UC Berkeley, School of Law

421 Boalt Hall; Berkeley, CA 94720

law.berkeley.edu/bclt

 

Dear Students and Faculty,
 
This week in our Law & Tech Speaker Series we have guest speakers from Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe LLP on Thursday, 11/3. Please note that there is no lunch talk on Tuesday, 11/1. On Tuesday, there will be a CDO event on public service careers, and on Wednesday, 11/2, there will be a talk from Ryan Horning, Assistant General Counsel for the Oakland A's. 
 
Be sure to attend the Berkeley Center for Law and Technology's Fall Networking Mixer on November 3rd! More details can be found below.  
 
The Patent Quality Writing Competition deadline for submissions has been extended to November 7.
 
Applications are still being accepted for the Law & Technology Certificate; it's easy to apply and most students qualify.
 
See below for more information on these and other events, opportunities and more.
 
If you have any questions about this week's content or items for inclusion in future newsletters, please email bclt@law.berkeley.eduAll items for inclusion must be submitted by 12:00 p.m. Friday of the week prior to publication.

 

 

THIS WEEK

 

 


Public Interest/Public Service Career Fair

 

Tuesday, November 1, 2016

12:45 PM - 2:00 PM
Steinhart, Warren, Donor Lobby, Goldberg
 

Once again this year, the Berkeley Law Career Development Office and Field Placement Program are combining their annual fall outreach events, jointly hosting the PI/PS Internship and Career Fair. We are excited to offer you and our public service-minded students this excellent opportunity to connect!

The PI/PS Internship and Career Fair is “table-talk” style, where agencies can talk with students about summer employment, academic year placements, pro bono work, and other career opportunities at your organization.

Lunch will be provided.

 

 

SELS Presents: Oakland A's Senior Counsel, Ryan Horning

 

 

Lawyering in the Major Leagues

Wednesday, November 2, 2016

12:45 PM - 1:45 PM
Boalt Hall, Room 132
 

Senior Counsel for the Oakland Athletics Ryan Horning joins SELS to speak on his extensive experience as a lawyer in the big leagues. This is an excellent opportunity to openly discuss some of the key legal aspects that arise in the arena of professional sports, including drafting and negotiating sponsorship agreements, understanding sports marketing, and learning the terminology to facilitate communication with business people within the sports organization. Come and take a lesson from the pros!  

Lunch will be provided.


This event is co-sponsored by SELS, BCLT, and BCLBE. 

 

 

BCLT/BTLJ Law & Tech Speaker Series: Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe LLP

 

 

"Global Hacking Warrants or Common Sense Reform?"

 

Thursday, November 3, 2016

12:45 PM - 1:45 PM
Boalt Hall, Room 105
 

A pending change to the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure would allow issuance of warrants for remote searches of computers without regard to physical location. Would this permit, as a USA Today headline said, "mass hacking of Americans' computers by feds," or is it a modest and necessary response to the realities of investigations involving computer botnets and the online distribution of child pornography?  Orrick Senior Associates Jacob Heath and Rob Uriarte will discuss the proposed amendments to Rule 41.

 

Lunch is served for students staying through the entire presentation.

 

Co-sponsored by the Berkeley Center for Law & Technology, Berkeley Technology Law Journal, and Berkeley Information Privacy Law Association.

 

This event is open to current Berkeley Law students, Berkeley Law affiliates and BCLT law firm sponsors only.

 

 

BCLT Fall Networking Mixer

 

 

Thursday, November 3, 2016

6:30 PM - 8:00 PM
Goldberg Room (2nd Floor of Boalt Hall)
 

Join BCLT/BTLJ for our 2016 Fall Networking Mixer. Attendees will include attorneys from the top IP law firms in the area and 1L, 2L and 3L Berkeley Law students. Do not miss this exclusive networking opportunity. Drinks and light refreshments will be served.

 

Registration is complimentary but required. RSVP by Monday, October 24.  RSVP online »

 

This event is open only to current Berkeley Law J.D. students and BCLT law firm and corporate sponsors. A special event is being planned for LL.M. students on Thursday, November 17. More information will be circulated in a few weeks.

