From: VOL...@law.ucla.edu (Eugene Volokh) Subject: Cyberspace Free Speech Law for Non-Lawyers Date: 1996/10/05 Message-ID: <13363213A7@law1.law.ucla.edu>#1/1 X-Deja-AN: 187634422 sender: dae...@osiris.wu-wien.ac.at organization: WU Mail/News Gateway reply-to: VOL...@law.ucla.edu newsgroups: at.mail.com-priv PLEASE FEEL FREE TO FORWARD The Cyberspace Law for Nonlawyers free e-mail seminar (now at over 17,000 subscribers) is about to start its Free Speech unit. If you've ever wanted to brush up on the constitutional law of free speech, especially as it applies to cyberspace, this is your chance. To subscribe, send a message with the text SUBSCRIBE CYBERSPACE-LAW Yourfirstname Yourlastname to LISTS...@PUBLISHER.SSRN.COM * The seminar is aimed at educated laypeople, not primarily at lawyers. Low on legalese and Latin. * This is a low-traffic distribution list, NOT a discussion list. Subscribers will get one message (a few paragraphs long) every few days. * The seminar is co-authored by Prof. Larry Lessig, University of Chicago Law School Prof. David Post, Georgetown University Law Center Prof. Eugene Volokh, UCLA School of Law Larry Lessig clerked for U.S. Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia, and now teaches constitutional law and the law of cyberspace. He's written about law and cyberspace for the Yale Law Journal and the University of Chicago Legal Forum (forthcoming). David Post practiced computer law for six years, then clerked for U.S. Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, and now teaches constitutional law, copyright law, and the law of cyberspace. He's written about law and cyberspace for the University of Chicago Legal Forum (forthcoming) and the Journal of Online Law, and writes a monthly column on law and technology issues for the American Lawyer. Eugene Volokh worked as a computer programmer for 12 years, and is still partner in a software company that sells the software he wrote for the Hewlett-Packard Series 3000. He clerked for U.S. Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O'Connor, and now teaches constitutional law and copyright law. He's written about law and cyberspace for the Yale Law Journal, Stanford Law Review, Michigan Law Review, and the University of Chicago Legal Forum (forthcoming). -- Eugene Volokh, UCLA Law