with George Washington Law School
June 4-5, 2020
Washington, DC
Virtual Event (keyed to eastern time)
Organized jointly by BCLT and the George Washington University Law School, the Privacy Law Scholars Conference (PLSC) assembles a wide array of privacy law scholars and practitioners from around the world to discuss current issues and foster greater connections between academia and practice. PLSC brings together privacy law scholars, privacy scholars from other disciplines (economics, philosophy, political science, computer science), and practitioners (industry, legal, advocacy, and government). For more information, see our FAQ.
PLSC is a paper workshop. There are no published proceedings, and after the event, papers are not available. Because authors’ drafts are works in progress, we do not publicly release these writings, nor do we publicize them (no Tweeting, blogging, etc.), as authors’ ideas are often inchoate and need incubation for full development.
At PLSC, papers workshops are led by a “discussion leader” who facilitates a discussion among participants on an author’s paper. Authors are encouraged to participate in “listening” mode. There are no panels or talking head events at PLSC.
All participants are expected to read and be prepared to discuss one paper per session (usually a total of 8 papers), and thus PLSC requires significant preparation. We recommended that participants devote 1.5 to 2 days of reading to prepare prior to the conference. One does not need to submit a paper to participate in PLSC–indeed most participants do not.
PLSC 2020 is at capacity and we are not accepting new registrations.
In light of the COVID pandemic, PLSC 2020 will be a 100% virtual event, following an eastern time schedule. More details coming.
Click here for the archives of previous Privacy Law Scholars Conferences.
PLSC 2020 Program
Day 1 – Thursday, June 4thNOTE: All times are U.S Eastern Time (ET) |
9:00 AM Opening Remarks |
9:15 AM – 10:20 AM First Session |
Data Market Discipline: From Financial Regulation to Data Governance by Sebastian Benthall and Salome Viljoen, discussion by Julie Cohen |
Hey, Google, Where’s My Amazon Alexa?: An Intersectional Map of Where We Are on Virtual Assistant Privacy Policies, Security Standards, and Real-Life Use by Jill Bronfman, discussion by Lance Mabry |
Online political microtargeting by foreign actors: an interdisciplinary exploration by Tom Dobber, Ronan Ó Fathaigh, and Frederik Zuiderveen Borgesius, discussion by Robert Sloan |
What Drives Who Has Access to Police Body Camera Footage? by Alex Marthews and Catherine Tucker, discussion by Beatriz Botero Arcila |
Avoidability in U.S. Privacy Law by Laura Moy, discussion by D.R. Jones |
Techno-Futurism in Play: Privacy, Surveillance, and Innovation at Disney by Madelyn Sanfilippo and Yan Shvartzshnaider, discussion by Jody Blanke |
The Silicon Ceiling by Elana Zeide, discussion by Rory Van Loo |
The Myth of the Privacy Paradox by Daniel J. Solove, discussion by Bilyana Petkova |
Regulatory Spillovers: The Case of GDPR by Kevin E. Davis and Florencia Marotta-Wurgler, discussion by Sylvain Métille |
10:20 AM–11:00 AM Break |
The UK Job Market. Hosted by Kirsty Hughes |
Mentoring and Checking In. Hosted by Danielle Citron |
Understanding NSF funding opportunities. Hosted by Jeremy Epstein |
Empirical Investigation of Privacy. Hosted by Chris Slobogin and Matthew Kluger |
Law & CS Cross Pollination. Hosted by Aloni Cohen and Sarah Scheffler |
11:00 AM–12:05 PM 2nd Session |
Alternative Data: Underscoring Consumer Privacy by Kristin Johnson, discussion by Ido Sivan-Sevilla |
Surveillance Deputies by Karen Levy and Lauren Kilgour, discussion by Ron Lee |
Shining a Light on Dark Patterns by Jamie Luguri and Lior Strahilevitz, discussion by Lorrie Cranor |
