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Final papers posted from the George Washington Law Review's CFAA symposium
Last year, the George Washington Law Review hosted a symposium on the controversial Computer Fraud and Abuse Act. I was honored to be the faculty adviser to the symposium. I'm happy to say that the final papers have been posted on the Law Review's website. Here are the papers in order they appear in the issue:
Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse (D-R.I.), Keynote Address—Hacking into the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act: The CFAA at 30
Patricia L. Bellia, A Code-Based Approach to Unauthorized Access Under the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act
Josh Goldfoot and Aditya Bamzai, A Trespass Framework for the Crime of Hacking
James Grimmelmann, Consenting to Computer Use
William A. Hall Jr., The Ninth Circuit's Deficient Examination of the Legislative History of the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act in United States v. Nosal
Orin S. Kerr, Trespass, Not Fraud: The Need for New Sentencing Guidelines in CFAA Cases
Matthew B. Kugler, Measuring Computer Use Norms
Michael L. Levy, A Proposed Amendment to 18 U.S.C. § 1030-The Problem of Employee Theft
Michael J. Madison, Authority and Authors and Codes
Jonathan Mayer, The "Narrow" Interpretation of the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act: A User Guide for Applying United States v. Nosal
Paul Ohm and Blake Reid, Regulating Software When Everything Has Software
Ric Simmons, The Failure of the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act: Time to Take an Administrative Approach to Regulating Computer Crime
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