Legal scholars guided the creation and development of privacy torts, including what would become known as the disclosure tort, for about seventy-five years (1890-1965), a period in which most states came to recognize a common law or statutory right to privacy. Since then, scholarly attempts to curb or modify the tort have yielded little. This Article-beginning with the formalism-realism debate won by Brandeis, Pound, and Prosser and ending with modern experts--shows that notwithstanding enormous efforts by contemporary legal academics, would-be reformers of the disclosure tort have not budged it since Prosser\u27s Restatement (Second). The Article presents both a lesson and a warning for modern scholars who seek to change privacy tort law
This Article argues that the modern concept of privacy itself, particularly as framed by some of its...
The tort of invasion of privacy has had a short but tortuous development made even more tortuous by ...
Information technologies are reducing the costs of credible signaling, just as they have reduced the...
Legal scholars guided the creation and development of privacy torts, including what would become kno...
In 1890, Samuel Warren and Louis Brandeis proposed a privacy tort and seventy years later, William P...
Although seventy-seven years have passed since its launching, the right of privacy is still in its i...
The authors assert the need for a common method of analyzing privacy situations that can be applied ...
In 1890, Samuel Warren and Louis Brandeis, in their famous Harvard Law Review article The Right to P...
The familiar legend of privacy law holds that Samuel Warren and Louis Brandeis invented the right to...
Because invasion of privacy developed from a late nineteenth century law review article motivated in...
Where the right to privacy exists, it should be available to all people. If not universally availabl...
This Article examines the complex ways in which William Prosser shaped the development of the Americ...
This Article argues that the current interpretation given to the four-part invasion of privacy frame...
The history of the two torts of defamation and unwarranted invasion of the right of privacy has been...
In the years since Samuel Warren and Louis Brandeis proposed a unified theory of invasion of privacy...
This Article argues that the modern concept of privacy itself, particularly as framed by some of its...
The tort of invasion of privacy has had a short but tortuous development made even more tortuous by ...
Information technologies are reducing the costs of credible signaling, just as they have reduced the...
Legal scholars guided the creation and development of privacy torts, including what would become kno...
In 1890, Samuel Warren and Louis Brandeis proposed a privacy tort and seventy years later, William P...
Although seventy-seven years have passed since its launching, the right of privacy is still in its i...
The authors assert the need for a common method of analyzing privacy situations that can be applied ...
In 1890, Samuel Warren and Louis Brandeis, in their famous Harvard Law Review article The Right to P...
The familiar legend of privacy law holds that Samuel Warren and Louis Brandeis invented the right to...
Because invasion of privacy developed from a late nineteenth century law review article motivated in...
Where the right to privacy exists, it should be available to all people. If not universally availabl...
This Article examines the complex ways in which William Prosser shaped the development of the Americ...
This Article argues that the current interpretation given to the four-part invasion of privacy frame...
The history of the two torts of defamation and unwarranted invasion of the right of privacy has been...
In the years since Samuel Warren and Louis Brandeis proposed a unified theory of invasion of privacy...
This Article argues that the modern concept of privacy itself, particularly as framed by some of its...
The tort of invasion of privacy has had a short but tortuous development made even more tortuous by ...
Information technologies are reducing the costs of credible signaling, just as they have reduced the...