Prof. Carrier’s work cited in Forbes and two FTC comments

Forbes article on product hopping https://www.forbes.com/sites/theapothecary/2024/05/21/how-drug-companies-stifle-competition-with-product-hopping/ FTC comment to Patent Office https://www.ftc.gov/system/files/ftc_gov/pdf/FTC-Comment-on-USPTO-Terminal-Disclaimer-NPRM-7-9-2024.pdf Statement of Commissioner Slaughter https://www.ftc.gov/system/files/ftc_gov/pdf/2410004exxonrksstmt_0.pdf

Prof. Carrier publishes articles on Ticketmaster, NCAA, & patent thickets

Michael A. Carrier, The Antitrust Case Against Live Nation Entertainment, 15 Harvard Journal of Sports and Entertainment Law 1 (2024), https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=4657361 Michael A. Carrier & Marc Edelman, An Antitrust Analysis of the NCAA Transfer Policy, 11 Texas A&M Law Review 999 (2024), https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=4636414 Michael A. Carrier & S. Sean Tu, Why Pharmaceutical Patent Thickets Are … Continue reading Prof. Carrier publishes articles on Ticketmaster, NCAA, & patent thickets

Prof. Hrdy Quoted in National Law Journal on Noncompete Ban

Professor Camilla Hrdy was quoted in a National Law Journal article regarding a recent district court decision enjoining the Federal Trade Commission’s noncompete ban.    “Camilla Hrdy, a Rutgers Law School professor, called Brown’s ruling “predictable” because the FTC’s noncompete rule is sweeping as it bans noncompete agreements nationwide with few exceptions…. “I have a … Continue reading Prof. Hrdy Quoted in National Law Journal on Noncompete Ban

Prof. Hrdy publishes article on trade secrecy and generative AI

Professor Camilla Hrdy, who joins the Rutgers Law faculty as an Associate Professor of Law in the fall, has just published a new article on trade secrecy, contracts, and generative AI. The article will be published in the Berkeley Technology Law Review. Professor Hrdy argues that developers of “closed-source” generative AI products, such as ChatGPT, … Continue reading Prof. Hrdy publishes article on trade secrecy and generative AI