The 12th annual Privacy Law Scholars Conference occurred on Thursday, May 29th, 2019 and Friday, May 30th, 2019, was hosted by the University of California, Berkeley, with a pre-conference event on Wednesday, May 29th, 2019 sponsored by Microsoft.
Program
Wednesday, May 29 | Location |
5:30–8:00 PM Pre-PLSC Reception, sponsored by Microsoft Please join Microsoft for an interactive event, discussion and networking opportunity on Wednesday, May 29th.* Microsoft is hosting a panel at 5:30pm comprised entirely of PLSC participants, followed by a 6:30 pm reception and kick-off for the Privacy Law Scholars Conference. This year’s topic is AI & Ethics: Are we headed into a bright future or is winter coming? Light refreshments provided *This event has been planned to comply with the requirements of the Legislative and Executive Branch gift rules. Executive Branch personnel wishing to attend should consult with their designated Agency Ethics Office | University Memorial Stadium 2227 Piedmont Ave Berkeley, CA 94720 (from the plaza level, take the elevators to the club level) |
Thursday, May 30 | |
8:00-9:00 AM Breakfast | Chevron Auditorium, International House |
9:00-9:10 Opening remarks | Chevron Auditorium, International House |
9:15-10:30 Workshop 1 | |
Privacy’s Constitutional Moment, by Woodrow Hartzog (Northeastern University School of Law and College of Computer and Information Science); Neil Richards (Washington University Law), comment by Tara Whalen | Golub Home Room, International House |
When Law Frees Us to Speak, by Danielle Keats Citron (U. Maryland Law School); Jonathon Penney (Citizen Lab, University of Toronto / Princeton CITP), comment by Christopher Wolf | Goldberg Room (297), Law School |
Binary Governance: Lessons from the GDPR’s Approach to Algorithmic Accountability by Margot Kaminski (Colorado Law), comment by Eldar Haber | Sproul Room 1, International House |
Reframing the “Global AI Arms Race” as a Privacy Race to the Top, by Jesse Woo (Kyoto University), comment by Julie Cohen | Sproul Room 2, International House |
Examining the Anomalies, Explaining the Value: Should the USA Freedom Act’s Metadata Program be Extended?, by Susan Landau (Tufts University); Asaf Lubin (Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University), comment by Bryan Cunningham | Room 107, Law School |
An Experiment on Inconsistent Privacy Preferences and the Role of Information Avoidance, by Dan Svirsky (Harvard University), comment by Ashkan Soltani | Room 111, Law School |
From Data Protection to Knowledge Governance, by Pam Dixon (World Privacy Forum); Jane K Winn (University of Washington School of Law), comment by Brenda Leong | Room 136, Law School |
The Case for Safety-Critical Software Professionals, by Bryan Choi (The Ohio State University), comment by Joshua Kroll | Morrison & Foerster Room (298), Law School |
10:30-11:00 Break | Chevron Auditorium, International House |
11-12:15 Workshop 2 | |
Trust, Privacy, and the Legitimacy of Automated Decision-Making, by Kirsten E Martin (George Washington University); Ari E Waldman (New York Law School), comment by Denise Anthony | Warren Room (295), Law School |
A Right to Reasonable Inferences Re-Thinking Data Protection Law in the Age of Big Data and AI, by Sandra Wachter (University of Oxford); Brent Mittelstadt (University of Oxford), comment by Jody Blanke | Golub Home Room, International House |
Legitimacy in Context, by Ashley E Gorham (NYU); Helen Nissenbaum (Cornell Tech); Madelyn R Sanfilippo (CITP, Princeton University); Katherine Strandburg (New York University School of Law); Mark Verstraete (NYU), comment by Daniel Susser | Goldberg Room (297), Law School |
Manipulating Opportunity, by Pauline Kim (Washington University Law School), comment by Victoria Schwartz | Sproul Room 1, International House |
