It's been a great year for Cybercrime Review and for many of our authors. Jeffery's posts appeared in a number of law review articles, including the Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology and the University of Pennsylvania Journal of Constitutional Law. Even more impressive was Jeffery's cite in the North Dakota Supreme Court case, In re D.O.
In addition to authoring a number of amazing articles, Justin appeared on a number of television segments discussing the the Target black friday hack and a recent Wisconsin Supreme Court decision on cellphone tracking.
This year I was also fortunate enough to join a stellar group of contributors who have a real passion for understanding cybercrime and the rapidly converging areas of technology and the law. 2013 was an exciting year and I'm looking forward to great things to come in 2014!
Here is a look back at some of our more popular 2013 posts:
March 4, 2013, CFAA read narrowly by another court; misuse by employee is not "unauthorized access"
April 3, 2013, Hacking Back: Why security is important, even for hackers committing felonies (from XyliBox)
April 25, 2013, Wisconsin federal court forbids forced production of decrypted data on Fifth Amendment grounds
May 1, 2013, Forensic Fraud: Now Available on Daytime TV - A frank discussion about the admissibility of photo and video enhancement testimony
May 21, 2013, 1st Circuit holds that cell phone searches incident to arrest violate the 4th Amendment
June 7, 2013, The Verizon FISA Court Order, the PRISM Program, And a Whirlwind Of Commentary: A Look Back At An Eventful Two Days
October 6, 2013, Federal Ct. in web scraping case: accusations of "hacking" and "theft" could be defamatory, but privileged under facts
October 7, 2013, Court dismisses most of teen's suit for use of bikini-clad photo from Facebook in high school "Internet Safety" class
November 1, 2013, Exiting CTO who copied source code and company files wins dismissal of CFAA claim; Thoughts on the CFAA post-Nosal
November 13, 2013, Fed Ct: A cell phone is not a container (i.e. conventional wardrobe), but Narnia (the magical wardrobe); police need a warrant to enter the portal
Happy New Year!
Happy New Year!
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