About the Authors
Raymond S. Ku
Education
A.B., Brown University, 1992
J.D., New York University, 1995
Background
Background
Raymond Ku is Professor of Law at Case Western Reserve University School of Law and Co-Director of Cases Center for Law, Technology and the Arts. He received his J.D., cum laude, from New York University School of Law where he was a Leonard Boudin First Amendment Fellow in the Arthur Garfield Hays Civil Liberties Program, and his A.B. with Honors from Brown University where he was the recipient of the Philo Sherman Bennet Prize for the best political science thesis discussing the principles of free government. Professor Ku clerked for the Honorable Timothy K. Lewis, United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit. He then practiced constitutional, intellectual property, and antitrust law with Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher, LLP, and First Amendment/media and intellectual property law with Levine Pierson Sullivan & Koch, L.L.P., both in Washington, D.C. He has taught at Cornell Law School, Seton Hall University School of Law, Thomas Jefferson School of Law, and St. Thomas University School of Law.
An internationally recognized scholar, Professor Ku writes on legal issues impacting individual liberty, creativity, and technology. His articles appear in the law reviews and journals of Berkeley, Chicago, Fordham, Georgetown, Minnesota, Stanford, Tulane, Vanderbilt, and Wisconsin among others. Professor Ku was the 2009 recipient of the Case Western Reserve University Law Alumni Associations Distinguished Teacher Award, and voted Professor of the Year by the graduating class of 2009.
Books
Cyberspace Law: Cases and Materials, (Aspen Publishers, 2002) (with M. Farger and A. Cockfield)
Cyberspace Law: Governing Information in the Digital Age (2nd. Ed., Aspen Publishers, 2006) (with J. Lipton)
Articles (selected)
Grokking Grokster, 2005 Wis. L. Rev. 1217
Consumer Copying & Creative Destruction: Fair Use Beyond Market Failure, 18 Berk. Tech. L. J. 539 (2003)
The Founders' Privacy: The Fourth Amendment and the Power of Technological Surveillance, 86 Min. L. Rev.
1325 (2002)
The Creative Destruction of Copyright: Napster and the New Economics of Digital Technology, 69 U. Chi. L.
Rev. 263 (2002)
Irreconcilable Differences: Congressional Treatment of Internet Service Providers as Speakers 3, Vand. Ent.
Law & Prac. J. 70 (2001)
Antitrust Immunity, the First Amendment & Settlements: Defining the Boundaries of the Right to Petition, 33
Ind. L. Rev. 385 (2000)
Swingers: Morality Legislation & the Limits of State Police Power, 12 St. Thomas L. Rev. 1 (1999)
Consensus of the Governed: The Legitimacy of Constitutional Change, 64 Fordham L. Rev. 535 (1995)
Books
Cyberspace Law: Cases and Materials, (Aspen Publishers, 2002) (with M. Farger and A. Cockfield)
Cyberspace Law: Governing Information in the Digital Age (2nd. Ed., Aspen Publishers, 2006) (with J. Lipton)
Articles (selected)
Grokking Grokster, 2005 Wis. L. Rev. 1217
Consumer Copying & Creative Destruction: Fair Use Beyond Market Failure, 18 Berk. Tech. L. J. 539 (2003)
The Founders' Privacy: The Fourth Amendment and the Power of Technological Surveillance, 86 Min. L. Rev.
1325 (2002)
The Creative Destruction of Copyright: Napster and the New Economics of Digital Technology, 69 U. Chi. L.
Rev. 263 (2002)
Irreconcilable Differences: Congressional Treatment of Internet Service Providers as Speakers 3, Vand. Ent.
Law & Prac. J. 70 (2001)
Antitrust Immunity, the First Amendment & Settlements: Defining the Boundaries of the Right to Petition, 33
Ind. L. Rev. 385 (2000)
Swingers: Morality Legislation & the Limits of State Police Power, 12 St. Thomas L. Rev. 1 (1999)
Consensus of the Governed: The Legitimacy of Constitutional Change, 64 Fordham L. Rev. 535 (1995)
Jacqueline D. Lipton
EducationB.A., University of Melboune, Melbourne, Australia, 1989
B.A., La Trobe Univesrity, Melbourne, Australia, 1990
L.L.B., University of Melbourne, Melbounre, Australia, 1991
L.L.M., Monash University, Melbourne, Australia, 1995
L.L.M., Cambridge University, United Kingdom, 1998
Ph.D, Law School, Griffith University, Brisbane, Australia, 2001
Background
Professor Lipton joined Case Western Reserve Law School in 2001, having previously held positions in prominent law schools in the United Kingdom and Australia. Her writing and teaching is focused in the areas of commercial law, cyberlaw, and intellectual property law with a comparative/international focus.