Measuring Data Protection: A Report Card for GDPR, by Omer Tene (iapp); Jules Polonetsky (FPF), comment by Lee Bygrave | Sproul Room 2, International House |
The Law and Politics of Cyberattack Attribution, by Kristen Eichensehr (UCLA School of Law), comment by David Thaw | Room 107, Law School |
A Design for Public Trustee and Privacy Protection Regulation, by Priscilla M Regan (George Mason University), comment by Lisa Austin | Room 111, Law School |
The Role of Satellites and Smart Devices: Data Surprises and Security, Privacy, and Regulatory Challenges, by Anne T McKenna (Penn State Dickinson Law); Amy Gaudion (Penn State Dickinson Law); Jenni Evans (Penn State Institute for CyberScience), comment by Aaron Burstein | Room 136, Law School |
Multi-layered interoperability in practice – the Danish National Police’s implementation of POL-INTEL, by Julia Ballaschk (Danish National Police), comment by Stuart Shapiro | Morrison & Foerster Room (298), Law School |
12:15-1:15 Lunch | Chevron Auditorium, International House |
1:15-2:30 Workshop 3 | |
Political Economy of the Quantum Information Age, by Chris Hoofnagle (UC Berkeley Law), comment by Andrea Matwyshyn | Warren Room (295), Law School |
From Individual Control to Social Protection: New Paradigms for Privacy Law in the Age of Predictive Analytics, by Dennis D Hirsch (Ohio State Moritz College of Law), comment by Deven Desai | Golub Home Room, International House |
A Composition Theory for Privacy Law, by John A Fluitt (Georgetown Institute for Technology Law & Policy); Kobbi Nissim (Georgetown University Dept. of Computer Science); Alexandra Wood (Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society); Aloni Cohen (MIT); Micah Altman (MIT Libraries); Salome Viljoen (Berkman Klein Center), comment by Steven Bellovin | Goldberg Room (297), Law School |
Genetic Genealogy and the Problem of Familial Forensic Identification, by Natalie Ram (University of Baltimore School of Law), comment by Jennifer Lynch | Sproul Room 1, International House |
Legal Implications of Complex Multi-Agent Systems and Robotic Swarms, by Jesse Woo (Kyoto University); Jan Whittington (University of Washington); Daniel Friedman (Stanford University); Tucker Chambers (Crypoptera); Boyang Sa (University of Washington); Feiyang Sun (University of Washington), comment by Lance Hoffman | Sproul Room 2, International House |
Intergovernmental Cooperation in Electronic Surveillance, by Anne E Boustead (University of Arizona), comment by Riana Pfefferkorn | Room 107, Law School |
Unraveling Data Sovereignty, by Jennifer C Daskal (American University Washington College of Law), comment by Charlotte Tschider | Room 111, Law School |
Is Anti-Brown the New Black?: Black Parents as Child Privacy Protectors, by Najarian Peters (Seton Hall University Law), comment by Elana Zeide | Room 136, Law School |
2:30-3:00 Break | Chevron Auditorium, International House |
3:00-4:15 Workshop 4 | |
The Role of Platforms (as Platforms) in Privacy Law and Policy: Taking Stock and Looking Ahead, by Joris Van Hoboken (University of Amsterdam); Ronan O. Fahy (University of Amsterdam), comment by Kamel Ajji | Warren Room (295), Law School |
Formalism, Computing, and Social Change, by Rediet Abebe (Cornell University); Solon Barocas (Cornell University); Jon Kleinberg (Cornell); Karen Levy (Cornell University); Manish Raghavan (Cornell); David Robinson (Upturn), comment by Aaron Massey | Golub Home Room, International House |
The Impact of GDPR on the Ad-Supported Online Ecosystem, by Vincent Lefrere (Institut Mines Telecom, Business School-University of Paris Sud); Logan Warberg (Carnegie Mellon University); Cristobal Cheyre (Carnegie Mellon University); Veronica Marotta (Carlson School of Management, University of Minnesota ); Alessandro Acquisti (CMU), comment by Will DeVries | Goldberg Room (297), Law School |
The Right to Contestation, by Jennifer Urban (UC Berkeley Law);Margot Kaminski (Colorado Law); , comment by Tal Zarsky | Sproul Room 1, International House |
