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AOI: Law and Technology

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Professor Gil Seinfeld Professor Gil Seinfeld

@UMICHLAW Fall 2015

Seinfeld Searches Younger Doctrine for Answers in Google Inc. v. Hood

An authority on federal courts and jurisdiction, Professor Gil Seinfeld acknowledges that it is a rare occasion when the public’s attention is captured by a case that aligns with his scholarly interests. Google Inc. v. Hood was just such an exception.

Fall 2014 Feature Startup Central Fall 2014 Feature Startup Central

Features Fall 2014

Startup Central

If you want to be an entrepreneur, understand that you’ll have to be part of a team if you’re going to be successful. This, according to Geoff Entress, ’98, a Seattle-based investor who has backed more than 
125 companies in the past 15 years.

More advice from Entress: Be comfortable with risk. Be visionary. Don’t be a jerk. And go to law school.

Ben Gubernick, ‘11; CEO MJ Cartwright; and Prof. J.J. Prescott. Ben Gubernick, ‘11; CEO MJ Cartwright; and Prof. J.J. Prescott.

Features Fall 2014

Transforming What It Means to “Go to Court”

What if your day in court didn’t have to be in court? That’s the idea that led Michigan Law Professor J.J. Prescott and Ben Gubernick, ’11, his former student, to invent a first-of-its-kind technology that helps people interact with courts online, at any time of day, without needing to hire an attorney.

Geoff Entress, ’98 Geoff Entress, ’98

Features Fall 2014

Good Fortune: An Angel Investor Helps Entrepreneurs Soar

“An entrepreneur can’t do everything themselves, so they need a team around them,” says Geoff Entress, ’98, a Seattle-based investor who has backed more than 125 companies in the last 15 years. Today, the Pittsburgh native is a venture partner with Voyager Capital, sits on the boards of 11 companies, and is what’s called an angel investor—that is, someone who provides personal capital to businesses trying to get off the ground.

Carl E. Schneider, ’79 Carl E. Schneider, ’79

@UMICHLAW Fall 2014

New Book by Prof. Schneider Focuses on the Failure of Mandated Disclosure

Mandated disclosure. It’s the 15,000 words that stand between an iTunes user and his 99-cent download, the fine print on a doctor’s consent form, and the focus of a new book by Michigan Law Professor Carl E. Schneider, ’79.