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The internet is global, but the laws that govern it are not; designing digital platform regulations around shared modules can help relieve this tension.
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The emerging three-factor Carpenter test should become the primary standard for Fourth Amendment searches, replacing the test that has prevailed for over 50 years.
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What’s the best path forward for platform transparency regulation?
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An EU proposal on combating child sexual abuse material online relies on technology not yet invented and, even worse, would create significant national security risks.
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A review of James E. Baker, “The Centaur’s Dilemma: National Security Law for the Coming AI Revolution” (Brookings Institution, 2020).
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If Roe is overturned, criminal investigations into women’s reproductive decisions enabled by modern technologies and the sensitive, intimate data these technologies capture would constitute an unique ext...
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The American Data Privacy and Protection Act would provide numerous substantive privacy protections that are long overdue.
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Transparency reporting and data sharing aren’t the same. They aren’t even the right words.
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Europe’s new Digital Markets Act is in tension with the General Data Protection Regulation, and the practical impact may be bad for privacy and competition.
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A legislative deadlock in Brussels risks the future of U.S.-EU negotiations.
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The laws already in California and Vermont do not put any meaningful controls on companies selling, licensing and otherwise sharing Americans’ sensitive data on the open market—and the new bills are no d...
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Here is an explainer of the data presented in three intelligence community reports released in April regarding the continuing decline in the use of national surveillance authorities over the past two yea...