Contracting for Personal Data, by Kevin Davis (New York University School of Law); Florencia Marotta-Wurgler (New York University School of Law), comment by Angie Raymond | Sproul Room 2, International House |
Privacy and the Human Element, by Yafit Lev-Aretz (NYU School of Law), comment by Lindsay Weinberg | Room 107, Law School |
Candidate Privacy, by Rebecca Green (William & Mary Law School), comment by William McGeveran | Room 111, Law School |
Reconceptualizing Police Deception, by Kiel Brennan-Marquez (University of Connecticut); Peter Siegelman (University of Connecticut), comment by Scott Mulligan | Room 136, Law School |
Exploring the boundaries of encryption policies and practices: a human rights-based approach, by Ot van Daalen (University of Amsterdam), comment by Dennys Antonialli | Morrison & Foerster Room (298), Law School |
4:15 Reception | Great Hall, International House |
5:30 Dinner | Chevron Auditorium, International House |
Friday, May 31 | |
8:00-9:00 AM Breakfast | Chevron Auditorium, International House |
9:00-10:15 Workshop 5 | |
Implementing Carpenter, by Orin Kerr (University of Southern California Gould School of Law), comment by Paul Ohm | Golub Home Room, International House |
Privacy Law’s False Promise, by Ari E Waldman (New York Law School), comment by Felix Wu | Goldberg Room (297), Law School |
The Economic Impact of Privacy Protection: The Effects of Online Ad-Blocking and Anti-Tracking Technologies on Consumers’ Online Behavior and Purchases, by Jeremy Thomas (CMU); Li Jiang (George Washington University); Alisa Frik (International Computer Science Institute, UC Berkeley); Florian Schaub (University of Michigan); Cristobal Cheyre (CMU); Alessandro Acquisti (CMU), comment by Andrew Stivers | Sproul Room 1, International House |
The Paradox of Automation as Anti-Bias Mechanism, by Ifeoma Ajunwa (Cornell University), comment by Gautam Hans | Sproul Room 2, International House |
Algorithms and Human Freedom , by Richard Warner (Chicago-Kent College of Law); Robert H. Sloan (University of Illinois at Chicago), comment by Jonathan Manes | Room 107, Law School |
The Privacy Act Project Report, by Robert Gellman (Privacy Consultant), comment by Peter Winn | Room 111, Law School |
Privacy From Doctors, by Carleen Zubrzycki, comment by Susanne Wetzel | Room 136, Law School |
Agency Laundering and Information Technologies, by Alan Rubel (University of Wisconsin-Madison); Clinton Castro (Florida International University); Adam Pham (University of Wisconsin-Madison), comment by Catherine Crump | Morrison & Foerster Room (298), Law School |
Towards a reform of the EU regime for international transfers of personal data, by Svetlana Yakovleva (Institute for Information Law (IvIR)), comment by Kenneth Propp | Room 129, Law School |
10:15-10:45 Break | Chevron Auditorium, International House |
10:45-12:00 Workshop 6 | |
Automation and the Crisis of Legitimacy in the Administrative State, by Danielle Citron (U. Maryland Law School); Ryan Calo (University of Washington), comment by Sharon Bradford Franklin | Warren Room (295), Law School |
Catalyzing Privacy, by Anupam Chander (Georgetown Law School); Margot Kaminski (Colorado Law); Bill McGeveran (University of Minnesota Law School); , comment by Orla Lynskey | Golub Home Room, International House |
The Emerging Principles of Fourth Amendment Privacy, by Matthew Tokson (University of Utah S.J. Quinney College of Law), comment by Alan Rozenshtein | Goldberg Room (297), Law School |
Algorithmic transparency as a disciplinary technique in scored society, by Hao Wang (University of Amsterdam), comment by Stacy-Ann Elvy | Sproul Room 1, International House |
The CLOUD Act and the right to privacy of Non US persons, by Chinmayi Arun (National Law University Delhi), comment by Brian Owsley | Sproul Room 2, International House |
