June 12, 2015
The Digital Age on the Global Stage: Can the Law Keep Up?
2015 ACS National Convention, 2015 National Convention, copyright, International Law, patent, right to be forgotten, Right to Privacy
Jeffrey Rosen
National Constitution CenterBegin: 0:00
Anupam Chander
University of California, DavisBegin: 14:28
Mieke Eoyang
Third WayBegin: 11:58
Orin Kerr
The George Washington University Law SchoolBegin: 10:18
Greg Nojeim
Center for Democracy and TechnologyBegin: 4:40
Kate Westmoreland
Stanford Center for Internet and SocietyBegin: 9:11
The rapid development of technological innovation continually raises challenging questions for our legal system and policymakers as they seek to regulate actors and actions at the international level.Increasingly, the United States and our allies are at odds, imposing different legal standards across the Internet. What laws and treaties can effectuate law enforcement goals while maintaining various nations' civil liberties regimes in an age of transnational crime and terrorism? What standards should be met for U.S. law enforcement to access information stored in extraterritorial data centers? How can divergent free speech principles in Europe and the U..S. be successfully navigated with regard to hate speech on the Internet? Can European protection of the "right to privacy" and the "right to be forgotten" comport with American standards of free speech?
Speakers:
- Jeffrey Rosen, President and CEO, National Constitution Center
- Anupam Chander, Director, California International Law Center; Professor of Law, University of California, Davis
- Mieke Eoyang, Director, National Security Program, Third Way
- Orin Kerr, Fred C. Stevenson ,Research Professor of Law, The George Washington University Law School
- Greg Nojeim, Director, Freedom, Security and Technology Project, Center for Democracy and Technology
- Kate Westmoreland, Non-Residential Fellow, Stanford Center for Internet and Society