Remove 2025 Remove Article Remove State law
article thumbnail

Lessons Learned from 2024 and the Year Ahead in AI Litigation

Debevoise Data Blog

Despite the busy 2024 litigation year against companies offering AI platforms in 2024, significant intellectual property questions remain unanswered as the calendar turns to 2025. 2025 may bring some clarity to the legal status of AI, including through highly anticipated guidance from the U.S. Copyright Office.

article thumbnail

A Review of the NYT v. Microsoft AI-Copyright Ruling (Guest Blog Post)

Eric Goldman

2025 WL 1009179 (S.D.N.Y. April 4, 2025), might be the most important case pending on the legality of scraping public data to create training data sets to build large language models (“LLMs”). 1125(c) and are widely recognized by the general consuming public of the United States.” Microsoft Corp.,

professionals

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

What If I Don’t Want to Litigate? Law Degree Alternatives: Exploring Unconventional Career Paths

The Barrister

Wisconsin offers a “diploma privilege” system for graduates of its two in-state law schools, while New Hampshire permits a small cohort of law students to practice without taking the bar after completing a specialized curriculum. last visited Feb 27, 2025). Harvard Law Review.

article thumbnail

The Final Verdict: Examining the Death Penalty in the United States and South Carolina

The Barrister

Over the years, the state has shifted between different execution methods and faced significant legal and logistical challenges in carrying out the death penalty. Law Library has many books available for check out including: The Death Penalty in the United States: A Complete Guide to Federal and State Laws / Louis J.

article thumbnail

Building a Digital Future: Is America Ready for a Federal Digital Bill of Rights?

Richmond Journal of Law and Technology

Additionally, states and the federal government are already taking incremental steps toward protection in the digital age without a federal digital bill of rights. These state-level initiatives create a patchwork of digital privacy laws, complicating efforts to establish a national, uniform standard for digital rights protection.