Thirty-third selected bibliography on computers, technology and the law: (January 2000 through December 2000).

INTRODUCTION

Each year, the Journal provides a compilation of the most important and timely articles on computers, technology, and the law. The Bibliography, indexed by subject matter, is designed to be a research guide to assist our readers in searching for recent articles on computer and technology law. This year's annual Bibliography contains nearly 1000 articles, found through the examination of over 800 periodicals.

The Bibliography aims to include topics on every legal aspect of computers and technology. However, as new issues in this field emerge, we welcome your suggestions for additional topics and sources, as well as your commentary on the Bibliography.

INDEX 1. COMPUTERS AND TECHNOLOGY IN LAW PRACTICE 1.0 General 1.1 Computerized Legal Research 1.1.0 General 1.1.1 Online Legal Research 1.1.2 Legal Research Using CD-ROM 1.2 Law Office Management 1.2.0 General 1.2.1 Office Automation 1.2.2 Case Management 1.2.3 Case File Security 1.2.4 Internet Access 1.3 Selected Uses in the Law Practice 1.3.0 General 1.3.1 Tax Filing 1.3.2 Bankruptcy 1.3.3 Estate Planning 1.3.4 Real Estate 2. COMPUTERS AND TECHNOLOGY IN LITIGATION 2.0 General 2.1 Scientific Evidence 2.1.0 General 2.1.1 Expert Testimony 2.1.2 DNA Typing 2.1.3 Fingerprint 2.1.4 Polygraph 2.1.5 Forensic Evidence 2.2 Demonstrative Evidence 2.2.0 General 2.2.1 Computer-Generated Evidence 2.2.2 Audio/Visual Evidence 2.3 Cameras in the Courtroom 2.4 Dispute Resolution 3. COMPUTERS AND TECHNOLOGY IN THE GOVERNMENT 3.0 General 3.1 Computers and Technology in Law Enforcement 3.1.0 General 3.1.1 Computers and Technology in Police Operation 3.1.2 Computers and Technology in Correctional Institutions 3.2 Use of Computers and Technology by Federal Departments and Agencies 3.2.0 General 3.2.1 Military Technology 3.2.2 Internal Revenue Service 3.2.3 U.S. Patent Office 3.2.4 Government Information Retrieval System 3.3 Use of Computers and Technology in Judicial Administration 3.4 Use of Computers and Technology by State and Federal Legislatures 4. LEGAL ISSUES OF COMPUTER AND TECHNOLOGY SALES, USAGE, AND SERVICES 4.0 General 4.1 Contracting for Hardware, Software, and Computer Services 4.1.0 General 4.1.1 Purchase, Lease and License Considerations 4.1.2 Limitations of Limited Warranties 4.2 Government Regulation of Computer-Related Industry 4.2.0 General 4.2.1 First Amendment Issues 4.2.2 Antitrust 4.2.3 FCC Regulation 4.2.4 SEC Regulation 4.2.5 Tariff and Trade Control 4.3 Substantive Law Aspects 4.3.0 General 4.3.1 Computer Crime 4.3.2 Computer-Related Product Liability 4.3.3 Computer Security 4.3.4 Taxation of Software 4.4 Problems of Privacy and Computers 4.4.0 General 4.4.1 Data Privacy 4.4.2 Governmental Invasion of Privacy 4.4.3 Credit Reference 5. COMPUTERS AND TECHNOLOGY IN EDUCATION 5.0 General 5.1 Legal Education 6. COMPUTERS AND TECHNOLOGY IN BUSINESS 6.0 General 6.1 Electronic Commerce 6.2 Computers and Technology in Banking and Finance 6.2.0 General 6.2.1 On-line Securities Trading 6.3 Computers and Technology in the Transportation Industry 6.4 Computers and Technology in the Publishing Industry 6.5 Computers and Technology in Advertising 7. INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY PROTECTION OF COMPUTERS AND TECHNOLOGY 7.0 General 7.1 Patent 7.1.0 General 7.1.1 Software Patent 7.1.2 Biotech Patent 7.2 Software Copyright 7.2.0 General 7.2.1 User Interface 7.2.2 Fair Use 7.2.3 Video Game 7.3 Digital Copyright 7.3.0 General 7.3.1 Electronic Compilation 7.3.2 Computer Database 7.3.3 Multimedia 7.3.4 Computer-Generated Works 7.4 Trademark 7.5 Trade Secret 7.6 Semiconductor Chip Protection 7.7 Licensing 7.8 Internet Intellectual Property Issues 7.9 International Developments 7.9.0 General 7.9.1 GATT-TRIPS 7.9.2 NAFTA 7.9.3 Developments in Canada 7.9.4 Developments in Mexico and Latin America 7.9.5 Developments in Australia and New Zealand 7.9.6 Developments in Africa 7.9.7 Developments in Asia 7.9.8 Developments in Western Europe 7.9.9 Developments in Eastern Europe and Russia 8. COMPUTERS AND LEGAL REASONING 8.0 General 8.1 Artificial Intelligence 9. LEGAL ISSUES OF THE INTERNET 9.0 General 9.1 ISP and Internet Access 9.2 Domain Names 9.3 Taxation of Electronic Commerce 9.4 Encryption and Digital Signatures 9.5 Internet Crime 9.6 Civil Procedure in Cyberspace 10. LAW AND TECHNOLOGY 10.0 General 10.1 Technology Transfer 10.2 Audio/Video Recording 10.3 Space Law 10.4 Medical Technology 10.5 Biotechnology and Pharmaceuticals 10.6 Environmental Law 10.6.0 General 10.6.1 Pollution 10.6.2 Hazardous Substances 10.6.3 Electromagnetic Fields 10.6.4 Nuclear Technology 10.6.5 Energy and the Environment 10.6.6 International Environmental Law Developments 10.7 Television 10.7.0 General 10.7.1 Satellite Television 10.7.2 Cable Television 10.8 Telecommunications 10.8.0 General 10.8.1 Telephone 10.8.2 Multimedia in Telecommunications 10.8.3 International Telecommunications Developments 11. OTHERS 11.0 General 11.1 Y2K Issues BIBLIOGRAPHY

