The Yale Law Journal

Results for 'Google'

Steven J. Horowitz

would not care nearly as much about its more vicious content were it not for Google. In this essay, I sketch a framework for a statutory solution to the Google bomb problem ...

Antitrust and Platform Monopoly

deal directly with consumers, such as Amazon, Apple, Facebook, and Google, are not “winner-take-all” firms. They must compete on the merits or

Forum: Helping Truth with Its Boots: Accreditation as an Antidote to Fake News

online platforms’ responses to fake news Platforms such as Facebook, Google, and Twitter have attempted to address fake news by identifying and curbing

Forum: ARTificial: Why Copyright Is Not the Right Policy Tool to Deal with Generative AI

consider is Authors Guild v. Google, Inc. The case stemmed from Google’s collaboration with several major research libraries to digitize their

Forum: The Agency Costs of Equal Treatment Clauses

Google, and others have all gone public with this structure. However, this structure presents a problem for controllers. As the company grows and

Forum: Platform Realism, Informational Inequality, and Section 230 Reform

innocuous terms return and, with each query, entrench prevailing racist and misogynist meanings. In other words, before Google rectified this problem

Forum: Corpus Linguistics & Original Public Meaning: A New Tool To Make Originalism More Empirical

with the small sample sizes that have usually plagued originalist research. Lawyers use corpora on a daily basis.In a sense, Google and Westlaw or Lexis

Forum: A Flood of Judicial Lobbying: Amicus Influence and Funding Transparency

from Google to at least ten groups that filed briefs in support of Google’s position. The Court’s amicus-funding-disclosure rule did not require the IAP

Forum: Warrant Canaries and Disclosure by Design: The Real Threat to National Security Letter Gag Orders

2013, Google published a transparency report detailing receipt of fewer than 1000 NSLs for each six-month period beginning with January 2009

Forum: Much Ado About Nothing: Why Student Scholarship Has Nothing To Fear from Blogs

one could argue that the student note is not necessary, for a practicing attorney could simply do a Google search to find the expert commentary about