A new approach to cyberlaw.

 

Meg Leta Jones is an Associate Professor in the Communication, Culture, and Technology Department at Georgetown University.

She researches rules and technological change with a focus on privacy, memory, innovation, and automation in digital information and computing technologies. She’s also a core faculty member of the Science, Technology, and International Affairs program in Georgetown's School of Foreign Service, a faculty affiliate with the Institute for Technology Law & Policy at Georgetown Law Center, a faculty fellow at the Georgetown Ethics Lab, and visiting faculty at the Brussels Privacy Hub at Vrije Universiteit Brussel.

Meg’s research covers comparative information and communication technology law, critical information and data studies, governance of emerging technologies, and the legal history of technology. Ctrl+Z: The Right to be Forgotten, Meg’s first book, is about the social, legal, and technical issues surrounding digital oblivion. Her second book project, Cookies tells the transatlantic history of 21st Century computer privacy through the lens of a familiar technical object. More details about her work can be found at MegLeta.com

Amanda Levendowski is an Associate Professor of Law at Georgetown Law.

She researches how to use intellectual property laws creatively to tackle tricky social justice issues that crosscut technology, including combating nonconsensual pornography, curbing biased artificial intelligence, uncovering secret surveillance technologies, countering invasive face surveillance, and discovering dystopian technologies. She’s the founding director of Georgetown’s Intellectual Property and Information Policy Clinic and a faculty affiliate with the Institute for Technology Law and Policy. In 2021, she was a recipient of Public Knowledge’s 20/20 Visionary Award.

Amanda’s work covers intellectual property, technology, and information policy. Before joining Georgetown, she co-taught the NYU Technology Law and Policy Clinic, where she was a fellow at the Engelberg Center and an affiliate researcher with the Information Law Institute. More details about her work can be found at levendowski.net.