Brookelynn Stone examines the recently filed case Estรฉe Lauder Inc. et al. v. Walmart Inc. et al., which accuses Walmart of trademark infringement and seeks to hold Walmart accountable for non-genuine products sold by third party sellers on its online marketplace. She explores the key issues likely to shape the outcome of the case and what a ruling in favor of the plaintiffs could signal to large e-commerce platforms and its potential impact on the future of third-party sales.
Pure Versus Professional Speech: Limits to Revoking Public Employee Benefits
Nathan Steineker analyzes a public pension fund policy permitting the revocation of a retireeโs benefits based on conduct that may raise concerns under the First and Fourteenth Amendments.
Is Social Media the Next Big Tobacco? Public Nuisance Litigation and the Limits of Section 230
Kennedy Aikey examines the growing wave of litigation against major social media companies, specifically the recent case holding Meta and YouTube liable, and asks whether social media could become the next Big Tobacco. She explores how plaintiffs use nuisance theories to argue that platforms such as Meta, YouTube, TikTok, and Snap Inc. intentionally designed addictive platforms that harm youth mental health. She also analyzes whether claims that focus on the design of social media platforms, rather than on user-generated content, could allow plaintiffs to bypass the liability shield created by Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act.
No Parking Any Time: State Legislation Preempting Local Minimum Parking Requirements
Andrew Pyles discusses the Northern Illinois Transit Authority Act, which forbids local governments from requiring parking around transit stations, focusing on whether states should preempt local land-use laws through sweeping legislation.
AI as a Force Multiplier: The New Era of Serial ADA Litigation
AI is transforming ADA litigation, making it easier than ever for serial filers to generate high volume claims. But as courts confront fabricated citations and AI assisted filings, the systemโs vulnerabilities are becoming increasingly apparent. In her latest article, Mofe Koya explores how AI is reshaping enforcementโand the challenges that come with it.
Trump v. Colbert: A Discussion on the Administration’s Censorship of CBS and its Affiliates
Jack Frischen examines the Trump Administrationโs involvement with CBS Broadcasting and how it likely amounts to intentional censorship of their competing views by use of antiquated laws and bullying tactics
Steps, Sleep, Safety: Rethinking Privacy for Wearable Health Devices
Katie Bunch examines how wearable healthcare devices collect sensitive health data that often falls outside of HIPAA protections. She explores potential gaps in federal and state privacy laws and argues for stronger consent requirements, expanded HIPAA coverage, and more uniform protections to ensure consumersโ health information is safeguarded as technology continues to advance.
A Silver Lining: Could the Repeal of the Endangerment Finding Allow for a New Mechanism to Challenge Power Companies Through Public Nuisance Litigation?
Stella Brocker explores how the repeal of the endangerment finding may open the door to public nuisance claims against power companies. This action was previously barred by the 2011 Supreme Court decision in American Electric Power Co. v. Connecticut, which held that the EPAโs Endangerment Finding formed part of a congressional statutory scheme that displaced federal public nuisance claims. She argues that in the absence of this statutory scheme, these claims should now be able to proceed in federal court, allowing injured parties an opportunity to seek relief from those who are largely responsible for the emissions contributing to climate change.
“Leave No Trace” – Except My Face: Politicization of the National Park Service
Josh Smith explores the growing tension between presidential self-promotion and the law governing Americaโs public lands. Using the Trump Administrationโs placement of presidential imagery on national park passes as a case study, this Article analyzes whether politicizing public lands exceeds statutory authority and erodes the constitutional norm of politically neutral governance.
Below the Floor: How States are Challenging Federal Child Labor Law
Maggie Traubert explores how recent state efforts to expand youth employment create conflicts with federal child labor laws, leaving businesses uncertain of the law and young workers potentially at risk of abuse. The article examines how state child labor statutes disrupt the cooperative federalism model, function as โzombie laws,โ exploit enforcement gaps, and impose asymmetric legal burdens on businesses.
