- Professor Timothy K. Armstrong’s article, Dueling Monologues on the Public Domain: What Digital Copyright Can Learn from Antitrust, was published in the first issue of the University of Cincinnati College of Law Intellectual Property and Computer Law Journal. The article is available at http://scholarship.law.uc.edu/ipclj/.
- Professor Armstrong delivered a guest lecture on November 13, 2015, to a combined group of UC undergraduate and graduate students in the Software Testing and Quality Assurance course in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computing Systems. Professor Armstrong’s talk was titled “Legal Issues in Software Development” and focused principally on copyright law, patent law, and contractual and licensing issues that would be of particular concern to software developers and their employers.
- Professor Armstrong delivered a presentation to the Harvard Law School Association of Cincinnati titled, “Art and Money, Here and Abroad: Two (or Four) Theories of Copyright.” The presentation took place on November 20, 2015, at the offices of Blank Rome LLP in downtown Cincinnati. The talk considered competing theories of copyright law that have been enunciated at different times by U.S. policymakers and asked whether the increasing prominence of copyright as an issue in the international trade regime called those theories into doubt.
Additionally, Professor Armstrong’s work was cited in the following:
- Professor Armstrong’s Digital Rights Management and the Process of Fair Use, 20 Harv. J.L. & Tech. 49, 60 (2008), in Trevor I. Kiviat, Beyond Bitcoin: Issues in Regulating Blockchain Transactions, 65 Duke L.J. 569 (2015).
- Professor Armstrong’s Chevron Deference and Agency Self-Interest, 13 Cornell J.L. & Pub. Pol’y 203, 204 (2004), in Nicholas Jackson, When is an Agency a Court? A Codified Functional Approach to State Agency Removal Under 28 U.S.C. § 1441, 49 U. Mich. J.L. Reform 273 (2015).