Freedom Needs Privacy – On the role of privacy as enabling autonomy of embodied situated agency, by Maria Brincker (UMB), comment by Mary Madden | Room 107, Law School |
Resisting the Inventory: Close Readings of Big Data from the 1940 Census, by Dan Bouk (Colgate University), comment by D.R. Jones | Room 111, Law School |
Privacy and Religious Views, by Madelyn R Sanfilippo (CITP, Princeton University); Yafit Lev-Aretz (NYU School of Law), comment by Blake Reid | Room 136, Law School |
Customer Response to Adverse Security Events: An Empirical Study, by Rahul Telang (Carnegie Mellon University); Yangfan Liang (Carnegie Mellon University), comment by Jim Graves | Morrison & Foerster Room (298), Law School |
12:00-1:00 Lunch | Chevron Auditorium, International House |
1:00-2:15 Workshop 7 | |
Predictive Fairness in Criminal Justice, by Richard M Re (UCLA School of Law), comment by Stephanie Pell | Warren Room (295), Law School |
Female Servitude by Default and Social Harm: AI Virtual Personal Assistants, Data Privacy Law, and the FTC, by Nora Ni Loideain (Institute of Advanced Legal Studies, University of London); Rachel Adams (Institute of Advanced Legal Studies, University of London), comment by Janice Tsai | Golub Home Room, International House |
Do You Get What You Pay For? Comparing The Privacy Behaviors of Free vs. Paid Apps, by Kenneth Bamberger (UC Berkeley Law); Serge Egelman (ICSI / UC Berkeley); Amit Elazari (Berkeley Law); Catherine Han (UC Berkeley); Irwin Reyes (International Computer Science Institute) , comment by Jill Bronfman | Goldberg Room (297), Law School |
Privacy Regulation as Competition Policy, by Sean Howell (Law Clerk), comment by Mark MacCarthy | Sproul Room 1, International House |
Privacy and the City: How Data Shapes City Identities, by Ira Rubinstein (NYU School of Law), Bilyana Petkova (Maastricht University / EPIC), comment by Joseph Jerome | Sproul Room 2, International House |
GDPR Transparency as a Research Method, by Jef Ausloos (University of Amsterdam (IViR)), comment by Joshua Kroll | Room 107, Law School |
Defining the Scope of “Possession, Custody, or Control” for Privacy Issues and the Cloud Act, by Justin Hemmings (Georgia Tech); Sreenidhi Srinivasan (Georgia Tech); Peter Swire (Georgia Tech), comment by James Dempsey | Room 111, Law School |
A protected personal space as guaranteed by European human rights law and the limits it sets for profiling media users, by Sarah J Eskens (University of Amsterdam), comment by Lydia De la Torre | Room 136, Law School |
Big Data in Consumer Lending Transactions, by Stacy-Ann Elvy (New York Law School), comment by Edina Harbinja | Morrison & Foerster Room (298), Law School |
2:15-2:45 Break | Chevron Auditorium, International House |
2:45-4:00 Workshop 8 | |
Strategic Games and Algorithmic Transparency, by Ignacio N Cofone (McGill University) and Katherine J. Strandburg (New York University School of Law), comment by Blase Ur | Warren Room (295), Law School |
Owning Our IDs, by Sarah E Igo (Vanderbilt University), comment by Karen Levy | Golub Home Room, International House |
“This all seemed fairly normal to me”—The Absence of Effect of Privacy Policies on Invasive Personal Disclosure, by Jennifer King (Center for Internet and Society); Richmond Y Wong (University of California Berkeley); Rena Coen (University of California, Berkeley School of Information); Jael Makagon (Santa Clara County); Andreas Katsanevas (Stanford University), comment by Katie Shilton | Goldberg Room (297), Law School |
“Big Government, Big Tech,” and Other Public-Private Partnerships for Implementing China’s Social Credit System Project, by Shazeda Ahmed (University of California-Berkeley School of Information); Xin Dai (Ocean University of China), comment by Margaret Hu | Sproul Room 1, International House |
