Siddartha Rao's profile

    Siddartha Rao

    Top rated Business Litigation attorney in New York, New York

    Education Qualification:

    The University of Texas School of Law

    Practice Areas:

    Business litigation,

    Intellectual property,

    Technology transactions,

    Appellate,

    Communications,

    Contracts,

    Trademarks

    One Battery Park Plaza 7th FloorNew York, New York, 10004

    First Admitted: 2009, New York

    Professional Webpage: https://www.romanolaw.com/legal-team/siddartha-rao/

    Bar/Professional Activity:
    • New York (2009), U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York (2009), U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York (2011), U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York (2011), U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of New York (2015), U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit (2012)
    • New York City Bar Association Member; Member and Secretary Information Technology and Cyber Law Committee
    Educational Background:
    • Middlebury College B.A., (2004)
    White Papers:
    • This summary of the Sekisui v. Hart opinion provides an analysis of the case's result and reasoning within the broader context of developing law on electronic discovery and proposed amendments to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure., Author, E-Discovery, 2013
    Scholarly Lectures/Writings:
    • To kick off the JLCW second issue, I co-authored a foreword summarizing the recent developments in cyber security law and policy, analyzing and presenting survey data of hundreds of business entities across the world concerning cyber threat preparedness, and advancing proposals for federal policy on cyber issues affecting the private sector., Co-Author, Cyber Warfare and the Corporate Environment, Journal of Law and Cyber Warfare, Cyber Policy, Cyber Security, Operations Risk, Data Privacy
    • The severe disparity in the incidence of life threatening disease between developed and developing countries cannot be ignored.  Exacerbating this overwhelming concentration of disease is severe poverty which restricts access to preventative medicine. The prices necessitated by pharmaceutical patent protection contribute to a severe inequity in access to needed health care: a “global drug gap.”  This paper proposes a mechanism using existing treaty law to foster an economically viable and cooperative approach between patent holders and compulsory licensees to help close the global drug gap., Author, Closing the Global Drug Gap: A Pragmatic Approach to the Problem of Access to Medicines, Journal of Legal Technology Risk Management, Pharmaceuticals, International Patent, Human Rights, 2008
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