Consumers overwhelmingly believe that companies do not do enough to protect their personal data. As Congress considers federal data protection legislation, it must ensure that any proposed legislation comports with the First Amendment. In 2011, in Sorrell v. IMS Health Inc., the U.S. Supreme Court determined that a Vermont law prohibiting the use of physician-prescribing records for marketing purposes violated the First Amendment. At the heart of Sorrell is that shared data, unlike a traditional commodity like oil, conveys information and is thus First Amendment-protected speech. Since Sorrell, the use and retention of data, specifically personal data, has exploded and is only expected to increase. Nevertheless, the United States currently ...
Passage of the European Data Protection Directive and other national laws have increased the need fo...
After decades of calls for comprehensive consumer privacy laws in the United States, they are nearly...
America’s privacy bill has come due. Since the dawn of the Internet, Congress has repeatedly failed ...
Consumers overwhelmingly believe that companies do not do enough to protect their personal data. As ...
Today’s world runs on data. The creation and improvement of technological products and services depe...
Given the growing ubiquity of digital technology’s presence in people’s lives today, it is becoming ...
Does the United States need a federal data privacy policy? If so, what would one even look like? Th...
This thesis explores the current regulatory and legislative protections afforded to consum...
This Article addresses the need to recognize a property-based right in personal data and to limit th...
Collection, analysis, and use of personal data increasingly affect everything we do in the informati...
Although privacy has been around for quite some time, it has picked up speed within the last fifty y...
In 2011, the United States Supreme Court in Sorrell v. IMS Health Inc. struck down a Vermont law tha...
In the United States today, substance abusers have greater privacy than web users and privacy has be...
Data is the pollution problem of the information age, and protecting privacy is the environmental ch...
The discussion around personal privacy has only become more important in our modern, digitized world...
Passage of the European Data Protection Directive and other national laws have increased the need fo...
After decades of calls for comprehensive consumer privacy laws in the United States, they are nearly...
America’s privacy bill has come due. Since the dawn of the Internet, Congress has repeatedly failed ...
Consumers overwhelmingly believe that companies do not do enough to protect their personal data. As ...
Today’s world runs on data. The creation and improvement of technological products and services depe...
Given the growing ubiquity of digital technology’s presence in people’s lives today, it is becoming ...
Does the United States need a federal data privacy policy? If so, what would one even look like? Th...
This thesis explores the current regulatory and legislative protections afforded to consum...
This Article addresses the need to recognize a property-based right in personal data and to limit th...
Collection, analysis, and use of personal data increasingly affect everything we do in the informati...
Although privacy has been around for quite some time, it has picked up speed within the last fifty y...
In 2011, the United States Supreme Court in Sorrell v. IMS Health Inc. struck down a Vermont law tha...
In the United States today, substance abusers have greater privacy than web users and privacy has be...
Data is the pollution problem of the information age, and protecting privacy is the environmental ch...
The discussion around personal privacy has only become more important in our modern, digitized world...
Passage of the European Data Protection Directive and other national laws have increased the need fo...
After decades of calls for comprehensive consumer privacy laws in the United States, they are nearly...
America’s privacy bill has come due. Since the dawn of the Internet, Congress has repeatedly failed ...