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Kerala High Court on Publishing Judgments and Right to be Forgotten: Some Points to Ponder Upon

SpicyIP

And Other Connected Cases while deciding on a litany of 9 litigations. Among other issues, the Court dealt with the question of, whether “ Publishers of judgments, like Indian Kanoon, and other law journals, have no right to publish the details of parties ignoring the privacy rights of litigants which includes their right to be forgotten.”

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Today at noon EST: free HLS webinar on developing professionalism in students

43(B)log

He has written and spoken widely on copyright, privacy and other areas of technology law. In 2015, he authored The Duty of Confidentiality in the Surveillance Age, 17 J. She teaches in the area of criminal law, primarily in the Civil-Criminal Litigation Clinic and the Juvenile Justice Clinic, a clinic which she directs and co-founded.

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HLS teaching series: Developing Professionalism in Students, March 21, at 12 noon EST

43(B)log

He has written and spoken widely on copyright, privacy and other areas of technology law. In 2015, he authored The Duty of Confidentiality in the Surveillance Age, 17 J. She teaches in the area of criminal law, primarily in the Civil-Criminal Litigation Clinic and the Juvenile Justice Clinic, a clinic which she directs and co-founded.

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Journey Through “Octobers” on SpicyIP (2005 – Present) 

SpicyIP

This is a “serials crisis” i.e., a situation when rising subscription costs for scholarly journals exceed academic library budgets, hampering researchers’ access. I am not even wading into the Bogus Open Access Journals and The dark side of the scientific publishing industry ). One may ask – is open access a solution?

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SpicyIP Weekly Review (August 2 – 8)

SpicyIP

In the interim order, it was found that there is a prima facie case to uphold the petitioner’s RTBF, based on (1) the protection of his right to privacy and reputation both online and offline, and (2) providing an acquitted person the right to have their name redacted and stop being identified as an accused person. News from India.

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Monthly Wrap Up (February 18, 2023): Noteworthy Trade Secret and Restrictive Covenant Posts, Cases and Developments

LexBlog IP

The other big news last week was the so-called “noisy exit” of FTC Commissioner Christine Wilson from the FTC, an exit punctuated by a pointed op-ed piece in The Wall Street Journal asserting that FTC Chair Lina Khan has disregarded the rule of law and due process in her management of the FTC.