Law Bulletins

Summary
Yaesul provides legal counsel on a variety of transactional matters including intellectual property, technology transactions, information technology, privacy, and artificial intelligence. She assists with assessing risk and drafting of SaaS agreements, privacy policies, terms of use, master service agreements, statements of work, license agreements, employee intellectual property assignment agreements among many others.
She has experience working with clients to protect their intellectual property assets of all sizes on sell- and buy-side deals, assessing risk to help them successfully acquire or sell their intellectual property assets. Yaesul provides a wide range of other services, including advisory on intellectual property rights as they relate to secured transactions.
Prior to her legal career, Yaesul worked at the White House as an intern in the Office of Cabinet Affairs and later in the White House Domestic Policy Council as a Policy Advisor. She also worked at the Foreign Agricultural Service for the U.S. Department of Agriculture. During her tenure at the Northwestern Pritzker School of Law, she served as a UNICEF Fellow for the United Nations and a legal extern for the American Medical Association.
Yaesul earned her J.D. from Northwestern University Pritzker School of Law where she was an Associate Editor for the Northwestern Journal of Law and Social Policy and the Vice President of the Asian Pacific American Law Students Association’s Professional Development Committee. She holds a master’s degree in public management from Johns Hopkins University and a bachelor’s degree, summa cum laude, in political science from Emory University.
All Service Areas
All Industries
Education
- Northwestern University Pritzker School of Law (2021)
Northwestern Journal of Law and Social Policy, Associate Editor
- Johns Hopkins University (2016)
M.A. – Public Management
- Emory University (2012)
summa cum laude
B.A. – Political Science
Admissions
- State - Illinois
News
Does Fair Use Apply To Training Generative AI Systems? In a “Pre-Publication” Report, the United States Copyright Office Says: “It depends.”