Category Archives: Talks & Conferences

A Day in Amsterdam

I leave for Amsterdam on Tuesday evening, for what promises to be a really interesting conference at the IViR, the Institute for Information Law of the University of Amsterdam, this time in co-production with Tilberg University. (The joint venture between Amsterdam and Tilburg has produced a genuine Internet studies powerhouse.) The IViR could be my favorite place to go for conferences, as I always meet interesting people, and it has a lovely setting. My job is to comment on a great paper by Ronald Leenes and Bert-Japp Koops of Tilberg.

Even though I booked the tickets a while ago, the transatlantic airfares were unusually high. It turned out that I could lower the price from insane to painful by returning a day late, so in addition to my arrival day spent in a jet-lagged haze, I'm also going to have Saturday, July 3 (by which time I'll be over jet lag), free to actually tourist around Amsterdam, one of my favorite cities. As best I can recall, this is the first time in at least a decade, maybe more, that I have an entire extra day just to tourist as part of a conference trip unless I was traveling with the family. Usually when I'm on my own I book myself for fairly tight schedules, even for the transatlantic events, in order to minimize the time away from home. If all goes well, I'll be home in time for the July 4 fireworks, assuming I can stay up that late.

I spent a very happy week in Amsterdam while a grad student, so I have a pretty good idea of which museums I'd like to revisit, and just how much fun it is to walk around Amsterdam in the sunshine. But if anyone has advice on where to eat, or especially where to find WiFi hotspots I would be most grateful. Last time I went to Amsterdam I took a long list of alleged hotspots with me that I'd collated from several internet sites, and only one of them actually worked, and that was in a nice cafe but somewhat far from my hotel. And yes, it's the same infuriating hotel they booked me into last time.

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‘Trademark in Transition’

I'm off to Santa Fe today to speak at a symposium organized by the University of Houston on “Trademark in Transition”. This is a slightly terrifying thing to do as I do not, in my heart of hearts, think of myself as a trademark lawyer.

The other presenters are Graeme Dinwoodie, Stacey Dogan, Bill Landes, Mark Lemley and Glynn S. Lunney, so I will be surrounded by many of the stars of US trademark law, not to mention Thomas McCarthy, author of the finest US trademark treatise. What am I doing in this august company? Well you might ask. And I did. It seems, according to the organizers, that I am on the program because they wanted something a bit 'offbeat'. Now 'offbeat' is not the first word you might think of when you think of trademark law, a subject whose charms center on its basically commonsensical approach to problems and the relatively high quality of the draftsmanship of the most important governing of its statutes, the Lanham Act. (Hey, you think the Lanham Act is bad, let me introduce you to environmental law!)

Emboldened by the organizers' admission as to the reason for my presence, I have written a weirder-than-usual paper called “When We Say US™, We Mean It” which discusses who if anyone owns a country's name, and ccTLD names, and related .com names. If nobody laughs in the wrong places, I may put it online after the conference, or I may wait until I get a more polished version.

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ID Standards: the Trans-National Dimension

Here's the 2-page outline of the talk I gave today at the seminar on ID cards and human rights.

Continue reading

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More On Privacy and Court Records

Just a few semi-random notes from the meeting I'm attending in Tampa on privacy and court records.

  • Florida's open records law doesn't apply to judicial committees. Thus, although the meetings are open to the public and there's even a court reporter here writing down everything said during the two days (hired by a private law firm for its own benefit; I guess it's cheaper than sending a lawyer), groups of us are allowed to dine together socially without violating the law. Executive branch committees can't do that in Florida without violating the Open Meetings laws. Alas, it was raining last night so a group of us dined in the hotel. Good food, but no way the state's per diem will cover the bill.
  • The Committee has an impressive amount of expertise. Many of the members are veterans not just of the bench and of judicial administration reforms but of several previous court committees on high tech subjects. One thing that I can’t help noticing, however, is how the dominant presentational style is North or Central Florida, rather than the South Florida I'm used to. That means people are frequently soft-spoken, vaguely Southern, almost always over-modest. Even the judges are remarkably kind and pleasant, which is not inevitable in my experience (is this a side-effect of an elected bench? Or just smart selecting by the committee organizers?).
  • One of the speakers, Susan Larson, pointed us to a comprehensive web site she maintains on Public Access to Court Records, which looks like a treasure trove of material about what other jurisdictions are doing.
  • I am not very impressed with the abilities of many of Florida's politicians. I am impressed with the quality of the state (not local!) bureaucracy. My dealings with people in the Secretary of State's office a few years ago on digital signature matters was a happy surprise. The people from the Supreme Court Clerk's office are even more impressive.
  • The problems that the committee is charged with solving are even more complicated than I feared, especially given the thicket of relevant federal and Florida constitutional provisions (and separation of powers issuess…), statutes, rules of court, and issues of relations between courts and regional court clerks (who are separately elected and powerful local officials).
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Excellent Summary of Digital Cops Conference

James Grimmelmann at Law Meme delivers an excellent Report on last month's 'Digital Cops in a Virtual Environment' Conference.

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Privacy and Court Records

I'm off to Tampa early this morning for two days for the inaugural meeting of the Florida Supreme Court Committee on Privacy and Court Records.

If the truth be told, I suspect that the fundamental problem which the Committee is supposed to solve is a typical tragic choice, one with no pure solution. Thus, when first asked to serve, I expressed reluctance. But when pressed, I capitulated: service on committees like this is part of the social contract I think ought to apply to law professors.

So here I am. If there's a way to preserve the tradition of the fullest practicable public access to court records (a First Amendment right, and maybe a due process right too) in an age of cheap online full text access and also fully to protect the reasonable privacy interests of people caught up in Family Court or the like (especially pro se's who often disclose too much about themselves in their filings), I have yet to hear of it.

Some compromises are better than others, but they have resource implications that may be a tough sell in Florida. (Indeed the whole issue is quite political in this state as the revenues from selling electronic access accrue to the offices of the clerks of the regional courts, and they may well object to anything that threatens this revenue stream to their offices or imposes expensive redaction duties.)

Background reading, if you are so minded, begins with the Florida Judicial Management Council Privacy and Electronic Access to Court Records—Report and Recommendations (Dec. 17, 2001) and Florida Report of the Study Committee on Public Records (Feb. 15, 2003).

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