Main Content
“The Hidden Costs of Automated Thinking” by Jonathan Zittrain (The New Yorker, 2019)
4.3.1.2
https://perma.cc/JNX8-HCM8
“The Judicial Demand for Explainable Artificial Intelligence” by Ashley Deeks (Columbia Law Review, 2019)
4.3.1.3
https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3440723
“The Law of the Horse: What Cyberlaw Might Teach” by Lawrence Lessig, HLR Commentaries (1999)
1.1.1
https://perma.cc/97JT-D3PW
“The Mythos of Model Interpretability” by Zachary C. Lipton (ArXiv, 2016)
4.3.3.5
https://perma.cc/6MV7-HLHB
“The New Governors: The People, Rules, and Processes Governing Online Speech” by Kate Klonick, Harvard Law Review (2018)
4.1.2.2
https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2937985
“Three Eras of Digital Governance” by Jonathan Zittrain (2019)
1.1.2
https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3458435
“Towards a Clearer Conversation about Platform Liability” by Daphne Keller, Knight First Amendment Institute (2018)
2.3.2.6
https://perma.cc/ZKA5-4WVB
“Understanding the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA)” by Mark Diamond (2019)
4.2.1.3
https://perma.cc/7TYA-WD2U
“War and Peace ebook readers find a surprise in its Nooks” by Hermione Hoby (The Guardian, 2012)
2.2.2.2
https://perma.cc/TK4Y-XZ6A
“WTF is GDPR?” by Natasha Lomas, TechCrunch (2018)
4.2.1.2
https://perma.cc/5G3F-9YVN
This book, and all H2O books, are Creative Commons licensed for sharing and re-use with the exception of certain excerpts. Any excerpts from the Restatements of the Law, Principles of the Law, and the Model Penal Code are copyright by The American Law Institute. Excerpts are reproduced with permission, not as part of a Creative Commons license.