AI, lawyers, and professional work: The practice of law with automated decision support technologies, by Daniel N Kluttz (UC Berkeley School of Information); Deirdre Mulligan (UC Berkeley School of Information), comment by Tim Casey | Sproul Room 2, International House |
Locked-in Data Production: User Freedom and Capture in the Platform Economy, by Elettra Bietti (Harvard Law School), comment by Alex Rosenblat | Room 107, Law School |
The right to be let alone by oneself, by Bart Van der Sloot (Tilburg University), comment by Daniel Susser | Room 111, Law School |
4:00–4:15 Say goodbye until next time | Chevron Auditorium, International House |
Participants
Alessandro Acquisti, Carnegie Mellon University |
Rachel Adams, Institute for Advanced Legal Studies, University of London and Human Sciences Research Council |
Shazeda Ahmed, UC Berkeley School of Information |
Kamel Ajji, Paris 2 University |
Ifeoma Ajunwa, Cornell University |
Kendra Albert, Harvard Law School |
Micah Altman, MIT |
Denise Anthony, University of Michigan |
Dennys Antonialli, InternetLab Brazil |
Jocelyn Aqua, PwC |
Chinmayi Arun, Beckman Klein Centre at Harvard University |
Jef Ausloos, University of Amsterdam (IViR) |
Lisa Austin, University of Toronto Faculty of Law |
Peter Austin, Palantir Technologies |
Julia Ballaschk, Danish National Police |
Renata Barreto, Berkeley Law |
Lindsey Barrett, Georgetown University Law Center |
Steven Bellovin, Columbia University |
Elettra Bietti, Harvard Law School |
Jody Blanke, Mercer University |
Dan Bouk, Colgate University |
Anne Boustead, University of Arizona |
Courtney Bowman, Palantir Technologies |
Kiel Brennan-Marquez, University of Connecticut School of Law |
Maria Brincker, University of Massachusetts Boston |
Maja Brkan, Maastricht University |
Jill Bronfman, Common Sense Media |
Jeff Brueggeman, AT&T |
Aaron Burstein, Wilkinson Barker Knauer LLP |
Lee Bygrave, University of Oslo |
Matt Cagle, ACLU of Northern California |
Joseph Calandrino, Federal Trade Commission |
Ryan Calo, University of Washington |
Tim Casey, Calif. Western School of Law |
Clinton Castro, Florida International University |
Anupam Chander, Georgetown Law |
Moon Jung Choi, visiting scholar of UC Berkeley |
Bryan Choi, The Ohio State University |
Danielle Citron, University of Maryland Carey School of Law |
Ignacio Cofone, McGill University |
Aloni Cohen, MIT |
Julie Cohen, Georgetown Law |
Catherine Crump, UC Berkeley School of Law |
Mary Culnan, Future of Privacy Forum |
Rachel Cummings, Georgia Tech |
Bryan Cunningham, Cybersecurity Policy & Research Institute, UC Irvine |
Xin Dai, Ocean University of China Law School |
Jennifer Daskal, American University Washington College of Law |
Lydia De La Torre, Santa Clara |
Alex Deane, FTI Consulting |
Jolynn Dellinger, Duke/UNC |
Deven Desai, GA Tech, Scheller College of Business |
Will Devries, Google |
Pam Dixon, World Privacy Forum |
Dissent Doe, PogoWasRight.org / DataBreaches.net |
Nick Doty, UC Berkeley, School of Information |
Natasha Duarte, Center for Democracy & Technology |
Lilian Edwards, University of Newcastle, Law School |
Serge Egelman, UC Berkeley / ICSI |
Kristen Eichensehr, UCLA School of Law |
Amit Elazari, UC Berkeley School of Information, Intel |
Stacy-Ann Elvy, New York Law School |
Sarah Eskens, University of Amsterdam |
Ronan Fahy, University of Amsterdam |
Cyrus Farivar, NBC News |
Muge Fazlioglu, International Association of Privacy Professionals (IAPP) |
Aaron Fluitt, Georgetown Institute for Technology Law & Policy |
Sharon Franklin, New America’s Open Technology Institute |
Juliane Fries, World Bank |
Kazunori Furuya, Berkeley Law School |
Amy Gajda, Tulane University Law School |
Amy Gaudion, Penn State Dickinson Law |
Robert Gellman, Privacy Consultant |
Lauren Gelman, BlurryEdge Strategies |
Stephanie Glaberson, Georgetown Law |
Jake Goldenfein, Cornell Tech |
Ashley Gorham, University of Pennsylvania/ NYU Information Law Institute |
