Many U.S. laws protect privacy by governing recording. Recently, however, courts have recognized a First Amendment “right to record.” This Article addresses how courts should handle privacy laws in light of the developing First Amendment right to record. The privacy harms addressed by recording laws are situated harms. Recording changes the way people behave in physical spaces by altering the nature of those spaces. Thus, recording laws can be placed within a long line of First Amendment case law that recognizes a valid government interest in managing the qualities of rivalrous physical space, so as not to allow one person’s behavior to disrupt the behavior of others. That interest, importantly, will not always justify suppressing recording...
A Right to Privacy for Modern Discovery Recently, the Supreme Court found that a person has a Fourth...
The right of privacy is an aggregate of many separate rights, each of which is guaranteed in the Bil...
The problem of privacy today is no longer—if it ever was—a distinctly legal problem. On the contrary...
Many U.S. laws protect privacy by governing recording. Recently, however, courts have recognized a F...
A growing body of authority recognizes that citizen recording of police officers and public space is...
The government regularly outs information concerning people’s sexuality, gender identity, and HIV st...
The First Amendment information-gathering right has always been inferior to the long-established rig...
Analyzing federal cases through May 2015, this Article examines the current, contested terrain of th...
The coordination of common law and constitutional norms are of pressing importance on matters of fre...
For more than three decades, the hypothetical constitutional right of informational privacy has gove...
Given the growing ubiquity of digital technology’s presence in people’s lives today, it is becoming ...
Nobody likes to be talked about but everybody likes to talk. Trying to stop the dissemination of pri...
Where the right to privacy exists, it should be available to all people. If not universally availabl...
Studying the different ways in which intellectual property law addresses expressive concerns offers ...
It is ironic that while recent legal history records the emergence of a constitutional right to priv...
A Right to Privacy for Modern Discovery Recently, the Supreme Court found that a person has a Fourth...
The right of privacy is an aggregate of many separate rights, each of which is guaranteed in the Bil...
The problem of privacy today is no longer—if it ever was—a distinctly legal problem. On the contrary...
Many U.S. laws protect privacy by governing recording. Recently, however, courts have recognized a F...
A growing body of authority recognizes that citizen recording of police officers and public space is...
The government regularly outs information concerning people’s sexuality, gender identity, and HIV st...
The First Amendment information-gathering right has always been inferior to the long-established rig...
Analyzing federal cases through May 2015, this Article examines the current, contested terrain of th...
The coordination of common law and constitutional norms are of pressing importance on matters of fre...
For more than three decades, the hypothetical constitutional right of informational privacy has gove...
Given the growing ubiquity of digital technology’s presence in people’s lives today, it is becoming ...
Nobody likes to be talked about but everybody likes to talk. Trying to stop the dissemination of pri...
Where the right to privacy exists, it should be available to all people. If not universally availabl...
Studying the different ways in which intellectual property law addresses expressive concerns offers ...
It is ironic that while recent legal history records the emergence of a constitutional right to priv...
A Right to Privacy for Modern Discovery Recently, the Supreme Court found that a person has a Fourth...
The right of privacy is an aggregate of many separate rights, each of which is guaranteed in the Bil...
The problem of privacy today is no longer—if it ever was—a distinctly legal problem. On the contrary...