Main Content

Content from the following sources has been used in the creation of this casebook:

    • 1: Online Speech original
    • 1.1: American Civil Liberties Union, "Freedom of Speech -- ACLU Position Paper" original
    • 1.2: Andrew Marantz, "The Fight Over Free Speech Online," The New Yorker (August 28, 2017) original
    • 1.3: Matthew Prince, "Why We Terminated Daily Stormer,' Cloudflare (August 16, 2017) original
    • 1.4: Margaret E. Krawiec, Thomas A. Parnham, "Courts Parse First Amendment Protections for Anonymous Critics Online," Skadden's 2015 Insights - Global Litigation (January 2015) original
    • 1.5: Ankita Rao, "Social Media Companies Are Not Free Speech Platforms," Vice Motherboard (Nov 25, 2016) original
    • 2: Privacy Basics; Data Privacy and Private Entities; Law Enforcement and Government original
    • 2.1: Dorothy J. Glancy, "The Invention of the Right to Privacy," 21 Ariz. L. Rev. 1 (1979), read pp. 1 - 8 original
    • 2.2: Caitlin Chin, "The U.S. Privacy Landscape Post-GDPR," Georgetown Public Policy Review (August 1, 2018) original
    • 2.3: Google Privacy Portal, skim all original
    • 2.4: Google's Privacy Policy, skim all original
    • 2.5: Google's Privacy Principles, skim all original
    • 2.6: "Facebook Settles FTC Charges That It Deceived Consumers By Failing To Keep Privacy Promises", Federal Trade Commission (November 29, 2011), read all original
    • 2.7: Kevin Granville, "Facebook and Cambridge Analytica: What You Need to Know as Fallout Widens," The New York Times (March 19, 2018) original
    • 2.8: Eric Goldman, "Primer on European Union’s Right To Be Forgotten (Excerpt from My Internet Law Casebook) + Bonus Linkwrap," Technology & Marketing Law Blog (August 21, 2014) original
    • 2.9: John Hendel, "In Europe, a Right to Be Forgotten Trumps the Memory of the Internet," The Atlantic (Feb 3, 2011) original
    • 2.10: Bruce Schneier, "Privacy and the Fourth Amendment," Schneier on Security (March 31, 2009) original
    • 2.11: Orin Kerr and Greg Nojem, "The Data Question: Should the Third-Party Records Doctrine Be Revisited?," ABA Journal (August 1, 2012) original
    • 2.12: Matt Stroud, "How a coke dealer busted by GPS tracking is changing privacy law," The Verge (February 21, 2012) original
    • 2.13: Sabrina McCubbin, "Summary: The Supreme Court Rules in Carpenter v. United States," Lawfare (June 22, 2018), read all original
    • 3: Copyright: Basic Scope of Protection, Fair Use, Online Liability, and the DMCA Safe Harbor original
    • 3.1: Copyright Act: 17 U.S. Code § 102 - Subject matter of copyright: In general original
    • 3.2: Copyright Act: 17 U.S. Code § 106 - Exclusive rights in copyrighted works original
    • 3.3: Copyright Act: 17 U.S. Code § 107 - Limitations on exclusive rights: Fair use original
    • 3.6: Mike Masnick, "YouTube Wins Yet Another Complete Victory Over Viacom; Court Mocks Viacom's Ridiculous Legal Theories," Techdirt (April 18, 2013), read all (~2 pages) original
    • 3.7: In the Matter of: Section 512 Study: Notice and Request for Public Comment, Docket No. 2015-7, Before the U.S. Copyright Office, Library of Congress, Joint Comments of Recording Industry Association of America et al. (March 31, 2016), read Sections I, II, and III, pages 1 - 14 (~13 pages) original
    • 3.8: Section 512 Study: Notice and Request for Public Comment, Docket No. 2015-7, Comment of Google, Inc. (April 1, 2016), read Responses to Questions 1, 2, and 7, pages 1 - 5 and page 8 (~6 pages) original
    • 3.9: Content Creators Coalition, "T Bone Burnett on the Broken DMCA Safe Harbors" (video) (4:54) original
    • 3.10: James Vincent, "EU approves controversial Copyright Directive, including internet ‘link tax’ and ‘upload filter’," The Verge (September 12, 2018) original
    • 4: AI, Algorithms, and Machine Learning: Law, Ethics, and Governance original
    • 4.1: Julia Angwin, Jeff Larson, Surya Mattu and Lauren Kirchner, "Machine Bias," ProPublica (May 23, 2016) original
    • 4.3: Iyad Rahwan, "What moral decisions should driverless cars make" (video), TEDx Cambridge, watch all (13:36) original
    • 4.5: Doshi-Velez, Finale and Kortz, Mason and Budish, Ryan and Bavitz, Christopher and Gershman, Samuel J. and O'Brien, David and Shieber, Stuart and Waldo, Jim and Weinberger, David and Wood, Alexandra, "Accountability of AI Under the Law: The Role of Explanation" (November 3, 2017), available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3064761, read all original
    • 4.6: Ryan Budish, "Helping Global Policymakers Navigate AI’s Challenges and Opportunities," Medium.com (August 13, 2018), read all original