 

The Fall Mixer is followed by the CDO Practice Area Program: "What’s Out There: Finding the Right Legal Specialty for You” held in the Warren Room 5:00-6:30pm.

 

Note: A list of firms that will be in attendance will be available on Monday, November 1.

 

More information can be found here >>

 

 

 

UPCOMING EVENTS

 

 

 

Women in Tech Law Presents: It's LIT (Ladies in Tech)

 

Wednesday, November 9, 2016

1:00 PM
Boalt Hall, Goldberg Room
 
Come join the discussion with Women of Tech Law Leaders and CHiPs co-founders:
 
Anirma Gupta, General Counsel for Tanium Inc.
Mallun Yen, Executive Vice President for RPX Corp.
Julie Mar-Spinola, Chief Intellectual Property Officer and VP of Legal Operations 
 
Q&A after the discussion.
 
Lunch will be served. 
 

 

International Law and Stability in Cyberspace

 

Thursday, November 10, 2016

4:30 PM
Boalt Hall, Room 105
 
On Thursday, November 10th, the State Department Legal Advisor, Brian Egan '00, will be giving a public lecture entitled "International Law and Stability in Cyberspace."
 
Egan was sworn in as State Department Legal Adviser in February 2016. He has served as Legal Adviser to the National Security Council and Deputy Assistant to the President and Deputy Counsel to the President at the White House (2013-16); Assistant General Counsel for Enforcement and Intelligence at the Department of the Treasury (2012-2013); Deputy Legal Adviser to the National Security Staff and Special Assistant to the President and Associate Counsel to the President (2011-12); and Deputy Legal Adviser to the National Security Staff (2009-11); and Attorney-Adviser at the Department of State (2005-09).
 
Sponsored by HRC, BCLBE, and BCLT. 
 

 

BERC@Boalt Nerd Nite

 

Tuesday, November 15, 2016

6:00 PM - 9:00 PM

Boalt Hall, Goldberg Room

 

The BERC@Boalt Nerd Nite will give an opportunity for energy-minded folks to get together and hear some lovable nerds talk about what they are working on. Cal Grad Students will give 10-20 minute talks relating to emerging energy-related technologies, policies, businesses, and legal topics.

 

Food and drinks will be provided! If you plan on coming please RSVP at http://berc-boalt-nerdnite.eventbrite.com so we know how much to provide.

 

 

 

LAW AND TECH OPPORTUNITIES

 

 

 

Scholarship for Immigrants and Children of Immigrants: Deadline: Nov 1

 

The Paul & Daisy Soros Fellowships for New Americans is a merit-based graduate school fellowship for immigrants and children of immigrants who are 30 or younger as of the application deadline: November 1, 2016. Every year, the program selects 30 Fellows, each of whom receives up to $90,000 over one to two years for full-time graduate study in any discipline or profession at a US graduate institution. If born abroad, an applicant must be a naturalized citizen, a green card holder, or a DACA recipient. If born in the United States, an applicant’s parents must have been born abroad as non-US citizens. Law school applicants must be 1 or 2Ls. More information and the online application can be found at www.pdsoros.org.

 

 

ACLU-Northern California Accepting Applications for Spring and Summer 2017 Law & Policy Internship Program





The ACLU of Northern California invites applications for Spring and Summer 2017 internships in its Legal-Policy Department. Internships are full- or part-time, generally requiring a 16–24 hours per week commitment. Interns will be eligible for Law School field placement credit. Students must commit to working all semester (12–14 weeks). The ACLU prefers that part-time interns commit to work full work days (i.e., two eight-hour days rather than four four-hour days) and recommends that students commit as many days a week as possible for the best internship experience. (For details about field placement credits, contact Sue Schechter, sschechter@law.berkeley.edu.)

 


Litigation internships

Litigation Interns work directly with one or more attorneys and conduct legal research and writing in support of active and potential impact litigation that spans the ACLU's issue areas. When possible, interns attend appellate arguments, trial proceedings, and depositions.  Additionally, interns may be asked to investigate facts and possible legal claims arising from intakes received via the Civil Liberties Hotline. Interns are encouraged to attend and participate in monthly program meetings, where prospective litigation and strategy are discussed. The Legal-Policy Department accepts 4-5 Litigation Interns per term. Litigation intern positions open in both our San Francisco and Fresno offices.

