I found his page on the actual Santa clara law website, and it specifically mentioned that he founded the chatgpt blog in question. So it looks like he is legitimately a qualified law professor and from his profile it looks like he does specialise in IP law stuff.
I found his page on the actual Santa clara law website, and it specifically mentioned that he founded the chatgpt blog in question. So it looks like he is legitimately a qualified law professor and from his profile it looks like he does specialise in IP law stuff.
On the other hand, the blog has posts with questionable methodology like asking chatgpt for probabilities of lawsuit outcomes.
I would like to hear from other IP law specialists.