JHTL is student-run by an Editorial Board of past JHTL staff members. Students who become JHTL staff members are able to receive academic credit for working on a piece for publication and cite-checking. The Editorial Board coordinates and supervises the research and writing development for all JHTL staff members. Staff members are selected through the summer write-on competition, and membership is open to all students who qualify, not just those concentrating in Intellectual Property. A unique feature of JHTL as a Suffolk Law Honor Board is its ability to publish all articles online, which allows members to publish their materials while still at Suffolk. Making articles available on Westlaw, Lexis, and the JHTL Web site allows members of the legal community direct access to our timely articles, and notes. For more information about the JHTL, please contact us at jhtl@suffolk.edu. If you are interested in submitting an Article for publication, please review our policy on Article Submissions.

Powering the Future: How Google and Tech Giants are Revolutionizing U.S. Electricity with Small Modular Reactors
By: Evan Mason Google has announced a historic agreement to purchase advanced nuclear energy to support its AI technologies and clean, affordable energy goals. This landmark deal, branded as the world’s first corporate agreement for electricity sourced from advanced...

Unlocking Minds: The Promise of Neurotechnology and the Challenge of Data Privacy
By: Grace Drost Microchips in the brain and mind-reading devices sound like something straight out of a science fiction film. However, science fiction is increasingly sounding like reality. Neuralink, a device designed to give paralyzed patients the ability to...

Sue Anyone with a Click of a Button? FTC Cracks Down on DoNotPay’s Misleading AI Claims
By: Kerry L. Alvarez How comfortable are you asking for legal advice on the internet? Do you trust the accuracy of what you find in your search results? Now, imagine bypassing traditional legal fees and hiring an internet “Robot Lawyer” instead of a human attorney. ...