Library News Detours and Frolics: Week of 11/16 As the days get shorter and exams loom, let us now warm our brains at the hearth of recent legal news and miscellany: “Massive hack of 70 million prisoner phone calls indicates violations… Detours and Frolics: Week of 11/9 A lot of things happened in the legal world last week. Here are some of them (plus some prison ramen): President Obama rejected construction of the Keystone pipeline (NY Times) A big week… Detours and Frolics: Week of 11/2 After being stranded in Austin on Monday, Detours and Frolics is back with your weekly selection of legal news and items of interest: The Librarian of Congress permitted some new exemptions to jailbreaking… Detours and Frolics: Week of 10/26 Happy Hallow-week! This D&F is only spooky if you’re a fan of really strong IP rights, so don’t worry about nightmares from reading on: The Second Circuit decided a major fair use case… Detours and Frolics: Week of 10/12 As fall falls and we hit the middle of the semester, take a break from your studies with some unintentionally California-centric legal news and miscellany: Under new sentencing guidelines, 6,000 federal prisoners will… Detours and Frolics: Week of 10/5 The beginning of the week, you say? That means it’s time for some law news: The 9th Circuit issued a ruling that opens the door for paying college athletes – though it doesn’t… Detours and Frolics: Week of 9/28 This week’s D&F covers some things that you’ve almost certainly heard about, and some things that you more than likely have not: For instance, you probably heard that VW is in a heap… Detours and Frolics: Week of 9/21 Well, the semester certainly is rolling along at this point. Here’s some legal news and items of interest for a little palate cleanser: It’s been 10 years since John Roberts became chief justice.… Detours and Frolics: Week of 9/14 This week we have an Atlantic-heavy edition of D&F for your reading pleasure: Is the Constitution flawed in its design? “Can DNA Evidence Solve a 30-Year-Old Crime?” Marcel Duchamp’s chess set, 3D printing, and… Detours and Frolics: Week of 8/31 Some legal news and miscellany for your reading pleasure as you begin your week: Why does it cost $2,350 to renounce your citizenship? (WSJ Law Blog) There’s some new evidence that may lead… Prev 1 … 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 … 19 Next