Eric Goldman (born April 15, 1968) is a law professor at Santa Clara University School of Law. He also co-directs the law school's High Tech Law Institute[1] and co-supervises the law school's Privacy Law Certificate.
He has been shortlisted as an "IP Thought Leader" by Managing IP magazine[7] and named an "IP Vanguard" by the California State Bar's Intellectual Property section.[8]
Goldman publishes the Technology & Marketing Law Blog, which covers Internet Law, Intellectual Property, and Advertising Law.[citation needed] The blog was named to the ABA Journal's Blawg 100 Hall of Fame.[9]
Goldman, E. (Spring 2006), "Search Engine Bias and the Demise of Search Engine Utopianism", Yale Journal of Law & Technology, 8: 188, Bibcode:2008wsis.book..121G, SSRN893892.
"Deregulating Relevancy in Internet Trademark Law", Emory Law Journal, 54: 507, 2005, SSRN635803.
"Warez Trading and Criminal Copyright Infringement", Journal of Copyright Society, 51, USA: 395, 2004, SSRN487163.
"Wikipedia's Labor Squeeze and its Consequences", Journal of Telecommunications and High Technology Law, 8, USA: 157, 2010, SSRN487163.
"Emojis and the Law", Washington Law Review, 93, USA: 1227, 2018, SSRN3133412.
Books
Advertising & Marketing Law: Cases and Materials (2nd Edition, 2014; 3rd Edition, 2016; 4th Edition, 2018) [13] co-authored with Rebecca Tushnet (the first casebook on this topic)