Dominique M. Williams
A New Orleans native, Dominique received a Bachelor of Business Administration in Finance from Loyola University New Orleans. After taking a gap year to move to Oakland, California, Dominique returned to New Orleans and continued her undergraduate education while also working full time to put herself through school.
Following her undergraduate education, Dominique went on to receive her Juris Doctor from Tulane University New Orleans, where she focused primarily on corporate and intellectual property law. During law school, Dominique demonstrated her ability to balance her coursework with extracurriculars. Ms. Williams served as a member of Tulane’s Black Law Student’s Association Mock Trial Team, on which she competed both at a regional and national level. Ms. Williams also served as a member of Tulane’s Journal of Technology and Intellectual Property. Ms. Williams’ article, Problem Solved: Is the Fintech Era Uprooting Decades of Discriminatory Lending Practices, in which she took a deep dive into the relationship between artificial intelligence and alternative lending, was published in Volume 23 of the Journal.
Ms. Williams is new to the Dallas area, and enjoys shopping, trying different foods, and traveling in her spare time.
- Loyola University New Orleans
- B.B.A. | Finance
- Tulane University School of Law
- J.D.
- Associate Attorney
- Sul Lee Law Firm, PLLC
- - Current
- “COPYWRITTEN, SO DON’T COPY ME”: HOW COPYRIGHT CAN BE USED TO PROTECT UNIQUE FASHION DESIGNS
- Sul Lee Law Firm, PLLC
- Copyright Ownership in the Age of Generative AI & Chat GPT
- www.sulleelaw.com
- Digital Millennium Copyright Act
- www.sulleelaw.com
- Is Your Idea Protectable?
- www.sulleelaw.com
- Problem Solved?: Is the Fintech Era Uprooting Decades-Long Discriminatory Lending Practices?
- Tulane Journal of Technology and Intellectual Property
- State Bar of Texas  # 24125458
- Member
- - Current
- Texas
- State Bar of Texas
- ID Number: 24125458
- Credit Cards Accepted
- Business Law
- Business Contracts, Business Dissolution, Business Finance, Business Formation, Business Litigation, Franchising, Mergers & Acquisitions, Partnership & Shareholder Disputes
- Intellectual Property
- Communications & Internet Law
- Internet Law, Media & Advertising, Telecommunications Law
- Trademarks
- Trademark Litigation, Trademark Registration
- International Law
- Imports & Exports
- English: Spoken, Written
- Q. Can I read a book on social media such as YouTube or Twitch if I am receiving any revenue from that social media?
- A: I would caution against reading the book, or portions thereof, aloud publicly on a platform where you are receiving revenue. Under copyright law, a copyright owner is given sole and exclusive rights to reproduce the work, create derivative works, perform the work, display the work, or to authorize others to do any of the aforementioned. Reading aloud and being compensated for same may violate the copyright holder's exclusive right to reproduce the work and perform the work.
- Blog
- Sul Lee Law Firm Blog