Megan Graham, UC Berkeley School of Law |
John Grant, Palantir Technologies |
Jim Graves, Georgetown Law |
Megan Gray, DuckDuckGo |
Rebecca Green, William & Mary Law School |
Jeremy Greenberg, Future of Privacy Forum |
Wendy Grossman, n/a |
Eldar Haber, Faculty of Law, Haifa University |
Thomas Haley, University of Utah/College of Law |
Gautam Hans, Vanderbilt Law School |
Edina Harbinja, Aston University, UK |
Woodrow Hartzog, Northeastern University |
Justin Hemmings, Georgia Tech Scheller College of Business |
Stephen Henderson, The University of Oklahoma |
Mike Hintze, Hintze Law PLLC / University of Washington School of Law |
Dennis Hirsch, Ohio State Moritz College of Law |
Jared Ho, Federal Trade Commission |
Lance Hoffman, George Washington University |
Chris Hoofnagle, UC Berkeley |
Sean Howell, Covington & Burling |
Margaret Hu, Washington & Lee Law School |
Kirsty Hughes, University of Cambridge |
Sarah Igo, Vanderbilt University |
Catherine Jasserand, University of Groningen |
Joseph Jerome, Center for Democracy & Technology |
Kristin Johnson, Tulane University Law School |
D.R. Jones, University of Memphis School of Law |
Margot Kaminski, Colorado Law |
Sonia Katyal, UC Berkeley |
Brett Kaufman, ACLU |
Elizabeth Keneski, Facebook |
Orin Kerr, University of Southern California Gould School of Law |
Cameron Kerry, Brookings/MIT |
Ido Kilovaty, University of Tulsa College of Law |
Pauline Kim, Washington University School of Law |
Jen King, Stanford Center for Internet and Society |
Anne Klinefelter, University of North Carolina |
Daniel Kluttz, UC Berkeley School of Information |
Logan Koepke, Upturn |
Nitin Kohli, UC Berkeley School of Information |
Joshua Kroll, UC Berkeley |
Susan Landau, Tufts University |
Claudia Langer, University of Saarland Law School, Germany/AUDI Group |
Ronald Lee, Arnold & Porter |
Becky Lenaburg, Microsoft Corporation |
Brenda Leong, Future of Privacy Forum |
Karen Levy, Cornell University |
Tiffany Li, Yale Law School |
David Lieber, Google |
Katrina Ligett, Hebrew University of Jerusalem |
Siona Listokin, George Mason University |
Asaf Lubin, Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University |
Jennifer Lynch, EFF |
Orla Lynskey, LSE Law |
Lance Mabry, IDEM |
Mark Maccarthy, Georgetown University |
Rory Macmillan, Macmillan Keck Attorneys & Solicitors |
Mary Madden, Data & Society Research Institute |
Jael Makagon, County of Santa Clara |
Jonathan Manes, University at Buffalo, SUNY |
Carter Manny, University of Southern Maine |
Mason Marks, Yale Law School |
Dustin Marlan, University of Massachusetts School of Law |
Chanda Marlowe, Future of Privacy Forum |
Florencia Marotta-Wurgler, New York University School of Law |
Kirsten Martin, George Washington University School of Business |
Aaron Massey, University of Maryland, Baltimore County |
Hideyuki Matsumi, Independent Researcher |
Andrea Matwyshyn, Northeastern University |
Jonathan Mayer, Princeton University |
William McGeveran, University of Minnesota Law School |
Anne McKenna, Penn State’s Dickinson Law and Institute for CyberScience |
Edward McNicholas, Sidley Austin LLP |
Emily McReynolds, Microsoft Research |
Sylvain Métille, Lausanne University (Switzerland) |
Christopher Millard, Queen Mary University of London |
Julissa Milligan, Boston University School of Law |
Laura Moy, Center on Privacy & Technology at Georgetown Law |
Scott Mulligan, Skidmore College |
Tejas Narechania, UC Berkeley School of Law |
Bryce Newell, University of Kentucky |
Nora Ni Loideain, Institute of Advanced Legal Studies, University of London |
Kobbi Nissim, Georgetown University |
Margaret O’Mara, University of Washington |
Thomas O’Malley, Former DOJ, Founder of Frozen Pii |
Andrew Odlyzko, University of Minnesota |
Paul Ohm, Georgetown University Law Center |
Amy Oliver, Future of Privacy Forum |
Peter Ormerod, Western Carolina University |
