Generalmente enfocado al mundo tecnológico y más concretamente al mundo de apple, pero no siempre tiene por que ser así.
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Kocobé vous emmène découvrir les enjeux du numérique par l'interview d'experts particulièrement pointus, un dimanche par mois, sur SynopsLive.
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Welcome to the rituraj singh dixit podcast, where amazing things happen.
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राजीव दीक्षित जी को शब्दो में बयान नहीं किया जा सकता !! उन्हें जानने के लिए उनके mp3 देखे ! उनके विचारो को समझे ! उसके बाद आप भी यही कहेंगे की राजीव दीक्षित जी को शब्दो में बयान नहीं किया जा सकता है !! राजीव भाई के सभी mp3 औडियो आप यहाँ सुन सकते हो
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Ipse Dixit is a podcast on legal scholarship. Each episode of Ipse Dixit features a different guest discussing their scholarship. The podcast also features several special series. "From the Archives" consists historical recordings potentially of interest to legal scholars and lawyers. "The Homicide Squad" consists of investigations of the true stories behind different murder ballads, as well as examples of how different musicians have interpreted the song over time. "The Day Antitrust Died?" ...
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From playing to over 100,000 people in his home state, to Glastonbury and Later...with Jools Holland at the BBC, Raghu has also hit the no. 1 spot on the iTunes World Music Charts no less than 7 times. Hear him in conversation at the Apple Store, Buchanan Street in Glasgow.
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Michael Assis on Art, Digital Art & NFTs
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35:15In this episode, Michael Assis, a PhD candidate at the Bard Graduate Center, discusses his scholarship on art, digital art, and NFTs, including his dissertation in progress, Decentralized Objects: Non-fungible Tokens in the Age of Web3. Among other things, Assis explains what NFTs are and how they relate to the history and theory of art and digital…
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From the Archives 114: Barbara Ringer on Implementing the Copyright Law: What Librarians Should Know.
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53:39At the 1977 American Association of Law Libraries Annual Meeting, Barbara Ringer, the eighth Register of Copyrights, gave a presentation titled "Implementing the Copyright Law: What Librarians Should Know," in which she explained how the Copyright Act of 1976, of which she was the principle drafter, would affect libraries and librarians. This is a …
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Zvi Rosen on the History of Copyright in Computer-Generated Works
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40:17In this episode, Zvi Rosen, Assistant Professor of Law at the Southern Illinois University Simmons Law School and incoming Associate Professor of Law at the University of New Hampshire Franklin Pierce School of Law, discusses his draft article "AI Authorship: A Case of History Repeating Itself?" Rosen explains how copyright law and the Copyright Of…
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Jill Hasday on Women's Voices in the Women's Rights Movement
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38:25In this episode, Jill Hasday, Distinguished McKnight University Professor and Centennial Professor in Law at the University of Minnesota Law School, discusses her new book, "We the Men: How Forgetting Women's Struggles for Equality Perpetuates Inequality," which is published by Oxford University Press. Hasday explains how men have historically used…
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Rohan Grey on Digitizing the Public Fisc
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1:02:37In this episode, Rohan Grey, Assistant Professor of Law at Willamette University School of Law, discusses his draft article "Digitizing the Fisc." Grey begins by explain how the Trump administration and Elon Musk have seized unilateral control of the administrative state through federal payment systems. He explains how those systems work and why th…
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Dan Rabinowitz on AI Litigation Analytics
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43:36In this episode, Dan Rabinowitz, founder and CEO of Pre/Dicta, a litigation analytics platform that uses artificial intelligence to predict the outcome of lawsuits, explains how the platform works, why it is useful, and who might find value in using it. This episode was hosted by Brian L. Frye, Spears-Gilbert Professor of Law at the University of K…
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Gregory Dickinson on Preventing Online Fraud
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31:41In this episode, Gregory M. Dickinson, Assistant Professor of Law at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln College of Law, discusses his article "The Patterns of Digital Deception," which is published in the Boston College Law Review. Dickinson begins by explaining why it's important to prevent online fraud, but also important to prevent it effectivel…
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In this episode, Jonathon J. Booth, Associate Professor of Law at the University of Colorado Law School, discusses his draft article, "A New Satanic Panic." Booth begins by describing the "satanic panic" of the 1980s and early 1990s, during which many people were prosecuted for and even convicted of crimes associated with imaginary satanic rituals.…
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Sarah Fackrell on the Counterfeit Sham
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33:02In this episode, Sarah Fackrell (formerly Burstein), Professor and Co-Director of the Program in Intellectual Property Law at Chicago-Kent College of Law, discusses her article The Counterfeit Sham, which is published in the Harvard Law Review. Fackrell begins by explaining why counterfeiting is uniquely bad and why design patent infringement is di…
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Samantha Alecozay on the Corporate Transparency Act
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41:53In this episode, Samantha Alecozay, a practicing faculty member at St. Mary’s University School of law, and the founding attorney of Alecozay Law Firm, PLLC, discusses her forthcoming article, “The Small Business Killer: How FinCEN Enforcement of the CTA Could Destroy the Last Bastion of the American Dream,” which will be published by the Lincoln M…
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Rohan Grey on Spending & Inflation
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1:04:47In this episode, Rohan L. Grey, Assistant Professor of Law at Willamette University College of Law, discusses his new article "Public Spending, Price Stability, and the Green Transition: A Reassessment," which is published in the George Washington Journal of Energy and Environmental Law. Grey begins by explaining why inflation is a policy problem a…
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Matt Steilen on Magna Carta and Common Counsel
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53:36In this episode, Matthew Steilen, Professor of Law at the University of Buffalo School of Law, discusses his draft article "Magna Carta and the Origins of Legislative Power," which is part of a book project. Steilen begins by explaining the origins and purpose of Magna Carta. He then focuses on Chapter 12 of Magna Carta, which requires "common coun…
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In this episode, Oliver Traldi, a John and Daria Barry Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the James Madison Program at Princeton University, discusses his new book "Political Beliefs: A Philosophical Introduction," which is published by Routledge. Here is the description of the book: Anyone who’s had an argument about politics with a friend may walk a…
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Alison LaCroix on the Interbellum Constitution
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36:47In this episode, Alison L. LaCroix, Robert Newton Reid Professor of Law, Associate Member of the Department of History at the University of Chicago Law School, discusses her new book, "The Interbellum Constitution: Union, Commerce, and Slavery in the Age of Federalisms," which is published by Yale University Press. LaCroix explains what made interb…
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Naomi Sunshine on Reclaiming German Citizenship
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27:13In this episode, Naomi Sunshine, a director in the Public Interest Law Center and Supervising Attorney in the Immigrants Right Clinic at NYU Law School, discusses the process of reclaiming German citizenship under Article 116 Paragraph 2 of the Basic Law, which provides for the restoration of German citizenship to former German citizens deprived of…
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In this episode, Henry Oliver, a writer, speaker, and brand consultant based in London, discusses his new book, "Second Act: What Late Bloomers Can Tell You About Reinventing Your Life." Oliver begins by explaining what he means by a "late bloomer" and what their stories can tell us about success. He discusses many historical examples of late bloom…
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Phillips & Baumann on the Major Questions Doctrine & the SEC
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38:28In this episode, Todd Phillips, Assistant Professor at the Georgia State University J. Mack Robinson College of Business, and Beau J. Baumann, a Ph.D. student at Yale Law School, discuss their article "The Major Questions Doctrine's Domain," which will be published in the Brooklyn Law Review. Phillips and Baumann begin by explaining what the major …
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