  1. COMPUTERS AND TECHNOLOGY IN LAW PRACTICE

    1.0 General

    Todd Flaming, Survey of Illinois Law: Legal Technology, 24 S. ILL. U. L.J. 915 (2000).

    Paul J. Johns, Technology-Augmented Advocacy: Raising the Trial Lawyer's Standard of Care; Changing Traditional Legal Education; and Creating New Judicial Responsibilities, 25 OHIO N.U. L. REV. 569 (1999).

    Jerry Lawson, Comment, The Language of Change, 39 JUDGES J. 44 (2000).

    1.1 Computerized Legal Research

    1.1.0 General

    Peter Mikhail, Hopkins v. Cellpro: An Illustration that Patenting and Exclusive Licensing of Fundamental Science is Not Always in the Public Interest, 13 HARV. J.L. & TECH. 375 (2000).

    Sue Scott, Law Online, 25 ALTERNATIVE L.J. 24 (2000).

    1.1.1 Online Legal Research

    1.1.2 Legal Research Using CD-ROM

    1.2 Law Office Management

    1.2.0 General

    Donald S. Skupsky, Applying Records Retention to Electronic Records, PREVENTIVE L. REP., Spring 2000, at 16.

    Donald S. Skupsky, Destroy Your Client Files Under a Records Retention Program ... And Protect Their Interests Too, PREVENTIVE L. REP., Summer 2000, at 4.

    1.2.1 Office Automation

    1.2.2 Case Management

    1.2.3 Case File Security

    1.2.4 Internet Access

    1.3 Selected Uses in the Law Practice

    1.3.0 General

    Marilyn Devin, CD-ROM Briefs: Are We There Yet?, 2 J. APP. PRAC. & PROCESS 377 (2000).

    Deborah Leonard Parker, Electronic Filing in North Carolina: Using the Internet Instead of the Interstate, 2 J. APP. PRAC. & PROCESS 351 (2000).

    Philip A. Talmadge, New Technologies and Appellate Practice, 2 J. APP. PRAC. & PROCESS 363 (2000).

    Clifford S. Zimmerman, A (Microsoft) Word to the Wise -- Beware of Footnotes and Gray Areas: The Seventh Circuit Still Counts Words, 2 J. APP. PRAC. & PROCESS 205 (2000).

