Archive for the ‘SU Law’ Category

Teaching Information Privacy @ SU Law

I just accepted a position at Seattle University Law teaching Information Privacy in the spring.  This is a great opportunity to look at cutting edge privacy & technology issues from a policy and legal perspective with a group of motivated law students. SU is granting me opportunity to take the course in an interesting direction, it will be the first course at SU with an optional blogging component for students.   I administered a student run blog at University of Washington’s iSchool in Winter quarter for IMT550: Law, Ethics Policy & Information Management that was very successful, and am curious to see how law students react to blogging compared to Masters students with an IT background. Was the positive involvement generational or related to tech literacy? Are law students more likely to publish publicly or privately? There are trade offs both ways, I enjoy the honesty that can come from private forums while also appreciate the professionalism many student put into public works.

The Information Privacy class I am teaching is a mix of old and new educational techniques.  The class has a traditional legal focus covering the classics including Brandeis and Warren & Prosser and a fairly decent portion of case law, but will also adds in some components that I see as essential for being a lawyer in a digital age such as a focus on FTC cases, how the press reacts to privacy issues and international privacy law. When reconciling clients lawyers need to be aware of more then just risk of a law suit public image and ethics matter when you are charged with peoples personal information. The class will also be following recent events through privacy blogs, and focus on practical skills including giving a short 5 minute oral presentation and evaluating start up companies for potential privacy pitfalls.

I am posting the current draft syllabus here for comments and ideas.

Draft Syllabus v2:

This course examines legal and ethical issues related to information privacy, an individuals right to control his or her personal information held by others. Topics include:

  • privacy policies (including ToS & EULA) contract law
  • privacy rights as tort
  • privacy rights as human rights
  • privacy as copyright
  • administrative Law w/ regards to privacy
  • governmental surveillance and private tracking
  • data portability v. privacy
  • Information as an assets
  • Users rights w/ regard to information

Course Objectives
Upon completion of the course, students will be able to discuss orally and in writing:

  • The major decisions, statutes, and international frameworks of information privacy law
  • The “reasonable expectation of privacy” test and its various applications
  • How to assess the privacy implications of new business practices and new government practices
  • Technologies role in privacy protection
  • The tension between privacy & transparency
  • The tension between privacy & free speech
  • The tension between privacy rights & information as an asset
  • The role information professionals play in shaping modern privacy law & practices

Course Philosophy
This is not a lecture class, this is a discussion class with projects and presentations. All readings must be done before class. We will spend about half of each day working through concepts in the readings together in a Socratic dialogue, the other half of class will be spent on group activities, guest speakers or student presentations. I expect you and I to learn as much if not more from your fellow students as from the instructor. The questions in class will often have no right answers.

Course Schedule, Topics and Readings:
No text is required for this course. All readings are available online through this site or through the web. Beyond the required reading you would be well advised to keep up on current events related to the topics of this class. Some recent links & news stories will be distributed each week via email & the blog, and will be discussed up at the beginning of each class.

Week 1: Intro and Overview of Topics
Class 1: Course Overview, Blogging Assignments, Introductions & Preview of Issues. Be prepared to discuss what is privacy broadly and the difference between privacy & secrets.

Readings:

Week 2 Sources of Privacy Law – Overview & Comparison

Week 3 Torts / NDA (cases to be added)

  • Prosser
  • Intrusion,
  • Private Facts
  • False Light
  • Appropriation / Publicity
  • Confidentiality (including NDA)

Week 4 1st Amendment tensions

  • Cox Broadcasting Corp. v. Cohn, 420 U.S. 469 (1975)
  • Hiibel v. Sixth Judicial District
  • NAACP v.Alabama et seq.
  • Case Law search in WA state currently before the Judaical Information Services Committee

Week 5: 4th Amendment

  • Olmstead – wiretapping
  • Katz v. US – Reasonable Expectation of Privacy
  • US v. Karo 1984
  • California v. Ciraolo 1986
  • Kyllo v. US 2001 (Thermal imaging)


Week 6 Online Personal Information, Is Privacy Dead?

Possible Speaker from Health Vault

Week 7: EU Privacy

Week 8: Current 4th Amendment special cases
Guest speaker – ACLU

  • US v. Aukai – travel
  • Chandler v. Miller – Drug testing & NTEU – v. Raab
  • TBA

Week 9: Policy Solutions  & Statutes

  • 1973: The Code of Fair Information Practice
  • 1980: OECD Guidelines on the Protection of Privacy and Transborder Flows of Personal Data
  • p3p – a platform for privacy preferences
  • Privacy Act and FOIA (still looking for reading and case)
  • Video Privacy Act
  • Identity Theft and Assumption Deterrence Act of 1998

Week 10: Privacy Policies Best & Worst Practices

Week 11: Social Networks & FTC

  • EPIC Facebook Complaint
  • Evolution of Facebook from a private network to a public broadcast platform – Kai
  • Foursquare Hack, Facebook private photo hack

Week 12: Protecting Children

  • History of the ACT
  • ACLU v. Mukasey 2009

Week 13: Google Book Settlement

  • Laws for Libraries
  • The settlement
  • Current complaints filed
  • Goggle’s policies

Week 14:
The final week is reserved for a more in depth look at any topics students want to explore along with student presentations not held in other classes.

