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Paul Schwartz

Paul M. Schwartz[1] is professor of law at the University of California, Berkeley School of Law and a Director of the Berkeley Center for Law & Technology. He is a leading international scholar of information privacy law[2]. He was a Berlin Prize Fellow at the American Academy in Berlin and a Transatlantic Fellow at the German Marshall Fund in Brussels. Among other publications, he has co-authored Privacy Law Fundamentals[3] and Information Privacy[4] with Daniel J. Solove.

He has been quoted numerous times by the media outlets New York Times[5][6][7][8] and San Francisco Chronicle[9].

Selected articles

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  • Data Protection Law and the Ethical Use of Analytics, Privacy and Security Law Report, 10 PVLR 70 (January 10, 2011)
  • Prosser's Privacy and the German Right of Personality: Are Four Privacy Torts Better than One Unitary Concept?, 98 California Law Review 1925 (2010), Karl-Nikolaus Peifer, co-author
  • Preemption and Privacy, 118 Yale Law Journal 902 (2009)
  • Keeping Track of Telecommunications Surveillance, 52 Communications of the ACM 24 (Sept. 2009)
  • Reviving Telecommunications Surveillance Law, 75 University of Chicago Law Review 287 (2008)
  • Notification of Data Security Breaches, 105 Michigan Law Review 913 (2007), Edward Janger, co-author
  • Property, Privacy, and Personal Data, 117 Harvard Law Review 2055 (2004)
  • Eldred and Lochner: Copyright Term Extension and Intellectual Property as Constitutional Property, 112 Yale Law Journal 2331 (2003), William Treanor, co-author

References

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Paul M. Schwartz's website

University of California, Berkeley School of Law