The Yale Law Journal

Results for 'simple mobile games'

Forum: On “Confetti Regulation”: The Wrong Way to Regulate Gamified Investing

on mobile phones. Broker-dealers, market participants regulated under the securities laws, sponsor these apps. One popular app, Robinhood, offers

Forum: Critiquing (and Repairing) the New International Tax Regime

Given the enormous losses of revenue and the gamesmanship the legislation will generate, it is fair to ask a lot of the new international regime. Yet

Forum: Foreword—The 2017 Tax Cuts: How Polarized Politics Produced Precarious Policy

hollow. Democrats themselves had long realized that the U.S.’s exceptionally high corporate tax rate in today’s global economy—with highly mobile capital

Forum: International Cooperation and the 2017 Tax Act

demand for U.S. capital. Its components included “worldwide” taxation, current “Subpart F” taxation of passive and mobile income earned by non-U.S

Stuck! The Law and Economics of Residential Stagnation

and even basic property law rules inhibit exit from low-opportunity states and cities. Furthermore, building codes, mobile home bans, federal location

Forum: Lessons from Lawrence: How “History” Gave Us Dobbs—And How History Can Help Overrule It

the woman was ‘quick with child’ . . . .” A letter sent by an antiabortion physician in Mobile, Alabama to Horatio Storer in 1859 confirms this

Reinterpreting Corporate Inversions: Non-Tax Competitions and Frictions

and eighty percent bright lines as proxies for “economic substance” allows corporations to play games by structuring their inversions to barely escape

Disappearing Claims and the Erosion of Substantive Law

parties’ agreement as written, pure and simple, and that it was “too darn bad” (in the words of Justice Kagan’s dissent) that the procedures under that

Forum: Constructing AI Speech

video games, the Internet, graphic design for websites, nude dancing, and transfers of doctors’ prescription data for purposes of advertising. It is

Romanticizing Democracy, Political Fragmentation, and the Decline of American Government

competition increasingly paralyze American government. The government shutdown and near financial default were not a simple product of party polarization