 

Technology & Civil Liberties internship

The Technology and Civil Liberties Intern will participate in cutting edge legal and policy work to safeguard privacy and free speech in the modern digital world. Interns will help draft reports, analyses, articles, and testimony to the legislature and regulatory agencies. Interns will have the opportunity to participate in strategy meetings with other ACLU staff, work with other interns in the San Francisco office, and likely attend technology meetings and events throughout the Bay Area. 

 

 
SCHOOL YEAR INTERNSHIPS 
School year internships are full- or part-time, generally requiring a 16 – 24 hours per week commitment. Students on the semester system must be able to commit to working 12 – 14 weeks. Students on the quarter system can serve shorter quarter-long internships. We greatly prefer that part-time interns commit to work full work days (i.e., two eight-hour days rather than four four-hour days) and recommend that students commit as many days a week as possible for the best internship experience. Semester interns earn academic credit as determined by their law schools. Work-study funding may be available. 
 
SUMMER INTERNSHIPS
Summer internships are full-time for 10 – 12 weeks and usually begin the day after Memorial Day. “Split” summers may be considered where the intern is available for a minimum of 10 weeks. Part-time internships are not available during the summer. For summer internships, students are encouraged to seek independent funding through their schools where available. The ACLU-NC will consider matching grants and may provide additional funding as available. Summer internships available in both our San Francisco and Fresno offices.
 
APPLICATION DEADLINES 
Applicants are encouraged to apply early in the hiring cycle as decisions are made on a rolling basis.
 
Spring term: Applications will be accepted beginning September 15 for the following spring term.
 
Summer term: Applications will be accepted beginning October 15 for the following summer term.
Fall term: Applications will be accepted beginning February 15 for the following fall term.

 

HOW TO APPLY
Applications must include the following: (1) Cover Letter that includes a statement about (a) which internship you are applying for, (b) a brief statement about why you want to work on that issue at the ACLU-NC, and (c) how you encountered the internship opening; (2) Resume; (3) Writing Sample; and, (4) List of References with contact information. 
 
Pursuant to NALP rules, 1L students should not submit application materials prior to December 1.

 

For full details, information on other internships, and to apply go here>>.

 

 
Patent Quality Writing Competition: Deadline Extended
 
The Patent Quality Initiative is hosting a writing competition for law students to research and write about issues related to patent quality. The First Place entry will be awarded $3,000 and Second Place will be awarded $1,500. Both winning articles will be published on the Patently-O Patent Law Journal and on the Patent Quality Initiative’s website. 

The deadline for entries has been extended to November 7, 2016.

All entries must be submitted to the following email address: writing.competition@patentqualityinitiative.com with “PQI Writing Competition” in the subject line. The full competition information and entry requirements are here

 
NOTE: If you submitted an entry to the email address listed in an earlier version of the rules or an earlier notice here in eNews, you should resubmit your entry to the corrected email address.
 
 
UC Berkeley School of Information: Fellowship
 
Apply to be a 2017 Fellow with the Center for Technology, Society & Policy
The Center for Technology, Society & Policy, a student-led organization hosted at the UCB School of Information, is now accepting proposals for its 2017 Fellows program. CTSP is a multidisciplinary design/build center focused on social and policy issues arising from the development and adoption of technology. 

Law students are eligible and encouraged to apply and propose a project to CTSP by November 28, 2016. Fellows receive $2000 in funding for projects that support one of CTSP four focus areas: engineering ethics; digital citizenship; evaluating technology policy; and supporting future technologists. To learn more about CTSP and past projects and to apply for the fellowship, visit ctsp.berkeley.edu
 
 
Law & Technology Certificate Program
 
Applications are now being accepted for the Law & Technology Certificate program.
 
The Law & Technology Certificate recognizes successful completion of a specialized course of study in addition to an activity component. The curricular requirements emphasize depth and breadth of coverage and afford students substantial flexibility in adapting their course of study toward a range of career paths at the growing intersection of law and technology.
 
 

 

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