Symposium 2012:
Privacy & Technology



Daniel J. Solove
George Washinton University
“Introduction: Privacy Self-Management and the Consent Paradox”

Jonathan Zittrain
Harvard Law School
Special Presentation

Paul Schwartz
Berkeley Law School
“The E.U.-U.S. Privacy Collision”

Lior Strahilevitz
University of Chicago
“A Positive Theory of Privacy”

Danielle Citron
University of Maryland
Anita Allen
University of Pennsylvania
Orin Kerr
George Washington University
Alessandro Acquisti
Carnegie Mellon University
Latanya Sweeney
Harvard University
Julie Cohen
Georgetown University
“What Privacy is For”


Neil Richards
Washington University
“The Dangers of Surveillance”

Joel Reidenberg
Fordham University
Paul Ohm
University of Colorado
Tim Wu
Columbia University
Thomas Crocker
University of South Carolina
Danny Weitzner
MIT




Full Schedule

Original Proposal


Danielle Keats Citron & David Gray, “Total Surveillance's Privacy Harms: A Reply to Professor Neil Richards”


VIDEO:

Introductory Comments
Daniel Solove and Dean Minow (HLS)

Special Presentation:
Jonathan Zittrain

Panel: The Harms of Surveillance:
Neil Richards, Danielle Citron, and Orin Kerr

Panel: The E.U.-U.S. Privacy Collision:
Paul Schwartz, Joel Reidenberg, Danny Weitzner, and Latanya Sweeney

Panel: What Privacy Is For:
Julie Cohen, Paul Ohm, Tim Wu, and Thomas Crocker

Panel: Toward a Positive Theory of Private Law :
Lior Strahilevitz, Anita Allen, and Alessandro Acquisti





Friday, November 9
8:30 A.M. – 4:30 P.M.


Langdell South
Harvard Law School

Please join us for an engaging and lively set of debates on one of the most important legal issues of our day: what is the future of privacy law in an age in which rapid cultural and social transformation is precipitated by the bewilderingly rapid pace of technological advance? Many of the nation's top privacy scholars will be joining us to discuss Big Data, executive surveillance, the E.U.-U.S. privacy divide, the theoretical foundations of privacy.

Open to the public. A light breakfast will be served at 8:00 a.m. before the symposium. Lunch, which will be served at 12:30 p.m., will provide an opportunity to interact with the symposium participants.


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