- From: Rebecca Bliquez <rbliquez@u.washington.edu>
- Date: Wed, 4 Apr 2001 13:25:42 -0700
- To: <rbliquez@u.washington.edu>
- Message-ID: <DAECIPGAKEGKPPCNGNHHIEEOCFAA.rbliquez@u.washington.edu>
Please circulate the below announcements to any event calendars, newsletters or other publicity avenues that you may have. I am also attaching a copy of our Lecture Series flier. More information is available on our website at www.law.washington.edu/lct or I can be reached at (206) 685-2636. Thank you! Rebecca __________________________________________ Rebecca Bliquez Project Coordinator & Assistant to the Director Center for Law, Commerce & Technology University of Washington Law School (206) 685-2636 (206) 616-3427 FAX rbliquez@u.washington.edu www.law.washington.edu/lct/ ____________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________ The Center for Law, Commerce and Technology at the University of Washington School of Law presents its Spring Lecture Series: Law, Technology and the Information Society 1. Steve Tapia, Senior Corporate Attorney at Microsoft “THERE’S NO THERE,THERE: JURISDICTION AND THE INTERNET” Tuesday, April 10, 2001, 4:00 pm Condon Hall (UW Law School), Room 109, 1100 NE Campus Parkway, Seattle, WA Reception to follow in Tunks Lounge Steve Tapia is a Senior Corporate Attorney at Microsoft and formerly an attorney at MSNBC.com. He will be speaking about Internet jurisdiction in thecontext of online journalism. His stories explore the issue of defamation/libel on the Internet. ============================ 2. Aaron Caplan, Staff Attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) “INTERNET IMPLICATIONS OF THE FIRST AMENDMENT RIGHT TO ANONYMOUS SPEECH” Tuesday, April 17, 2001, 4:00 pm Condon Hall (UW Law School), Room 109, 1100 NE Campus Parkway, Seattle, WA Reception to follow in Tunks Lounge Mr. Caplan is the ACLU lawyer representing "John Doe" in the recent Anonymous Web Speech Case. Case Background: The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) have asked a federal court in Washington to quash a subpoena that would force an Internet service to disclose the identity of a person who spoke anonymously on an Internet bulletin board. ================================ 3. Donald Horowitz, Chair of the Technology Bill of Rights Subcommittee of the Access to Justice Board, Washington State Bar Association "ACCESS TO JUSTICE TECHNOLOGY BILL OF RIGHTS" Tuesday, May 1, 2001, 3:30 pm Condon Hall (UW Law School), Room 109, 1100 NE Campus Parkway, Seattle, WA Reception to follow in Tunks Lounge
Attachments
- application/msword attachment: Tapia__Caplan__Horowitz_flyer.doc
Received on Wednesday, 4 April 2001 16:24:08 UTC