by technology@hastingslawjournal.org | Jul 10, 2022 | Volume 73, Issue 5
Robert S. Peck Volume 73, Issue 5, 1305-1326 Technological innovation begets legal revolution. And tort law, as a creature of the common law, makes the most profound doctrinal leaps and does so more rapidly than any other area of law when technology changes our...
by technology@hastingslawjournal.org | Jul 10, 2022 | Volume 73, Issue 5
Catherine M. Sharkey Volume 73, Issue 5, 1327-1352 Products liability in the digital age entails reckoning with the transformative shift away from in-person purchases at brick-and-mortar stores to digital purchases from e-commerce platforms. The epochal rise of the...
by technology@hastingslawjournal.org | Jul 10, 2022 | Volume 73, Issue 5
Eugene Volokh Volume 73, Issue 5, 1353-1460 When may parties in American civil cases proceed pseudonymously? The answer turns out to be deeply unsettled. This Article aims to lay out the legal rules (such as they are) and the key policy arguments, in a way intended to...
by technology@hastingslawjournal.org | Jul 10, 2022 | Volume 73, Issue 5
Bryan H. Choi Volume 73, Issue 5, 1461-1480 The pursuit of software safety standards has stalled. In response, commentators and policymakers have looked increasingly to federal agencies to deliver new hope. Some place their faith in existing agencies while others...
by technology@hastingslawjournal.org | Jul 10, 2022 | Volume 73, Issue 5
Anuj C. Desai Volume 73, Issue 5, 1481-1510 Social media is just one part of the broader free-speech ecosystem. Social media regulation thus only regulates one part of that ecosystem. To evaluate social media regulation thus requires an understanding of the role...