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AOI: Law and Technology

35 results

Nina Ruvinsky Nina Ruvinsky

In Practice Winter 2024-2025

Nina Ruvinsky, ’13: Historic Fraud in a Nascent Market

When fraud charges against Sam Bankman-Fried jolted the financial world in December 2022, it capped several frenetic weeks of work for Nina Ruvinsky, ’13. She and her colleagues at the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, in parallel with counterparts at the US Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York and the Securities Exchange Commission, had brought a complex, first-of-its-kind case, which involved more than $8 billion stolen from Bankman-Fried’s FTX cryptocurrency exchange. 

Stuart Feldstein Stuart Feldstein

Impact Winter 2024-2025

Stuart Feldstein, ’63: Innovating Communications, Inspiring Generosity

Stuart Feldstein began his career in the telecommunications industry with the Federal Communications Commission and later transitioned to private practice. He credits the Law School with preparing him for a successful career and has long felt impelled to give back.

Data visualization Data visualization

Features Winter 2024-2025

Empirical Legal Research Becoming More Popular Among Faculty in Effort to Address Real-world Issues

Recent years have seen a new development in the legal academy: the rise of empirical, data-driven, and collaborative research. Scholars, including a number of Michigan Law faculty members, often hope to use such work to study the real-time effects of the law on people and institutions.

Visualizing facial recognition Visualizing facial recognition

Features Winter 2024-2025

Flawed Facial Recognition Technology Leads to Wrongful Arrest and Historic Settlement

The Law School’s Civil Rights Litigation Initiative worked on behalf of a Michigan man falsely arrested for a crime based on flawed facial recognition technology. A first-of-its-kind settlement achieves the nation’s strongest police department policies and practices constraining law enforcement’s use of the technology. 

A portrait of Nat Pernick, ’86. A portrait of Nat Pernick, ’86.

Impact Summer 2024

Nat Pernick, ’86: Forging a Path in Computers and Medicine

From a young age, Pernick has had a propensity for mathematics and science, which would pave the way for his future in computers and medicine. He recently set up a scholarship to support students interested in the intersection of law and medicine.

A portrait of Kristin Johnson ’03. A portrait of Kristin Johnson ’03.

In Practice Fall 2023

Kristin Johnson ’03: Protecting Consumers by Policing Crypto Markets

As one of five members of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, a sister agency to the Securities and Exchange Commission, Kristin Johnson and her colleagues are charged with regulating US derivatives markets. As such, they oversee the creation and enforcement of rules to prevent fraud and manipulation in the markets they supervise—including crypto.

Zack James Zack James

Class Note Fall 2020

Zack James, ’17: Rethinking the Farm with Autonomous Tractors

Zack James, ’17, can recall the exact moment when building tractors started to pay off. It was August 2019, and James was sitting in his truck, watching an autonomous tractor move up and down a field, planting seeds. “It was the first time I was being paid to do farming services.”

Bayi-Mathijsen, ’85 Bayi-Mathijsen, ’85

Class Note Spring/Summer 2018

Benedicte Bayi-Mathijsen, ’85: Drawn to the World

“I discovered a completely different world at Michigan, and it just took me in a whole new direction,” Bayi-Mathijsen says. She found its “international dimension” to her liking and joined the International Law Society and the Michigan Journal of International Law

Action shot of an automously driven car passing in front of Michigan Law buildings Action shot of an automously driven car passing in front of Michigan Law buildings

Cover Story Winter 2022

On the Move: Mobility at Michigan Law

In June 2018, a boxy vehicle rolled onto the University of Michigan’s North Campus Research Complex. Although it could have been mistaken for a run-of-the-mill shuttle running a mundane route around the complex, one detail set it apart from the average bus: the lack of a driver. 

Icons representing the story. This is a lightbulb, a computer screen with a magnifying glass, a robot at a computer, a lock icon, and recycle icon Icons representing the story. This is a lightbulb, a computer screen with a magnifying glass, a robot at a computer, a lock icon, and recycle icon

Cover Story Fall 2022

The Evolution of the General Counsel

Traditionally, general counsels were relegated to a niche role that addressed the specific legal needs of an organization—such as overseeing litigation, executing contracts, or advising on legal risk. But the role has transformed during the past few decades, and has evolved from a narrow legal resource to the center of an organization’s creative problem solving.