George Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four. When we think of literary works and privacy, that is the first book that comes to mind, and the same is true for judges penning privacy law opinions too. Although the novel is notable for expressing fears of authoritarian overreach, other literary works offer judges a tool for describing the plights of parties before them—parties who seek to vindicate breaches of privacy in many different forms. Nineteen Eighty-Four particularly suits cases that challenge government surveillance or non-governmental wiretapping. References to Franz Kafka and Joseph Heller illuminate other privacy harms, such as unease with governmental collection, manipulation, and release of data. Nathaniel Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Lette...
In Discourses of Ordinary Justice, I read fiction by Charles Chesnutt, Edith Wharton, and Richard Wr...
The harms of privacy intrusions are numerous. They include discrimination, reputational harm, and c...
The familiar legend of privacy law holds that Samuel Warren and Louis Brandeis invented the right to...
George Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four. When we think of literary works and privacy, that is the first...
Scholars and jurists recognize Samuel Warren and Louis Brandeis’s influential Harvard Law Review art...
The focus of this Essay is the privacy of letters – the written manifestations of thoughts, intents,...
The problem of privacy today is no longer—if it ever was—a distinctly legal problem. On the contrary...
The relationship between privacy and intellectual property has resurfaced with a twist at the turn o...
This is the first of a three-book series on law for the secondary school market. It examines in an a...
The field of surveillance studies is developing at a rapid rate, fuelled by a deep unease about the ...
The field of surveillance studies is developing at a rapid rate, fuelled by a deep unease about the ...
There is growing interest in using copyright to protect the privacy and reputation of people depicte...
In every corner of the Western world, writers proclaim privacy as a supremely important human good...
Paper presented at the MARAC conference in Richmond, VA on October 26, 2012. S9 - We Walk the Line: ...
Because invasion of privacy developed from a late nineteenth century law review article motivated in...
In Discourses of Ordinary Justice, I read fiction by Charles Chesnutt, Edith Wharton, and Richard Wr...
The harms of privacy intrusions are numerous. They include discrimination, reputational harm, and c...
The familiar legend of privacy law holds that Samuel Warren and Louis Brandeis invented the right to...
George Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four. When we think of literary works and privacy, that is the first...
Scholars and jurists recognize Samuel Warren and Louis Brandeis’s influential Harvard Law Review art...
The focus of this Essay is the privacy of letters – the written manifestations of thoughts, intents,...
The problem of privacy today is no longer—if it ever was—a distinctly legal problem. On the contrary...
The relationship between privacy and intellectual property has resurfaced with a twist at the turn o...
This is the first of a three-book series on law for the secondary school market. It examines in an a...
The field of surveillance studies is developing at a rapid rate, fuelled by a deep unease about the ...
The field of surveillance studies is developing at a rapid rate, fuelled by a deep unease about the ...
There is growing interest in using copyright to protect the privacy and reputation of people depicte...
In every corner of the Western world, writers proclaim privacy as a supremely important human good...
Paper presented at the MARAC conference in Richmond, VA on October 26, 2012. S9 - We Walk the Line: ...
Because invasion of privacy developed from a late nineteenth century law review article motivated in...
In Discourses of Ordinary Justice, I read fiction by Charles Chesnutt, Edith Wharton, and Richard Wr...
The harms of privacy intrusions are numerous. They include discrimination, reputational harm, and c...
The familiar legend of privacy law holds that Samuel Warren and Louis Brandeis invented the right to...