The Duke Law and Technology Review can be found only online. The Review publishes concise and readable student-written pieces on current issues in law and technology. The articles, known as iBriefs, attempt to "fill the gap" between the timely (but shallow) newspaper story and the exhaustive (but outdated and turgid) law review article. Recent iBriefs have included such titles as:
- What, if Any, Are the Ethical Obligations of the U.S. Patent Office?: A Closer Look at the Biological Sampling of Indigenous Groups
- Injunction Junction: Remembering the Proper Function and Form of Equitable Relief in Trademark Law
- Download, Stream, or Somewhere in Between: The Potential for Legal Music Use in Podcasting
- Patent Misuse in Patent Pool Licensing: From National Harrow to “The Nine No-Nos” to Not Likely
- Barriers to Innovation: Intellectual Property Transaction Costs in Scientific Collaboration
- Buggy Whips and Broadcast Flags: The Need for a New Politics of Expression
- Regulating Indecency: The Federal Communication Commission's Threat to the First Amendment

