Professor Hrdy Presents New Research on Trade Secret Law at NYU Law

Professor Camilla Hrdy presented new research on trade secret law at the Workshop on the Research Handbook on Trade Secrecy at NYU Law. The Workshop, attended by experts on trade secret law and policy from the U.S. and abroad, was hosted jointly by New York University School of Law and Columbia Law School.   Prof. Hrdy’s … Continue reading Professor Hrdy Presents New Research on Trade Secret Law at NYU Law

Prof. Camilla Hrdy Presents at Hofstra Intellectual Property Law Colloquium

Prof. Camilla Hrdy presented her work on trade secrets, contracts, and generative artificial intelligence at the Hofstra Intellectual Property Law Colloquium, on October 7, 2024.  Prof. Hrdy argues that trade secret law is not “in crisis” as a result of generative AI. In fact, many of the established rules developed for older technologies, including traditional … Continue reading Prof. Camilla Hrdy Presents at Hofstra Intellectual Property Law Colloquium

Prof. Ellen P. Goodman keynotes TPRC52

On September 20, 2024, Professor Ellen P. Goodman keynoted TPRC52, the Research Conference on Communications, Information and Internet Policy in Washington, D.C. The title of her keynote was “Default to Distrust: Synthetic Content Policy and the Epistemic Storm.”

Prof. Ellen P. Goodman’s “Regulatory Analogies, LLMs, and Generative AI” published by Duke University Press

Duke University Press recently published Professor Ellen P. Goodman’s article “Regulatory Analogies, LLMs, and Generative AI” in Critical AI. Abstract With the release of large language models such as GPT-4, the push for regulation of artificial intelligence has accelerated the world over. Proponents of different regulatory strategies argue that AI systems should be regulated like … Continue reading Prof. Ellen P. Goodman’s “Regulatory Analogies, LLMs, and Generative AI” published by Duke University Press