Re: Re Fujitsu....How many times....ronran
in response to
by
posted on
Feb 10, 2007 03:21PM
"I don't use "wikipedia", although I am sure it has value in some areas such as childrens' book reports and so forth. The point is that you can get a lot of "free information" on the net --- but when you are dealing with serious legal concepts and your investment dollars, it is always best to be sure that you are consulting a truly authoritative source."
Is the good professor not a "truly authoratative source"?
http://picker.typepad.com/legal_infr...
Leffmann Professor of Commercial Law, University of Chicago
Director, John M. Olin Program in Law and Economics
Senior Fellow, The Computation Institute of the University of Chicago and Argonne National Laboratory
Randal C. Picker currently teaches classes in Antitrust, Network Industries, and Secured Transactions, along with co-teaching a seminar on The Legal Infrastructure of High-Tech Industries. He also co-runs The Law and Economics workshop. In prior years, Professor Picker has taught Bankruptcy and Corporate Reorganizations, Commercial Law and Civil Procedure. Next year, he and Professor Lichtman will teach a new course, Technology, Innovation and Society.<?XML:NAMESPACE PREFIX = O />
Randy Picker graduated from the College of the University in 1980, cum laude, with a Bachelor of Arts in economics and was elected to Phi Beta Kappa. He then spent two years in the Department of Economics, where he was a Friedman Fellow, completing his doctoral course work and exams. He received a masters degree in 1982. Thereafter, he attended the Law School and graduated in 1985 cum laude. He is a member of the Order of the Coif. While at the Law School, Mr. Picker was an associate editor of the Law Review. After graduation, Mr. Picker clerked for Judge Richard A. Posner of the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit. He then spent three years with Sidley & Austin in Chicago, where he worked in the areas of debt restructuring and corporate reorganizations in bankruptcy.
Mr. Picker is a member of the National Bankruptcy Conference, vice-chair of the legislation committee and served as project reporter for the Conference's Bankruptcy Code Review Project. He is also a commissioner to the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws and served as a member of the drafting committee to revise Article 9 of the Uniform Commercial Code.
Professor Picker is probably best known for his work Game Theory and the Law, co-authored with Douglas G. Baird and Robert Gertner.
His recent research has focused on the Federal Trade Commission’s case against Intel, and in particular, the role of cross-licensing of intellectual property. He has also extended his analysis of game theory and the law by incorporating agent-based computer simulations.
Recent Publications and Working Papers:
Courses:
Be well