    1.3.1 Tax Filing

    1.3.2 Bankruptcy

    David R. Kuney, Dot-Com and High-Technology Companies: Nuclear Waste and Chapter 11?, COMPUTER LAW., Aug. 2000, at 25.

    David S. Kupetz, Beware When Dealing with Licensors of Intellectual Property: A voiding Potential Pitfalls Facing Licensees and Lenders When Bankruptcy Intervenes, COMPUTER LAW., Jan. 2000, at 21.

    1.3.3 Estate Planning

    1.3.4 Real Estate

  2. COMPUTERS AND TECHNOLOGY IN LITIGATION

    2.0 General

    George Nicholson, A Vision of the Future of Appellate Practice and Process, 2 J. APP. PRAC. & PROCESS 229 (2000).

    Mark D. Robbins, Computers and the Discovery of Evidence: A New Dimension to Civil Procedure, 49 DEF. L.J. 195 (2000).

    Donald Shelton, Technology and the Judiciary: The Promise and the Challenge, 39 JUDGES J. 6 (2000).

    2.1 Scientific Evidence

    2.1.0 General

    Roger J. Johns, Jr., Caught in the Web: Websites and Classic Principles of Long Arm Jurisdiction in Trademark Infringement Cases, 10 ALB. L.J. SCI. & TECH. 65 (1999).

    Laura S. Killian, Note, Concerned or Just Plain Nosy? The Consequences of Parental Wiretapping Under the Federal Wire Tap Act in Light of Pollack v. Pollack, 104 DICK. L. REV. 561 (2000).

    Diana B. Petitti, Forensic Epidemiology: A Comprehensive Guide For Legal And Epidemiology Professionals, 40 JURIMETRICS J. 363 (2000) (book review).

    Rosmary C. Veniegas & Terri D. Conley, Biological Research on Women's Sexual Orientations: Evaluating the Scientific Evidence, 56 J. SOC. ISSUES 267 (2000).

    Laurens Walker & John Monaham, Scientific Authority: The Breast Implant Litigation and Beyond, 86 VA. L. REV. 801 (2000).

    2.1.1 Expert Testimony

    2.1.2 DNA Typing

    2.1.3 Fingerprint

    2.1.4 Polygraph

    2.1.5 Forensic Evidence

    2.2 Demonstrative Evidence

    2.2.0 General

    Perry C. Siatis, Comment, www.FranchiseDisclosure.com: Assessing the FTC's Proposed Franchise Rule Provisions Involving Electronic Disclosure, 2000 B.Y.U. L. REV. 713.

    2.2.1 Computer-Generated Evidence

    James I. Keane, Prestidigitalization: Magic, Evidence and Ethics in Forensic Digital Photography, 25 OHIO N.U. L. REV. 585 (1999).

    Honorable Shira A. Scheindlin & Jeffrey Rabkin, Electronic Discovery in Federal Civil Litigation: Is Rule 34 Up to the Task, 41 B.C. L. REV. 327 (2000).

    2.2.2 Audio/Visual Evidence

    2.3 Cameras in the Courtroom

    Gordon Bermant, Courting the Virtual: Federal Courts in an Age of Complete Inter-Connectedness, 25 OHIO N.U. L. REV. 527 (1999).

    Fred Galues, Comment, Where the Not-So-Wild Things Are: Computers in the Courtroom, the Federal Rules of Evidence, and the Need for Institutional Reform and More Judicial Acceptance, 13 HARV. J.L. & TECH. 540 (2000).

    Michael P. Kenny & William H. Jordan, Trial Presentation Technology: A Practical Perspective, 67 TENN. L. REV. 587 (2000).

    Frederick I. Lederer, The Effect of Courtroom Technologies On and In Appellate Proceedings, 2 J. APP. PRAC. & PROCESS 251 (2000).

    Frederic I. Lederer, Courtroom Technology -- A Judicial Primer, 39 JUDGES J. 13 (2000).

    Donald C. Massey, Discovery of Electronic Data from Motor Carriers: Is Resistance Futile?, 35 GONZ. L. REV. 145 (1999/2000).

    Edward Toussaint, Minnesota Court of Appeals Hears Oral Argument Via Interactive Teleconferencing Technology, 2 J. APP. PRAC. & PROCESS 395 (2000).

    Paul Zwier & Thomas C. Galligan, Technology and Opening Statements: A Bridge...

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