Two Indiana University School of Law – Bloomington students have recently won national contests for their writings,
according to the school ;s weekly e-mail newsletter, Indiana Law Annotated.
Doug Hass and Matthew Lawless, both 2Ls, will have their articles published later this year in the legal journals that conducted the competitions.
Hass ; article, "The Never-Was-Neutral Net and Why Informed End Users Can End the Net Neutrality Debates," is the winner of The Berkeley Technology Law Journal ;s 2007 Writing Competition. Hass ; article will be published in the BTLJ ;s Volume 22, Fall 2007 issue and included a $2,000 prize for first place.
Lawless wrote a comment that won the UCLA Journal of Law and Technology Comment contest, which included a $1,000 prize. His piece, "The Third Party Doctrine Redux: Internet Search Records and the Case for a ‘Crazy Quilt ; of Fourth Amendment Protection," will be published in the journal later this year.
Doug Hass and Matthew Lawless, both 2Ls, will have their articles published later this year in the legal journals that conducted the competitions.
Hass ; article, "The Never-Was-Neutral Net and Why Informed End Users Can End the Net Neutrality Debates," is the winner of The Berkeley Technology Law Journal ;s 2007 Writing Competition. Hass ; article will be published in the BTLJ ;s Volume 22, Fall 2007 issue and included a $2,000 prize for first place.
Lawless wrote a comment that won the UCLA Journal of Law and Technology Comment contest, which included a $1,000 prize. His piece, "The Third Party Doctrine Redux: Internet Search Records and the Case for a ‘Crazy Quilt ; of Fourth Amendment Protection," will be published in the journal later this year.














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