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Faculty in the News

Weekly Faculty in the News, 9/5

A roundup of faculty appearances in news sources and media from the last week.

8/27 – Professor Richard Warner was featured in a Medill Reports video story on a new website called Just Delete Me, which helps users protect their online privacy (“New program protects privacy by deleting old accounts“).

8/30 – Professor David Schwartz was quoted in an Inside Counsel article about a controversial exclusion order issued by the International Trade Commission against Apple products that infringed a patent owned by Samsung (“Controversial ruling stops import of products that infringe standard-essential patents“).

8/30 – Dean Stephen Sowle was quoted in a Chicago Daily Law Bulletin story on professionalism training for incoming students at law schools (“Building a foundation of professionalism,” behind paywall).

8/31 – Professor Edward Lee authored a guest post on Techdirt, the high tech news blog, in which he chose his favorite Techdirt posts of the week (“Law Professor Edward Lee’s Favorite Techdirt Posts Of The Week“).

9/4 – Dean Harold Krent was interviewed for an NBC5 video story on a woman’s repeated but ignored requests for a website to remove her online post (“Woman Says Cheater Site Wouldn’t Remove Scathing Entry“).

9/5 – Professor Ron Staudt was featured in Chicago Lawyer’s September cover story, in which he discussed the future of legal technology for law students and practicing attorneys and the plans for his groundbreaking software, A2J Author (“iAttorney: A professor’s quest to automate the law“).

Other News:

– Professor Sheldon Nahmod authored a new post on his blog, Nahmod Law, titled “First Amendment Retaliatory Arrest Decisions After Reichle.”

– It’s not too late to sign up to hear Professor Ed Lee give a book talk at the upcoming Social Media Week Chicago on September 25. Registration is free, and Lee will be discussing  his forthcoming book, The Fight for the Future: How People Defeated Hollywood and Saved the Internet—For Now. For more information, click here.

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