Daniel Lyons (@profdaniellyons) 's Twitter Profile
Daniel Lyons

@profdaniellyons

Husband & father. Professor & Assoc Dean @bclaw. Nonresident senior fellow @AEI. Telecom/Internet law, Energy, Admin Law.

"An appropriate number of dad jokes."

ID: 2181300102

linkhttps://www.aei.org/profile/daniel-lyons/ calendar_today08-11-2013 02:32:53

9,9K Tweet

1,1K Followers

1,1K Following

Alec Stapp (@alecstapp) 's Twitter Profile Photo

China is eating our lunch on nuclear energy: 1. The 2 US Vogtle reactors were 7 years late & $17 billion over budget 2. China built 13 similar reactors over the same period (with 33 more reactors underway) 3. By 2030, China's nuclear capacity is set to surpass the US 4. China

China is eating our lunch on nuclear energy:

1. The 2 US Vogtle reactors were 7 years late & $17 billion over budget

2. China built 13 similar reactors over the same period (with 33 more reactors underway)

3. By 2030, China's nuclear capacity is set to surpass the US

4. China
AEI Tech Policy (@aeitech) 's Twitter Profile Photo

AEI’s Daniel Lyons touched on Jimmy Kimmel, the FCC, and Murthy at a recent web event. Watch the full recording here: aei.org/events/policin…

Jonah Goldberg (@jonahdispatch) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The status of Kevin Roberts soul is up to others to speculate about. But he has sold off bits and pieces of Heritage’s integrity that will take the next president or the one after a generation to restore. It’s very sad.

Cornell Chronicle (@cornellnews) 's Twitter Profile Photo

First Amendment law and trying to “figure out what’s true” are guiding principles for #FreeSpeech on college campuses, said constitutional scholar Cass Sunstein in Cornell ILR School’s annual Milton Konvitz Memorial Lecture. Cornell Law School Harvard University news.cornell.edu/stories/2025/1…

Alan Cole (@alanmcole) 's Twitter Profile Photo

This is a whole line of argument I never thought about before but makes a great deal of sense. I feel a duty to amplify it because it wasn’t obvious to me but seems smart now that I hear it. Granting someone power to do big things, but not small things, is not contradictory.

Jonathan Turley (@jonathanturley) 's Twitter Profile Photo

It was an interesting oral argument on tariffs (at least for us dysfunctional law nerds). My view has not changed. I think that the odds favor the challengers. Sauer did a brilliant job, but he faced an obviously skeptical and discomforted Court...

Thom Lambert (@profthomlambert) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Herb Hovenkamp (Herbert hovenkamp) spent most of his career at Iowa Law, an excellent but non-elite law school. He could have gone anywhere. He devoted countless hours to stewarding one of the most respected and influential treatises in all of law. He could command huge bucks for his

Matthias Schmidt (@eurofounder) 's Twitter Profile Photo

I was at a cafe in Brussels ordering coffee Barista asked for my name and wrote it on a cup I caught myself and said “Wait, did I consent to you storing my name?” She put down the marker and looked at me confused I explained that under GDPR, names are personal identifiable

Int'l Ctr Law & Econ (@laweconcenter) 's Twitter Profile Photo

In a SIS v. Intuitive Amicus brief, scholars explain that “SIS is incorrect that market power in the foremarket alone is legally or economically sufficient to support such single-brand aftermarket theory.” Even monopolists face price limits.🔗⬇️

In a SIS v. Intuitive Amicus brief, scholars explain that “SIS is incorrect that market power in the foremarket alone is legally or economically sufficient to support such single-brand aftermarket theory.” Even monopolists face price limits.🔗⬇️
Josh Barro (@jbarro) 's Twitter Profile Photo

These choices to undermine selective admission are financially self-defeating for colleges. If you destroy the signaling value of the degree, you destroy your ability to command high tuition.

Niko McCarty 🧫 (@nikomccarty) 's Twitter Profile Photo

I'm a simple man. If I see a field trial of genetically-engineered trees, I read it. A recent preprint reports the largest field trial to-date of American Chestnut trees engineered to resist a blight. And the results look promising. For context: The U.S. was once filled with

I'm a simple man. If I see a field trial of genetically-engineered trees, I read it.

A recent preprint reports the largest field trial to-date of American Chestnut trees engineered to resist a blight. And the results look promising.

For context: The U.S. was once filled with
AEI Tech Policy (@aeitech) 's Twitter Profile Photo

“By defining the market broadly and evaluating Meta’s position as it exists today, the court applied those principles with clarity and restraint. The result is a reminder that competition in technology is vigorous, unpredictable, and shaped far more by innovation than by the size

Lomez (@l0m3z) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Trite observation maybe, but reading about Portuguese and later Dutch merchant traders traversing the uncharted open seas and enduring unspeakable peril to reach the Orient (the first sanctioned Dutch expedition to Java in 1596 lost 150 out of 250 men and resulted in a minor