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  • Non-Sequiturs: 02.09.16
    Non-Sequiturs

    Non-Sequiturs: 02.09.16

    * That hashtag you’re using might just be a registered trademark, but that doesn’t mean it should be. [Buzzfeed]

    * Yale Law students filed a class action representing people held in quarantine for 21 days amid fear of the Ebola virus. [Hartford Courant]

    * The Sixth Circuit holds 10 weeks of constant video surveillance from a public road does not constitute a search under the Fourth Amendment. You know if you just assume you are always being watched, none of this really bothers you. [Volokh Conspiracy]

    * Understanding the rapid fire world of SnapChat is essential if you don’t want to get left behind in the dustbin of history. [Associate’s Mind]

    * Tackling the thorny issue of access to justice, in law school and after. [Reboot Your Law Practice]

    * The ABA House of Delegates joins the call for cameras in the Supreme Court. What do they have against puppies? [Fix the Court]

    * When we say, “life without parole,” what do we really mean? [The New Yorker]

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