President Joe Biden in November 2021 signed the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act. Among other provisions, the law allocated $42.45 billion toward last-mile broadband development, . . .
Alan J. Meese •
June 7, 2022
For over three centuries, Anglo-American courts have assessed employee noncompete agreements under a Rule of Reason. Despite longstanding precedent, some now advocate banning all . . .
The right to be forgotten, which began as a part of European law, has found increasing acceptance in state privacy statutes recently enacted in . . .
Julian Morris •
June 1, 2022
Introduction Real-time payments (RTP) are an increasingly popular means by which individuals can send credits from one account to another. Many banks have established internal . . .
If a company misbehaves, lawsuits are one way of providing a remedy and encouraging that company and others to behave in the future. If . . .
Digital advertising is the economic backbone of much of the Internet. But complaints have recently emerged from a number of quarters alleging the digital advertising market is monopolized by its largest participant: Google.
The classical “law & technology” approach focuses on harms created by technology. This approach seems to be common sense; after all, why be interested—from . . .
Julian Morris •
May 25, 2022
Executive Summary In 2020, the Legislative Assembly of Costa Rica passed Legislative Decree 9831, which granted the Central Bank of Costa Rica (BCCR) authority to . . .
Two-dimensional Hotelling models predict that firms choose to maximally differentiate on one dominant characteristic and minimally differentiate on the other dominated characteristic. When consumers . . .