archive

Between freedom and security in the age of surveillance

Ashley Deeks (Virginia): An International Legal Framework for Surveillance. Ian Brown (Oxford) and Douwe Korff (London Metropolitan): Foreign Surveillance: Law and Practice in a Global Digital Environment. Laura Donohue (Georgetown): Bulk Metadata Collection: Statutory and Constitutional Considerations. Axel Arnbak (Amsterdam) and Sharon Goldberg (BU): Loopholes for Circumventing the Constitution: Warrantless Bulk Surveillance on Americans by Collecting Network Traffic Abroad. Joseph D. Mornin (UC-Berkeley): NSA Metadata Collection and the Fourth Amendment. Olivier Sylvain (Fordham): Failing Expectations: Fourth Amendment Doctrine in the Era of Total Surveillance. David Alan Sklansky (Stanford): Two More Ways Not to Think About Privacy and the Fourth Amendment. Jeremy W. Crampton (Kentucky): Collect it All: National Security, Big Data and Governance. Zeynep Tufekci (UNC): Engineering the Public: Big Data, Surveillance and Computational Politics. Sudha Setty (Western New England): Surveillance, Secrecy, and the Search for Meaningful Accountability. Md. Rzaul Karim (Birmingham): Race to the Online Mass Surveillance: The End of Privacy and Open Internet? Renato Leite Monteiro (NUS): The Balance between Freedom and Security in the Age of Surveillance: A Brief Analysis of the Recent Intelligent Electronic Surveillance Scandals. David Thaw (Pittsburgh): Surveillance at the Source. William H. Simon (Columbia): In Defense of the Panopticon. David Cole on denouncing surveillance, on camera (and more and more). ICReach: Ryan Gallagher on how the NSA built its own secret Google. Meet the shadowy tech brokers that deliver your data to the NSA. Glenn Greenwald on how Congress is irrelevant on mass surveillance — here's what matters instead. A UN report finds mass surveillance violates international treaties and privacy rights.