The Internet of Suspect Bodies by Stephanie Pell and Andrea M. Matwyshyn, discussion by Jennifer Daskal |
Privacy’s Vicious Cycle by Ari Waldman, discussion by Kirsten Martin |
Interrogating and Expanding “Design” in Privacy By Design by Richmond Wong and Deirdre Mulligan, discussion by Ryan Calo |
Implications of Data Anonymization on the Statistical Evidence of Disparity by Heng Xu and Nan Zhang, discussion by Leslie Francis |
Data Ownership is Not Dispositive: Data Ownership and Access in Outsourced “Smart City” Data Programs by Meg Young, discussion by Elaine Sedenberg |
Seductive Surveillance and Social Change The Rise of the Voice Intelligence Industry by Joseph Turow, discussion by Alan Rubel |
12:05 PM–1:15 PM Lunchtime break |
12:05 -12:35 Privacy Research Beyond the Law: Mentoring on Experimental Research Design in Privacy. Hosted by Alexis Shore |
12:05 -12:35 Privacy, surveillance, and covid-19–charting out a research agenda. Hosted by Leslie Francis |
12:05 -12:35 Women privacy law scholars. Hosted by Kristin Johnson |
12:05 -12:35 Bridging the Gaps: New Brookings Report of Federal Privacy Legislation. Hosted by Cam Kerry |
12:05 -12:35 Managing Interns, Research Assistants, and New Hires: Let’s Discuss Delegating and Sharing Work Online. Hosted by Jill Bronfman |
12:30–1:00 Celebrating Joel Reidenberg’s life, led by Ari Waldman |
1:15–2:20 3rd Session |
Algorithmic Impact Assessments and the Private Sector by Andrew Selbst, discussion by Denise Anthony |
Surveillance Capitalism Online: Cookies, Notice & Choice, and Web Privacy by Meg Jones, discussion by James Rule |
Trademarks as Surveillance Transparency by Amanda Levendowski, discussion by Jessica Silbey |
Designing for the Privacy Commons by Darakhshan Mir, discussion by Blase Ur |
Failed Hybrids: The Death and Life of Bluetooth Proximity Marketing by Gabriel Nicholas and Aaron Shapiro, discussion by Joseph Calandrino |
Life, law, and new privacy in a world of illusions and manipulations by Andrew Odlyzko, discussion by Susanne Wetzel |
Encryption, Privacy, and the Future of Law-Enforcement Searches by Julissa Milligan, Alan Z. Rozenshtein & Mayank Varia, discussion by Susan Landau |
Why fairness cannot be automated: Bridging the gap between EU non-discrimination law and AI by Sandra Wachter, Brent Mittelstadt, and Chris Russell, discussion by Jennifer Urban |
When a Small Change Makes a Big Difference by Tal Zarsky, Jane Bambauer, and Jonathan Mayer, discussion by Felix Wu |
2:20–3:00 Break |
Uniform Law Commission Project on Model Privacy Laws. Hosted by William McGeveran |
Platform Responsibility by Daniel Solove |
The future of EU, UK, and US privacy – What will it be? What should it be? Hosted by Peter Swire |
Privacy: What’s Identity Got To Do With It?” Hosted by Tom O’Malley |
Pro Bono War Stories: Sharing Past Work That Benefited the Public Interest. Hosted by Chris Wolf |
3:00–4:05 4th Session |
Narratives and Counternarratives on Data Sharing in and for Africa by Rediet Abebe, Kehinde Aruleba, Abeba Birhane, Sara Kingsley, George Obaido, Sekou Remy, and Swathi Sadagopan, discussion by Juliane Fries |
Automated Employment Discrimination by Ifeoma Ajunwa, discussion by Sharon Bradford Franklin |
Public Video Surveillance and Searches of “Persons” after Carpenter by Marc Blitz, discussion by Brian Owsley |
Are the Census Data Fit for Purpose? The Entanglement of Politics and Math, by Dan Bouk and danah boyd, discussion by Rachel Cummings |
Post Market Capitalism by Kiel Brennan-Marquez and Daniel Susser, discussion by Dustin Marlan |
H.R. 1984, a bill to enact the United States Agency Fair Information Practices Act (USA-FIPS Act) by Robert Gellman, discussion by Priscilla Regan |
