All Blog Posts
These blog posts are written by TAP academics, TAP staff members, and on occasion by guest bloggers. TAP’s purpose for this section of the site is to present information, points of view, research, and debates directly from the academics and guest experts.
Blog Results: 16
BLOG POST
Professors Citron, Solove, Allen, and Waldman Examine ‘The Fight for Privacy’
Publication Date: April 7, 2023
Highly regarded privacy law professors Daniel Solove, George Washington University, Anita Allen, University of Pennsylvania, and Ari Waldman, Northeastern University joined University of Virginia law professor Danielle Citron for a discussion of her recent book, The Fight for Privacy: Protecting Dignity, Identity and Love in the Digital Age.
Featuring
BLOG POST
Daniel Solove Contends Privacy Law Regulations Should Be Based on Use, Harm, and Risk
Publication Date: February 17, 2023
In a new article, George Washington Law professor and privacy expert Daniel Solove contends that privacy law requires rethinking. “Data Is What Data Does…” explains that privacy law “protections should be based on the use of personal data and proportionate to the harm and risk involved with those uses.”
Featuring
Daniel J. SoloveTAP Scholar
Danielle CitronTAP Scholar
BLOG POST
Privacy Experts Neil Richards and Danielle Citron Talk About Why Privacy Matters
Publication Date: January 13, 2023
In a UVA Common Law podcast, privacy law expert Neil Richards, law professor at Washington University in St. Louis, joins University of Virginia law professor Danielle Citron to discuss how privacy regulation could ensure that information cannot be used to gain control and influence others.
Featuring
Danielle CitronTAP Scholar
Neil RichardsTAP Scholar
BLOG POST
Privacy Experts Anita Allen and Danielle Citron Discuss Fighting Racial Discrimination in Our Digital Lives
Publication Date: October 7, 2022
In a UVA Common Law podcast, University of Pennsylvania law professor Anita Allen joins University of Virginia law professor Danielle Citron and UVA Law’s Dean Risa Goluboff to discuss privacy law as it specifically impacts people of color.
Featuring
Anita AllenTAP Scholar
Danielle CitronTAP Scholar
BLOG POST
Danielle Citron Explains How “Abortion Bans Are Going to Make Stalkerware Even More Dangerous”
Publication Date: July 18, 2022
In a recent article written for Slate, privacy law professor Danielle Citron says, “Intimate privacy is even more in jeopardy now that women’s reproductive choices may render them in violation of state criminal law.”
Featuring
Danielle CitronTAP Scholar
BLOG POST
Danielle Citron Leads New LawTech Center at UVA
Publication Date: September 29, 2021
Professor Danielle Citron is the inaugural director of the LawTech Center, a new scholarly center at the University of Virginia Law School.
Featuring
Danielle CitronTAP Scholar
BLOG POST
Professors Danielle Citron and Daniel Solove Examine Privacy Harms
Publication Date: March 16, 2021
In their new article, “Privacy Harms,” privacy experts and law professors Danielle Citron, University of Virginia, and Daniel Solove, George Washington University, discuss the legal challenges in holding privacy violators accountable for the harms they cause.
Featuring
Daniel J. SoloveTAP Scholar
Danielle CitronTAP Scholar
BLOG POST
Danielle Citron Discusses How Deepfakes Undermine Truth and Threaten Democracy
Publication Date: September 12, 2019
Boston University law professor Danielle Citron shares how the use of deepfake technology to manipulate video and audio for malicious purposes is becoming a real threat.
Featuring
Danielle CitronTAP Scholar
BLOG POST
Danielle Citron Discusses the Challenges of Protecting Sexual Privacy in a Digital World
Publication Date: June 5, 2019
Privacy law expert Danielle Citron explains how digital technology magnifies the harm from violations of sexual privacy in two new articles, “Sexual Privacy” and “Deep Fakes: A Looming Challenge for Privacy, Democracy, and National Security”.
Featuring
Danielle CitronTAP Scholar
BLOG POST
The Automated Administrative State
Publication Date: April 11, 2019
TAP Scholars Danielle Citron, University of Maryland Francis King Carey School of Law, and Ryan Calo, University of Washington, examine the trend of automation in agency decision-making, and find the automation of the administrative state “deeply concerning”.
Pagination