Introducing Kristen Osenga
posted by Deven Desai
I am pleased to announce that Kristen Osenga will be joining us as a guest blogger this month.
Kristen teaches at the University of Richmond, School of Law. Kristen graduated from the University of Illinois College of Law, Magna Cum Laude. She is a member of the Order of the Coif and was notes editor on the University Of Illinois Journal Of Law, Technology & Policy. In addition she has an M.S., Electrical Engineering from Southern Illinois University (2001) a B.S.E., Electrical Engineering from the University of Iowa (1994). She teaches Patent Law; Trademark and Unfair Competition Law; International Intellectual Property.
Her publications include:
*Information May Want to Be Free, but Information Products Do Not: Protecting and Facilitating Transactions in Information Products, __ Cardozo Law Rev. ___ (forthcoming 2009)
*Ants, Elephant Guns, and Statutory Subject Matter, 39 Arizona State Law Journal 1087 ( 2007).
*Rembrandts in the Research Lab: Why Universities should Take a Lesson from Big Business to Increase Innovation, 59 Maine Law Review 407 (2007).
*Linguistics and Claim Construction, 38 Rutgers University Law Journal 61(2006).
*Entrance Ramps, Tolls, and Express Lanes – Proposals for Decreasing Traffic Congestion in the Patent Office, 33 Florida State University Law Review 119 (2005).
*Rethinking Reexamination Reform: Is it time for corrective surgery or is it time to amputate?, 14 Fordham Intellectual Property, Media, & Entertainment Law Journal 217 (2003).
Welcome, Kristen!
November 1, 2008 at 2:10 pm
Posted in: Administrative Announcements
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Responses (2)
Mainda - November 22, 2008 at 5:11 pm
Hi Kristen
I found your article about ‘Simulating Consumer Surveys Using an iPod’ very interesting – your students are very lucky to be given such an interesting way to learn.
I have been trying to research the use of marketing surveys in litigation in the UK and Europe and so far have found only a handful of cases and hardly any articles or books about the subject by academics or lawyers on this side of the Atlantic.
Why is it that consumer surveys in UK/Europe are not (i’m assuming) as widely used in litigation as they are in the US? Are they viewed differently by judges here? Do you think that their use overall will grow or diminish? what are the challenges? and what are your views of the use internet surveys as evidence?
Thank you
Evan - December 9, 2008 at 2:07 am
It’s Not Fair!!! Foxes are running through my mind as I sleep! Haha, 2AM and test in the morning. Professor Osenga, Thanks for Everything, but please let me know if I have a future interest, one that is not divestable or contingent, or can claim possibly promissory estoppel in a degree? Cheers–E
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