An Ecological Approach to Data Governance by Jasmine McNealy, discussion by Brett Frischmann |
Governing an Algorithm in the Wild, by David Robinson, discussion by Joseph Lorenzo Hall |
Data as a Democratic Medium: A Relational Theory of Equality for the Data Political Economy by Salome Viljoen, discussion by Richard Warner |
A Cybersecurity Duty? by Charlotte Tschider, discussion by Steven Bellovin |
4:05– Post Proceedings |
4:00-4:30 Informal Social Break for Tech Clinicians (open to new, old, and would-be clinicians or anyone who wants to talk to one!). Hosted by Blake Reid |
4:00-4:30 Health Privacy in the Information Age. Hosted by Mason Marks |
4:00-4:30 Feminist Cyberlaw. Hosted by Meg Jones and Amanda Levendowski |
4:00-4:30 Life in the post-truth world. Hosted by Andrew Odlyzko |
4:00-4:30 Ideas for (and issues in) qualitative, quantitative, and mixed methods projects. Hosted by Yan Fa |
4:30-5:00 Neoliberalism and Privacy Managerialism. Hosted by Julie Cohen and Ari Waldman |
4:30-5:30 Virtual Happy Hour. Hosted by Dan Solove |
Day 2 – Friday, June 5thNOTE: All times are U.S Eastern Time (ET) |
9:00–10:05 AM 5th Session |
Two Genealogies of Power and Autonomy in the Platform Economy by Elettra Bietti, discussion by Marcin Betkier |
On Being a Client-Scholar-Practitioner by David Carroll, discussion by Megan Gray |
Mechanism Design for What? by Jake Goldenfein, Salome Viljoen, and Lee McGuigan, discussion by Jan Whittington |
Safe Harbors for Algorithms? by Pauline Kim, discussion by Joris van Hoboken |
Understanding Chilling Effects and their Harms by Jon Penney, discussion by Gavin Phillipson |
Real-Time Bidding and Adtech Under European Data Protection Law by Michael Veale and Frederik Zuiderveen Borgesius, discussion by Tara Whalen |
Privacy as Privilege by Rebecca Wexler, discussion by Paul Ohm |
Modeling the Right to be Forgotten, by Aloni Cohen, Adam Smith, Marika Swanberg, and Prashant Nalini Vasudevan, discussion by Joshua Kroll |
Ubiquitous Wiretaps and the Legal Implications of Passive Listening by Lindsey Barrett and Ilaria Liccardi, discussion by Anne Toomey McKenna |
The Portability and Other Required Transfers Impact Assessment (PORT-IA): Assessing Competition, Privacy, Cybersecurity, and Other Considerations by Peter Swire, discussion by Michael Froomkin |
10:05–10:50 Break |
Pitching and writing op-eds on privacy law Hosted by Josephine Wolff |
Social Break. Hosted by Rebecca Wexler |
Pandemic & Privacy: thermal scanning, facial recognition, and AI. Hosted by Brenda Leong |
Getting ahead of the curve – what will we be writing about in the next couple of years? Hosted by Tal Zarsky |
Does the Apple/Google coronavirus tracking tool strike the right balance between fighting the virus and protecting people’s privacy? Hosted by Lance Hoffman |
10:50–12:00 6th Session |
In the Shadow of the ‘Smart Court’: Challenges to Fairness, Transparency, and Accountability in China’s Applications of Courtroom AI by Shazeda Ahmed and Xin Dai, discussion by Angie Raymond |
Protected Grounds and the System of Non- Discrimination Law in the Context of Algorithmic Decision-Making and Artificial Intelligence by Janneke Gerards and Frederik Zuiderveen Borgesius, discussion by Sam Wrigley |
Structuring TechLaw by Rebecca Crootof and BJ Ard, discussion by Katherine Strandburg |
The Coronavirus (Safeguards) Bill 2020: Proposed protections for digital interventions and in relation to immunity certificates by Lilian Edwards and Michael Veale, discussion by Daniel Weitzner |
Corporate Data Ethics: Data Governance Transformations for the Age of Advanced Analytics and AI by Dennis Hirsch, Timothy Bartley, Aravind Chandrasekaran, Srinivasan Parthasarathy, Piers Norris Turner and Davon Norris, discussion by Emily McReynolds |
