15 Wake Forest L. Rev. Online 70 Mollie Pinion Harper Over the last decade, the rapid proliferation and globalization of technology has profoundly impacted the economy, the job market, and the ways in which companies, workers and consumers interact.[1] These changes are the direct result of booming internet commerce and a massive growth of peer-to-peer […]| Wake Forest Law Review
Georgia State University's Law Review will be hosting its 30th annual symposium on March 21, 2025.| College of Law
15 Wake Forest L. Rev. Online 46 William Gilchrist Enacted as part of the Telecommunications Act of 1996, section 230 of the Communications Decency Act was originally introduced to shield children from inappropriate content online.[1] Despite being passed for a relatively limited purpose, section 230’s broad liability protections for interactive computer services have since been […]| Wake Forest Law Review
15 Wake Forest L. Rev. Online 25 Trinity J. Chapman “The family, that dear octopus from whose tentacles we never quite escape, nor in our innermost hearts never quite wish to.” – Dodie Smith, Dear Octopus. Introduction “The first bond of society is marriage; next, children; and then the family.”[1] There is no doubt that […]| Wake Forest Law Review
15 Wake Forest L. Rev. Online 1 Nicholas R. Rader Introduction Corporations may, as a result of their operations, incur substantial contingent liabilities that diminish their enterprise value.[1] In some cases, these contingent liabilities take the form of mass tort judgments, which threaten to drag corporations into protracted, complex litigation in diverse forums with potentially […]| Wake Forest Law Review
14 Wake Forest L. Rev. Online 99 Dora W. Klein[1] “To determine whether evidence is admissible under Rule 404(b), the Huddleston test applies . . . .”[2] Introduction Many courts—mostly federal, but also some state courts—are misapplying the United States Supreme Court’s decision in the 1988 case United States v. Huddleston.[3] These courts have used a single paragraph of […]| Wake Forest Law Review