Prof. Colleen Chien wrote a Patently-O post about the launch of the Innovator Diversity Pilots Initiative. 

Prof. Colleen Chien‘s Paper Prisons Initiative launched a “diary” that shares the stories of people impacted by their criminal records. 

Prof. Taylor Dalton participated in the Richmond Law Junior Faculty Forum

Prof. Eric Goldman posted an article, “The United States’ Approach to ‘Platform’ Regulation.”

Santa Clara Magazine profiled Prof. Eric Goldman‘s Internet Law work in an article entitled “The Internet’s Last True Believer.” 

Prof. Sue Guan appeared in the CNBC documentary, “Making of the Meme King.”

Prof. Sue Guan’s article, “The Rise of the Finfluencer,” was featured in Patrick Boyle’s YouTube video and the Oxford Business Law Blog

Prof. Sue Guan’s “Spoofing and its Regulation” paper was listed in the Regulatory Review’s “What We’re Reading This Week” feature

Dean Michael Kaufman spoke about “Reconciling Freedom of Expression with Trauma-Informed Practices & Relationship Building” at the Widener Law Commonwealth 2023 Law Review Symposium

Profs. Brian Love and Christian Helmers published an article, “Patent Hold-Out and Licensing Frictions: Evidence from Litigation of Standard Essential Patents.

Prof. Michelle Oberman co-authored an article, “Doctors’ Duty to Provide Abortion Information.”

Prof. Catherine Sandoval, currently on leave, discussed her work as chair of the AALS Section on Communications, Media, and Information Law. 

Prof. David Sloss published an article, “The New ALI Restatement & the Doctrine of Non-Self-Executing Treaties.”

Prof. David Sloss posted an article, “Guns, Abortion, and Courts.” 

Prof. David Sloss contributed to an amicus brief explaining when malware attacks should be classified as “warlike.”