Decrypting Originalism: The Lessons of Burr by Orin Kerr, discussion by Matthew Kugler |
Is Personal Data a Market Good? The Intractability of Paying for Privacy by Aileen Nielsen, discussion by Svetlana Yakovleva |
Show Me the (Data About the) Money! Financial Regulation, and Consumer Financial Information by Nizan Packin, discussion by Elizabeth Renieris |
Privacy in Public Space: The Idea, Language and Image by Visakha Phusamruat, discussion by Rebecca Green |
Singling Out: What a Rigorous Legal-Technical Analysis Teaches Us About Privacy Regulation by Alexandra Wood, Kobbi Nissim, Micah Altman, and Aloni Cohen, discussion by Stuart Shapiro |
12:00–1:15 PM Lunch (with virtual sessions) |
12:00–12:30 Senior-Junior Faculty Mentoring. Hosted by Julie Cohen |
12:00-12:30 Lunch with Ira Rubinstein |
12:30–1:00 Lunch with PLSC Co-Chairs Dan Solove & Chris Hoofnagle |
1:15–2:20 PM 7th Session |
Identity Theft and the Reproduction of Inequality by Jordan Brensinger, discussion by Michele Gilman |
Improving Search and Seizure Warrants for the Digital Age by Jennifer Granick, discussion by Jolynn Dellinger |
Data-Inalienability by Gautam Hans, discussion by DeBrae Kennedy-Mayo |
Privacy Self-Help by Steven Hazel, discussion by Katie McInnis |
The Death of the Privacy Author by Gordon Hull, discussion by Margaret Hu |
One Size Does Not Fit All: Applying a Single Privacy Policy to (Too) Many Contexts by Yafit Lev-Aretz and Madelyn Rose Sanfilippo, discussion by Annie Anton |
Evaluating How Global Privacy Principles Answer Consumers’ Questions About Mobile App Privacy by Joel R. Reidenberg, Norman Sadeh, Thomas Norton, and Abhilasha Ravichander, discussion by Kevin Moriarty |
Making Privacy Injuries Concrete by Peter Ormerod, discussion by Deven Desai |
A Duty of Loyalty in Privacy Law by Neil Richards and Woodrow Hartzog, discussion by Andrew Stivers |
Inescapable Surveillance by Matthew Tokson, discussion by Brett Max Kaufman |
2:20–2:55 Break |
Senior-Junior Faculty Mentoring. Hosted by Woodrow Hartzog |
Data Security Enforcement in 2020: Any Progress or Just a Hot Mess? Hosted by Dissent Doe |
Teaching Privacy Law (and other Courses) via Zoom – Brainstorming about Best Practices. Hosted by Lior Strahilevitz |
Social Break with Orin Kerr. Hosted by Orin Kerr |
Privacy Law Scholars for Racial Justice. Hosted by Rediet Abebe |
2:55–4:00 PM 8th Session |
Automating Accountability? Privacy Policies, Data Transparency, and the Third Party Problem by David Lie, Lisa Austin, Peter Yi, Ping Sun, and Wenjun Qiu, discussion by Ignacio Cofone |
Employees as Data Subjects by Matthew Bodie, discussion by Gaia Bernstein |
Structural Sensor Surveillance by Andrew Ferguson, discussion by Kate Weisburd |
Enhanced Privacy Duties for Dominant Companies, by Mark MacCarthy, discussion by Christopher Wolf |
Privacy Work: The Labor of Protecting Information in a Networked Age by Alice Marwick, discussion by Lisa Nelson |
Emotions, Computing, and Privacy: Developing an Ethical Framework for Designing Affective Computing Systems by Lydia Stamato, Andrea Kleinsmith, and Aaron K. Massey, discussion by Luke Stark |
What Makes a Dark Pattern… Dark? Design Attributes, Normative Considerations, and Measurement Methods by Arunesh Mathur, Jonathan Mayer, and Mihir Kshirsagar discussion by Serge Egelman |
Technologies of agreement: Automating regulation with data standards by Anne L. Washington, discussion by Siona Listokin |
Health Privacy Exceptionalism and the Medicalization of Social Issues by Carleen Zubrzycki, discussion by Kendra Albert |
4:00-5:00 Post Proceedings |
LGBT Scholars Meetup. Hosted by Kendra Albert |
PLSC Program Committee
The PLSC Program Committee assists in judging papers for awards, and in selecting abstracts for inclusion in the conference.
