Undue Computational Experimentation: Can In Silico Experiments Allows Genus Claims to Survive?
U.S. courts have, time and again, struck down genus claims for undue experimentation. The most recent blow came last year in Amgen v. Sanofi, when …
Quality follows upgrading
U.S. courts have, time and again, struck down genus claims for undue experimentation. The most recent blow came last year in Amgen v. Sanofi, when …
In 2023, investigative journalists reported multiple instances where billionaires showered Supreme Court Justices with lavish gifts. Previously undisclosed luxury fishing trips, private jet travel, and …
American eviction proceedings are governed by a fusion of property and contract law. The law’s narrow understanding of eviction ignores the importance of a dwelling …
Municipalities increasingly rely on nonpolice public safety experts—from substance abuse counselors and mental health interventionists to homeless outreach teams and violence interrupters—to address safety issues …
It has often been said that the internet lacks public property. Unlike the offline world, denizens of cyberspace cannot gather in the digital equivalent of …
In the summer of 1977, several families living in Tyler, Texas received a letter informing them that their children were no longer eligible to attend …
In an increasingly technological, interconnected, and digital world, advancements in technology pose significant legal challenges. “Grey zone” conflicts—such as in cyber warfare, election interference, political …
The use of race in college admissions is contentious not only because elite colleges are a gateway to good careers, but because the colleges themselves …
The Indian Child Welfare Act (ICWA) of 1978, enacted to protect Native American children from being removed from their tribes, was recently upheld in 2023 …
“Hard cases make bad law” is one of the most famous aphorisms in Anglo-American law. Its insight is that when strict application of a generally …