BTLJ is proud to announce the winners of the 2015 Student Writing Competition. Congratulations to our winners, and thank you to all participants for your submissions!
First Place: “The Fourth Amendment Consequences of First Amendment Disputes Over National Security Letters Gag Orders,” by Rebecca Wexler (Yale Law School)
Second Place: “What Rosie the Robot Knows: The Internet of Things, Domestic Robots, and Fourth Amendment Reverence for the Home,” by Amanda Lynch (Yale Law School)
Third Place: “Tackling Tacking: Hana’s Potential Impact On Likelihood of Confusion,” by Megan McKeown (University of Notre Dame Law School)
Aldo J. Test Award for Best Berkeley Law Submission: “Patent Claim Construction Under Teva v. Sandoz: Deference at Last or More of the Same?,” by Joshua Furman (UC Berkeley School of Law)
Winners of 2015 Notes and Comments Competition
BTLJ is proud to announce the winners of the 2015 Student Writing Competition. Congratulations to our winners, and thank you to all participants for your submissions!
First Place: “The Fourth Amendment Consequences of First Amendment Disputes Over National Security Letters Gag Orders,” by Rebecca Wexler (Yale Law School)
Second Place: “What Rosie the Robot Knows: The Internet of Things, Domestic Robots, and Fourth Amendment Reverence for the Home,” by Amanda Lynch (Yale Law School)
Third Place: “Tackling Tacking: Hana’s Potential Impact On Likelihood of Confusion,” by Megan McKeown (University of Notre Dame Law School)
Aldo J. Test Award for Best Berkeley Law Submission: “Patent Claim Construction Under Teva v. Sandoz: Deference at Last or More of the Same?,” by Joshua Furman (UC Berkeley School of Law)
The ‘Unamerican’ Rule: Analysis of Shammas v. Focarino and Paying to Play in Trademark Appeals
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