- Franziska Boehm, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology
- Ryan Calo, University of Washington
- Danielle K. Citron, Boston University School of Law
- Julie Cohen, Georgetown University Law Center
- Deven Desai, Georgia Institute of Technology
- Woodrow Hartzog, Northeastern University School of Law
- Kirsty Hughes, University of Cambridge
- Margot Kaminski, University of Colorado Law
- Orin Kerr, University of California, Berkeley
- Karen Levy, Cornell University, Department of Information Science & Law School
- William McGeveran, University of Minnesota Law School
- Paul Ohm, Georgetown University Law Center
- Priscilla Regan, George Mason University
- Neil Richards, Washington University Law
- Ari Waldman, Northeastern University School of Law and Khoury College of Computer Sciences
PLSC Co-Chairs
- Daniel J. Solove, George Washington University School of Law
- Chris Jay Hoofnagle, UC Berkeley Law & School of Information
Final Participant List (316)(as of June 3, 2020)
Rediet Abebe, Harvard University |
Shazeda Ahmed, University of California, Berkeley – School of Information |
Ifeoma Ajunwa, Cornell ILR School/Cornell Law School |
Kendra Albert, Harvard Law School |
Denise Anthony, University of Michigan |
Jocelyn Aqua, PwC |
BJ Ard, University of Wisconsin Law School |
Kehinde Aruleba, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg |
Chinmayi Arun, Yale Law School |
Peter Austin, Palantir Technologies |
Lisa Austin, University of Toronto Faculty of Law |
Jeeyun (Sophia) Baik, University of Southern California |
Noël Bangma, Radboud University |
Lindsey Barrett, Institute for Public Representation, Communications & Technology Clinic, Georgetown Law |
Daniel Barth-Jones, Columbia University |
Steven Bellovin, Columbia University |
Sebastian Benthall, Information Law Institute – NYU Law |
Gaia Bernstein, Seton Hall University School of Law |
Maya Bernstein, U. S. Dept of Health & Human Services |
Marcin Betkier, Victoria University of Wellington |
Elettra Bietti, Harvard Law School/Berkman-Klein |
Abeba Birhane, UCD |
Jody Blanke, Mercer University |
Stacy Blasiola, Facebook |
Marc Blitz, Oklahoma City University School of Law |
Matthew Bodie, Saint Louis University School of Law |
Beatriz Botero Arcila, Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society / Harvard Law School |
Dan Bouk, Colgate University |
Courtney Bowman, Palantir |
danah boyd, Microsoft Research |
Jordan Brensinger, Columbia University |
Jill Bronfman, Common Sense Media |
Cheryl Brown, Univ. of North Carolina at Charlotte |
Jeff Brueggeman, AT&T |
Paula Bruening, Casentino Strategies LLC |
Aaron Burstein, Kelley Drye & Warren |
Sarah Butler, NERA Economic Consulting |
Joseph Calandrino, Federal Trade Commission |
Ryan Calo, University of Washington School of Law |
David Carroll, Parsons School of Design, The New School |
Neil Chilson, Stand Together |
Bryan Choi, The Ohio State University |
Danielle Citrom, Boston University School of Law |
Rena Coen, Rakuten, Inc. |
Ignacio Cofone, McGill University Faculty of Law |
Aloni Cohen, Boston University |
Julie Cohen, Georgetown Law |
Lorrie Cranor, Carnegie Mellon University |
Rebecca Crootof, University of Richmond Law School |
Mary Culnan, Future of Privacy Forum |
Rachel Cummings, Georgia Institute of Technology |
Xin Dai, Peking University School of Law |
Lucille Dai-He, N/A |
Christian Dameff, University of California San Diego |
Jennifer Daskal, American University Washington College of Law |
Jolynn Dellinger, Duke Law School; NC DOJ |
Deven Desai, GA Tech, Scheller College |
Will DeVries, Google |
Robert Deyling, Administrative Office of the United States Courts |
Pam Dixon, World Privacy Forum |
Tom Dobber, University of Amsterdam |
Dissent Doe, DataBreaches.net/PogoWasRight.org |
Megan Doerr, Sage Bionetworks |
