Symposium – Internet Privacy Regulation
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The Data Surveillance State in the United States and Europe
Europe and the United States recognize privacy as a fundamental pillar of democracy. The U.S. Constitution enshrines protection against state… Read More
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Setting the Tipping Point for Disclosing the Identity of Anonymous Online Speakers: Lessons from Other Disclosure Contexts
Anonymous speech can have great First Amendment value. But anonymous speech—and perhaps especially anonymous online speech—can sometimes inflict substantial harm,… Read More
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The Internet and Inequality: A Comment on the NSA Spying Scandal
In this Essay, I have three principal aims. First, I reconceptualize what is really at stake in the debate over… Read More
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Failing Expectations: Fourth Amendment Doctrine in the Era of Total Surveillance
This Essay takes up and critiques the contemporary doctrine by posing two sets of related questions. First, what are we… Read More
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The Right to Erasure: Privacy, Data Brokers, and the Indefinite Retention of Data
The world moves swiftly ahead on the digital platform. The Internet is a place for disseminating information and browsing alone. … Read More
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Big Data Ethics
We are on the cusp of a “Big Data” Revolution. Increasingly large datasets are being mined for important predictions and… Read More
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Criminalizing Revenge Porn
In this Article we make the case for the direct criminalization of nonconsensual pornography. Current civil law remedies, including copyright… Read More
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Hate Speech in Cyberspace
Hate speech on the Internet has become a source of concern among many in the civil rights community. African Americans,… Read More
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Alan Westin’s Privacy Homo Economicus
A regime of “notice and choice” largely governs U.S. Internet privacy law. Companies, long encouraged by regulators, issue privacy policies… Read More
