We live in an age of unprecedented surveillance, enhanced by modern technology, prompting some to suggest that privacy is dead. Previous scholarship suggests that no subset of the population feels this phenomenon more than marginalized communities. Those who rely on public benefits, for example, must turn over personal information and submit to government surveillance far more routinely than wealthier citizens who enjoy greater opportunity to protect their privacy and the ready funds to secure it. This article illuminates the other end of the spectrum, arguing that many individuals who may value government and nonprofit services and legal protections fail to enjoy these benefits because they reside in a “surveillance gap.” These people incl...
Over the past decade it has become increasingly common to speak of the emergence of a surveillance s...
U.S. information privacy laws contain a memory gap: they regulate the collection and disclosure of c...
Protecting associational freedom is a core, independent yet unappreciated part of the Fourth Amendme...
We live in an age of unprecedented surveillance, enhanced by modern technology, prompting some to su...
This article analyzes how privacy law fails the poor. Due to advanced technologies, all Americans ar...
This Article examines the matrix of vulnerabilities that low-income people face as a result of the c...
Algorithmic profiling technologies are impeding the economic security of low-income people in the Un...
In the United States, many low-income citizens are being held to a harsher standard than wealthier c...
This Article examines a question that had become increasingly important in the emerging surveillance...
Civilian surveillance has become a twenty-first-century norm across most of the globe. In the United...
In the United States, digital inclusion policies designed to introduce poor people, communities of c...
Since the nineteenth century, privacy concerns have increased with the growth of technology. The inv...
As courts and legislatures increasingly recognize that “digital is different” and attempt to limit g...
It can be easy to get depressed about the state of privacy these days. In an age of networked digita...
This Article examines how the prevailing legal conception of privacy facilitates the erosion of priv...
Over the past decade it has become increasingly common to speak of the emergence of a surveillance s...
U.S. information privacy laws contain a memory gap: they regulate the collection and disclosure of c...
Protecting associational freedom is a core, independent yet unappreciated part of the Fourth Amendme...
We live in an age of unprecedented surveillance, enhanced by modern technology, prompting some to su...
This article analyzes how privacy law fails the poor. Due to advanced technologies, all Americans ar...
This Article examines the matrix of vulnerabilities that low-income people face as a result of the c...
Algorithmic profiling technologies are impeding the economic security of low-income people in the Un...
In the United States, many low-income citizens are being held to a harsher standard than wealthier c...
This Article examines a question that had become increasingly important in the emerging surveillance...
Civilian surveillance has become a twenty-first-century norm across most of the globe. In the United...
In the United States, digital inclusion policies designed to introduce poor people, communities of c...
Since the nineteenth century, privacy concerns have increased with the growth of technology. The inv...
As courts and legislatures increasingly recognize that “digital is different” and attempt to limit g...
It can be easy to get depressed about the state of privacy these days. In an age of networked digita...
This Article examines how the prevailing legal conception of privacy facilitates the erosion of priv...
Over the past decade it has become increasingly common to speak of the emergence of a surveillance s...
U.S. information privacy laws contain a memory gap: they regulate the collection and disclosure of c...
Protecting associational freedom is a core, independent yet unappreciated part of the Fourth Amendme...