Danilo Doneda, IDP – Brazilan Public Law Institute |
Nick Doty, UC Berkeley, School of Information |
Lilian Edwards, Newcastle Law School |
Stacy-Ann Elvy, UC Davis School of Law |
Jeremy Epstein, National Science Foundation |
Sarah Eskens, University of Amsterdam |
Ronan Fahy, University of Amsterdam |
Yan Fang, University of California, Berkeley |
Müge Fazlioglu, International Association of Privacy Professionals (IAPP) |
Caitlin Fennessy, IAPP |
Andrew Ferguson, American University Washington College of Law |
Darleen Fisher, NSF |
Ariel Fox Johnson, Common Sense Media |
Leslie Francis, University of Utah S.J. Quinney College of Law |
Diana Freed, Cornell Tech |
Juliane Fries, World Bank |
Brett Frischmann, Villanova University |
Michael Froomkin, University of Miami |
Robert Gellman, Privacy Consultant |
Janneke Gerards, Utrecht University, Montaigne Centre for Rule of Law and Administration of Justice |
Daniel Gillmor, ACLU |
Michele Gilman, University of Baltimore School of Law |
Sue Glueck, Microsoft |
Jake Goldenfein, Cornell Tech |
Nathan Good, Good research |
Lauryn Gouldin, Syracuse University College of Law |
Jennifer Granick, ACLU |
John Grant, Palantir Technologies |
James Graves, TBD |
David Gray, University of Maryland Carey School of Law |
Megan Gray, DuckDuckGo |
Jeremy Greenberg, Future of Privacy Forum |
Wendy Grossman, Freelance writer |
Ece Gumusel, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign |
Thomas Haley, University of Utah S.J. Quinney College of Law |
Joseph Hall, Internet Society |
Gautam Hans, Vanderbilt Law School |
Woodrow Hartzog, Northeastern University |
Steven Hazel, US District Courts |
Justin Hemmings, PCLOB |
Janine Hiller, Virginia Tech |
Dennis Hirsch, The Ohio State University Moritz College of Law |
Lance Hoffman, George Washington University |
Chris Hoofnagle, UC Berkeley |
Gordon Hull, UNC Charlotte |
Catherine Jasserand, RUG (University of Groningen) |
Kristin Johnson, Tulane University Law School |
D.R. Jones, University of Memphis School of Law |
Meg Jones, Georgetown University |
Sara Jordan, Future of Privacy Forum |
Thomas Kadri, University of Georgia School of Law |
Margot Kaminski, Colorado Law School |
Brett Max Kaufman, ACLU |
Girard Kelly, Common Sense Media |
DeBrae Kennedy-Mayo, Georgia Tech |
Orin Kerr, University of California, Berkeley Law School |
Cam Kerry, The Brookings Institution |
Lauren Kilgour, Cornell University |
Pauline Kim, Washington University School of Law |
Jonathan King, Cordell Institute |
Sara Kingsley, Carnegie Mellon University |
Andrea Kleinsmith, UMBC |
Anne Klinefelter, University of North Carolina |
Dena Kozanas, U.S. Department of Homeland Security |
Magdalena Krajewska, Wingate University |
Mihir Kshirsagar, Princeton CITP |
Matthew Kugler, Northwestern Pritzker School of Law |
Elif Nur Kumru, Duke Center on Law & Tech |
Susan Landau, Tufts University |
Mary Leary, Columbus School of Law, The Catholic University of America |
Ron Lee, Arnold & Porter |
Becky Lenaburg, Microsoft Corporation |
Brenda Leong, Future of Privacy Forum |
Yafit Lev-Aretz, City University of New York |
Amanda Levendowski, Georgetown Law |
Karen Levy, Cornell University |
Tiffany Li, Boston University School of Law |
Ilaria Liccardi, MIT |
David Lie, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Toronto |
Rebecca Lipman, NYC Law Department |
Siona Listokin, George Mason University |
Jamie Luguri |
Joanne Ma, University of California, Berkeley |
Lance Mabry, IDEM |
Mark MacCarthy, Georgetown University |
Mary Madden, Joan Ganz Cooney Center |
Leighton Mair, University of Richmond |
Carter Manny, University of Southern Maine |
Mason Marks, Gonzaga University School of L |
Dustin Marlan, University of Massachusetts School of Law |
Alex Marthews, Restore The Fourth, Inc. |
Kirsten Martin, George Washington University |