Brian Owsley, UNT Dallas College of Law |
Nicole Ozer, ACLU of California |
Sunoo Park, Harvard Law & MIT |
Susan Park, Boise State University |
Stephanie Pell, West Point |
Jonathon Penney (Citizen Lab, University of Toronto / Princeton CITP) |
Najarian Peters, Seton Hall Law School |
Riana Pfefferkorn, Stanford Center for Internet and Society |
Jules Polonetsky, Future of Privacy Forum |
Kenneth Propp, Georgetown University Law Center |
Manish Raghavan, Cornell University |
Natalie Ram, University of Baltimore School of Law |
Angie Raymond, Indiana University |
Richard Re, UCLA School of Law |
Priscilla Regan, George Mason University |
Blake Reid, Colorado Law |
Neil Richards, Washington University in St. Louis |
Sarah Roberts, UCLA |
David Robinson, Cornell Information Science |
Zak Rogoff, Georgetown University |
Alex Rosenblat, Data & Society Research Institute |
Alan Rozenshtein, University of Minnesota Law School |
Alan Rubel, University of Wisconsin-Madison |
Ira Rubinstein, NYU School of Law |
Madelyn Sanfilippo, CITP, Princeton |
Victoria Schwartz, Pepperdine University School of Law |
Elaine Sedenberg, UC Berkeley School of Information |
Andrew Selbst, Data & Society Research Institute |
Andrew Sellars, Boston University School of Law |
Stuart Shapiro, MITRE Corporation |
Katie Shilton, University of Maryland, College Park |
Yan Shvartzshnaider, NYU |
Robert Sloan, university of Illinois @ Chicago |
Bart Sloot, TILT, Tilburg University |
Daniel Solove, George Washington University School of Law |
Ashkan Soltani, Soltani Consulting LLC |
Jeff Sovern, St. John’s University School of Law |
Sreenidhi Srinivasan, Georgia Tech |
Luke Stark, Microsoft Research Montreal |
Andrew Stivers, Federal Trade Commission, Bureau of Economics |
Katherine Strandburg, New York University School of Law |
Daniel Susser, Penn State |
Christian Svanberg, Danish National Police |
Dan Svirsky, Harvard University |
Rahul Telang, Carnegie Mellon University |
Omer Tene, International Association of Privacy Professionals |
David Thaw, University of Pittsburgh |
Jeremy Thomas, Carnegie Mellon University |
Matthew Tokson, University of Utah |
Prem Trivedi, Georgetown University |
Janice Tsai, Mozilla |
Charlotte Tschider, DePaul University College of Law |
Blase Ur, University of Chicago |
Jennifer Urban, UC Berkeley School of Law |
Ot Van Daalen, Institute for Information Law |
Nico Van Eijk, Institute for Information Law (IViR, University of Amsterdam) |
Joris Van Hoboken, LSTS (VUB) & IViR (UvA) |
Michael Veale, University College London |
Maximilian Von Grafenstein, Einstein Center Digital Future / Humboldt Institute for Internet and Society |
Sandra Wachter, University of Oxford |
Ari Waldman, New York Law School |
Hao Wang, University of Amsterdam |
Logan Warberg, Carnegie Mellon University |
Richard Warner, Chicago-Kent College of Law |
Cheryl Washington, UC DAVIS |
Yeong Wei Wee, Palantir Technologies |
Lindsay Weinberg, Purdue University |
Jonathan Weinberg, Wayne State Univ. Law School |
Gabriel Weinberg, DuckDuckGo |
Christiane Wendehorst, University of Vienna |
Susanne Wetzel, Stevens Institute of Technology |
Tara Whalen, Google |
Janice Whittington, University of Washington |
Craig Wills, Worcester Polytechnic Institute |
Kurt Wimmer, Covington & Burling |
Jane Winn, University of Washington School of Law |
Peter Winn, U.S. Department of Justice |
Shane Witnov, Facebook |
Christopher Wolf, Future of Privacy Forum |
Richmond Wong, UC Berkeley School of Information |
Jesse Woo, Kyoto University |
Alexandra Wood, Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society at Harvard University |
Allison Woodruff, Google |
Felix Wu, Cardozo School of Law |
Svetlana Yakovleva, Institute for Information Law (University of Amsterdam), De Brauw Blackstone Westbroek |
Tal Zarsky, Univ. of Haifa – Faculty of Law |
Elana Zeide, UCLA |
Carleen Zubrzycki |