Professor Lipton has authored numerous law review articles in these areas, including recent publications in the Northwestern University Law Review, the Iowa Law Review, the UC Davis Law Review, the Boston College Law Review, Harvard Journal of Law and Technology, the Berkeley Technology Law Journal, the Washington and Lee Law Review, the Washington University Law Review, the Hastings Law Journal, the Wake Forest Law Review, the Florida Law Review, and the Cardozo Law Review (de novo inaugural online supplement). She also authored Security Over Intangible Property (Thomson, 2000), the first text devoted solely to the issue of securitization of intangible property, including intellectual property. She is currently completing a text on Internet domain name governance issues with particular focus on the balance between trademark interests and free speech for the Edward Elgar International Intellectual Property series.
Prior to her academic work, Professor Lipton held positions in several leading Australian commercial law firms, as well as serving as inhouse counsel for a major Australian bank. In the spring of 2010, Professor Lipton will be a visiting professor at the University of Florida Levin College of Law, and Acting Director of its International Center for Automated Information Research (ICAIR).
Books
Background
Professor Lipton joined Case Western Reserve Law School in 2001, having previously held positions in prominent law schools in the United Kingdom and Australia. Her writing and teaching is focused in the areas of commercial law, cyberlaw, and intellectual property law with a comparative/international focus.
Professor Lipton has authored numerous law review articles in these areas, including recent publications in the Northwestern University Law Review, the Iowa Law Review, the UC Davis Law Review, the Boston College Law Review, Harvard Journal of Law and Technology, the Berkeley Technology Law Journal, the Washington and Lee Law Review, the Washington University Law Review, the Hastings Law Journal, the Wake Forest Law Review, the Florida Law Review, and the Cardozo Law Review (de novo inaugural online supplement). She also authored Security Over Intangible Property (Thomson, 2000), the first text devoted solely to the issue of securitization of intangible property, including intellectual property. She is currently completing a text on Internet domain name governance issues with particular focus on the balance between trademark interests and free speech for the Edward Elgar International Intellectual Property series.
Prior to her academic work, Professor Lipton held positions in several leading Australian commercial law firms, as well as serving as inhouse counsel for a major Australian bank. In the spring of 2010, Professor Lipton will be a visiting professor at the University of Florida Levin College of Law, and Acting Director of its International Center for Automated Information Research (ICAIR).
Books
Global Real Estate: Internet Domain Names, Trademarks, and Free Speech (forthcoming, 2010)
Cyberspace Law: Cases and Materials, (2ed, Aspen Publishers, 2006) (with Raymond Ku)
Security Over Intangible Property, (2000)
Articles (selected)
What Blogging Might Tell Us About Cybernorms (work in progress)
Security Over Intangible Property, (2000)
Articles (selected)
What Blogging Might Tell Us About Cybernorms (work in progress)
Internet Law: Jurisdiction in Cyberspace, 21 LegalDate 9 (2002)
"Ph.D Lite": A New Approach to Teaching Scholarly Legal Writing, 2009 Cardozo L. Rev.
We, the Paparazzi: Privacy in the Facebook Generation, In Brief 4 (Winter/Spring, 2009)
"Ph.D Lite": A New Approach to Teaching Scholarly Legal Writing, 2009 Cardozo L. Rev.
We, the Paparazzi: Privacy in the Facebook Generation, In Brief 4 (Winter/Spring, 2009)
From Domain Names to Video Games: The Rise of the Internet in Presidential Politics, 86 Denver U. L. Rev. 693
(2009)
Celebrity in Cyberspace : A Personality Rights Paradigm for a New Personal Domain Name Dispute Resolution
Policy, 65 Wash. and Lee L. Rev. 1445 (2008)
(2009)
Celebrity in Cyberspace : A Personality Rights Paradigm for a New Personal Domain Name Dispute Resolution
Policy, 65 Wash. and Lee L. Rev. 1445 (2008)
Who Owns 'hillary.com'? Political Speech and the First Amendment in Cyberspace, 49 Bos. Col. L. Rev. 55 (2008)