Alice Marwick, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill |
Aaron Massey, University of Maryland, Baltimore County |
Arunesh Mathur, Princeton University |
J. Nathan Matias, Cornell University |
Hideyuki Matsumi, VUB (Vrije Universiteit Brussel) |
Andrea Matwyshyn, Penn State Law/ Penn State Engineering |
Jonathan Mayer, Princeton University |
WIlliam McGeveran, University of Minnesota Law School |
Lee McGuigan, Digital Life Initiative, Cornell Tech |
Katie McInnis, Consumer Reports |
Jasmine McNealy, University of Florida |
Edward McNicholas, Ropes & Gray LLP |
Emily McReynolds, Microsoft |
Sylvain Métille, Lausanne University |
Christopher Millard, Queen Mary University of London |
Julissa Milligan, Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board |
Jon Mills, UF College of Law |
Darakhshan Mir, Bucknell University |
Brent Mittelstadt, University of Oxford |
Kevin Moriarty, Division of Privacy & Identity Protection; Federal Trade Commission |
Laura Moy, Georgetown University Law Center |
Trix Mulder, University of Groningen |
Scott Mulligan, Skidmore College |
Deirdre Mulligan, School of Information UCB |
Arvind Narayanan, Princeton University |
Lisa Nelson, University of Pittsburgh |
Nora Ni Loideain, Information Law and Policy Centre, Institute of Advanced Legal Studies, University of London |
Gabriel Nicholas, New York University School of Law |
Aileen Nielsen, ETH Zurich Center for Law & Economics |
Helen Nissenbaum, Cornell Tech |
Kobbi Nissim, georgetown university |
Tom Norton, Fordham Center on Law and Information Policy (CLIP) |
Ronan Ó Fathaigh, University of Amsterdam |
Tom O’Malley, Frozen Pii, LLC |
Maggie Oates, Carnegie Mellon University |
George Obaido, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg |
Andrew Odlyzko, University of Minnesota |
Paul Ohm, Georgetown Law |
Peter Ormerod, Western Carolina University |
Brian Owsley, UNT Dallas College of Law |
Nizan Packin, CITY UNIVERSITY OF NY — BARUCH COLLEGE |
Ella Padon Corren, Herzog Fox & Neeman |
Nicolas Papernot, University of Toronto and Vector Institute |
Sunoo Park, MIT & Harvard |
Stephanie Pell, West Point |
Jon Penney, Harvard Berkman Klein Center / Citizen Lab |
Najarian Peters, Seton Hall Law School |
Bilyana Petkova, HBKU College of Law – Doha |
Gavin Phillipson, University of Bristol |
Visakha Phusamruat, National Institute of Development Administration |
Jules Polonetsky, Future of Privacy Forum |
Kenneth Propp, Georgetown University Law Center |
Wenjun QIu, University of Toronto |
Michelle Ramsden, USDOJ |
Sofia Ranchordas, University of Groningen |
Daniel Rauch, tbd |
Abhilasha Ravichander, Carnegie Mellon University |
Angie Raymond, Information Governance, Ostrom Workshop- Indiana University |
Priscilla Regan, Schar School of Policy and Government, George Mason University |
Blake Reid, Colorado Law |
Sekou Remy, IBM Research Africa |
Elizabeth Renieris, Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society |
Neil Richards, Washington University School of Law |
David Robinson, Cornell |
Zak Rogoff, Ranking Digital Rights |
Michael Rosenbloom, Communications & Technology Law Clinic at Georgetown Law |
Alan Rozenshtein, University of Minnesota Law School |
Alan Rubel, University of Wisconsin-Madison |
Ira Rubinstein, NYU School of Law |
James Rule, Center for the Study of Law & Society, UC Berkeley |
Chris Russell, University of Surrey/the Alan Turing Institute |
Laurent Sacharoff, University of Arkansas School of Law |
Norman Sadeh, Carnegie Mellon University |
Madelyn Sanfilippo, CITP, Princeton University |
Sarah Scheffler, Boston University |
Lauren Scholz, Florida State College of Law |
Elaine Sedenberg, Facebook |
Andrew Selbst, UCLA School of Law |
Jordan Selzer, GWU/MFA |
Aaron Shapiro, Information Law Institute, NYU |
Stuart Shapiro, MITRE Corporation |
Alexis Shore, Boston University |
Yan Shvartzshnaider, NYU |
