Digital Estate Planning: Is Google Your Next Estate Planner?
In: The Student Lawyer, The American Bar Association, May 3, 2013
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In: The Student Lawyer, The American Bar Association, May 3, 2013
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In: New labor forum: a journal of ideas, analysis and debate, Band 25, Heft 1, S. 78-85
ISSN: 1557-2978
In: Widener Law Review, Band 20, Heft 165, S. 2014
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On June 21, 2011, the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) charged the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (UNC) with a number of NCAA legislation violations, including "not adequately and consistently monitor[ing] social networking activity that visibly illustrated potential amateurism violations within the football program[.]" While the NCAA's bylaws regarding member institution conduct indirectly impacts social media oversight, the NCAA's lack of a social media monitoring policy creates uncertainty as to how member institutions should deal with potential violations of a non-existing policy. Coupled with concerns about their public image, tort liability, and their student-athletes' safety, NCAA member institutions must develop a social media monitoring policy that does not infringe on constitutional free speech rights or more specific social media privacy laws. Ultimately, monitoring publicly available social media might be the safest and the best way to protect the institutions' interests without violating their student-athletes' legal rights.
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In: Boston University Journal of Science and Technology Law, Band 18, Heft 150
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