Michael Sierra-Arevalo, Rutgers School of Criminal Justiice |
Ido Sivan-Sevilla, Cornell Tech |
Robert Sloan, University of Illinois at Chicago |
Christopher Slobogin, Vanderbilt Law School |
Anna Slomovic, Independent |
Stephen Smith, Stanford Center for Internet and society |
Adam Smith, Boston University |
Daniel Solove, George Washington University Law School |
Alicia Solow-Niederman, Harvard Law School |
Lisa J Sotto, Hunton Andrews Kurth LLP |
Lydia Stamato, University of Maryland, Baltimore County |
Jay Stanley, ACLU |
Andrew Stivers, Federal Trade Commission, Bureau of Economics |
Lior Strahilevitz, University of Chicago Law School |
Katherine Strandburg, New York University School of Law |
Allyson Stuart, Charleston School of Law |
Jennifer Sturiale, Harvard Law School |
Tanasai Sucontphunt, National Institute of Development Administration |
Clare Sullivan, Law Center, Georgetown University |
Peter Sun, University of Toronto |
Daniel Susser, Penn State University |
Marika Swanberg, Boston University |
Peter Swire, Georgia Tech Scheller College of Business |
Omer Tene, IAPP |
Melanie Teplinsky, American University, Washington College of Law |
David Thaw, University of Pittsburgh |
Matthew Tokson, University of Utah College of Law |
Anne Toomey McKenna, Penn State Dickinson Law/ Penn State Institute for Computational & Data Sciences |
Lawrence Trautman, Prairie View A&M University |
Michael Traynor, Cobalt LLP |
Charlotte Tschider, University of Nebraska College of Law |
Catherine Tucker, MIT |
Joseph Turow, University of Pennsylvania |
Blase Ur, University of Chicago |
Jennifer Urban, Berkeley Law |
Jeffrey Vagle, Georgia State University College of Law |
Joris Van Hoboken, Vrije Universiteit Brussel & University of Amsterdam |
Rory Van Loo, Boston University |
Patricia Vargas Leon, Information Society Project Yale Law School |
Mayank Varia, Boston University |
Prashant Vasudevan, University of California Berkeley |
Michael Veale, University College London |
Mark Verstraete, NYU |
Salome Viljoen, NYU Law, Cornell Tech |
Sandra Wachter, University of Oxford |
Ari Waldman, New York Law School/Princeton |
Richard Warner, Chicago-Kent College of Law |
Anne Washington, New York University |
Gabriel Weinberg, DuckDuckGo |
Kate Weisburd, George Washington Univeristy School of Law |
Jeremy Weissman, Washington and Lee University / Roger Mudd Center for Ethics |
Daniel Weitzner, MIT Internet Policy Research Initiative |
Kevin Werbach, Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania |
Susanne Wetzel, Stevens Institute of Technology |
Rebecca Wexler, Berkeley School of Law |
Tara Whalen, Carleton University |
Jan Whittington, University of Washington |
Craig Wills, Worcester Polytechnic Institute |
Peter Winn, U.S. Department of Justice |
Jane Winn, University of Washington School of Law |
Shane Witnov, Facebook |
Christopher Wolf, Future of Privacy Forum |
Josephine Wolff, Fletcher School, Tufts University |
Richmond Wong, UC Berkeley School of Information |
Alexandra Wood, Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society at Harvard University |
Allison Woodruff, Google |
Sam Wrigley, University of Helsinki |
Felix Wu, Cardozo School of Law |
Heng Xu, American University |
Svetlana Yakovleva, Institute for Information Law (University of Amsterdam), De Brauw Blackstone Westbroek |
Meg Young, University of Washington Information School |
Tal Zarsky, Penn Law |
Elana Zeide, UCLA School of Law |
Nan Zhang, Kogod School of Business, American University |
Carleen Zubrzycki, Harvard Law School |
Frederik Zuiderveen Borgesius, iHub, Radboud University |
Polina Zvyagina, Airbnb |
Sponsors
In 2018, the Program Committee adopted a statement reflecting our longstanding approach to sponsorship. Our 2020 sponsors are Microsoft, Future of Privacy Forum, AT&T, and Covington & Burling LLP.