RSS to Scan
Keep up on current events is essential to this class. Each class will begin with a review of recent news related to privacy. Here are a few sources to follow:

The Electronic Privacy Information Center’s Blog –  EPIC.org
The Privacy Law Blog @ privacylaw.proskauer.com Large group law firm blog
Tech Dirt – Free Culture User Rights Slant – techdirt.com
New York Times Bits Blog- Main stream pop media perspective – bits.blogs.nytimes.com
DeepLinks – EFF – Digital Civil Rights eff.org/deeplinks

Assignments & Grading
Short Blogging Assignment:
Each student will write one short 150 to 300 word blog post on a current news items related to the class. The post must contain at least 3 links to relevant sources and one related image or other form of multi media. The post should also include at least one thought from the student about the news item. The next class after you post the short blog post be prepared to be questioned over this news item specifically.
This assignment may be completed in non public format on the class email list.  Instead of posting the blog post to the class blog you post it to the class email list.

Long Blogging Assignment:
Each student will write one long 800 to 1500 word blog post on a topic covered in class. This serious reflection on a topic covered. The student needs to take a point of view and write in favor of against a rhetorical point made in class. The student is free to agree or disagree with points made in class and must reference the class readings. The logic and source cites used to defend the POV are of critical importance in this post.

The student must also find at least one other online source that disagrees with their POV on the same topic and respond to that source within the post. This assignment needs to show careful reflection on the topic and must engage viewpoints that agree and disagree with the authors perspective. This assignment may be completed in non public format.  Instead of posting the blog post to the class blog you post it to the class email list.

Group Project:
Purpose: Integrate the topics and challenges of the class into a real world case study. Each group of 3 students will choose a real business to study their information privacy policies and challenges and make concrete suggestion for how to improve policies and avoid liability long term.

Each group must prepare a 10 to 20 page case study of the companies policies relating to topics covered in this class. This should include but is not limited to:

  • Review of the companies TOS or EULA
  • Review of privacy Policies
  • Past handling of privacy concerns
  • Assessment of private information that the company or service might be collecting and how that information should be handled as both an asset and a liability
  • List of potential legal issues related to privacy
  • Suggestion for improving the companies privacy policies and practices

This final group report should be of professional quality as if being presented to a chief Legal Officer & a Chief Information Office or other top level executives at the company you have been assigned to evaluate.

Groups must choose a company to evaluated by week three, an outline is due on week 7 and the final draft is due Thursday of week 13 by 5pm.

Class Presentations:
Each student must choose 1 topic covered in the class and prepare a 5 minute talk that explores that aspect of the class in more depth. Students may choose any topic covered including weekly news, short blog post, or long blog posts.  The time limit on this talk is short, but do not think that this means the talk is easy. The talk should be concise, focused, informative and well practiced. The talk should include 2 to 20 visual aids or slides. Examples of short informative talks will be provided along with some basic speaking techniques. I take public speaking very seriously, anytime you have the undivided attention of a group of people you should prepare.
Each talk will also be followed by a Q&A section from the professor and class.

Class Participation
Each student is expected to participate in class discussion at least eight time through comments and questions in class or comments on the discussion board or on the blog. At least two of those times must be in class and two of them must be online (via the private email list or the public blog), the other four times are up to you and can be in either forum.

Grading:
Class Participation: 15%
5 min Presentation 15%
Short Form Blog Post: 5%
Long Form Blog Post: 25%
Group Project: 40%

Evaluation of Student Work
You may expect to receive comments on and evaluations of assignments and submitted work in a timely fashion. All work from the course will be returned, with comments, within two weeks of being submitted.

Academic Integrity
For writing assignments, when ideas or materials of others are used, they must be cited using Blue Book for formal writing and best practices of web citation for online work. The format though is not as important as that the source material can be located and the citation verified. What is important is that the material be cited. Parallel citations to open access sources should be included when ever possible.

Copyright
All of the expressions of ideas in this class that are fixed in any tangible medium such as digital and physical documents are covered by copyright law by default. These expressions include the work product of both: (1) your student colleagues; and, (2) your instructors (e.g., the syllabus, assignments, reading lists, and lectures).
All work product of your professor, Brian Rowe, are made available under the Creative Commons BY License
* to Share — to copy, distribute and transmit the work
* to Remix — to adapt the work

Under the following condition: You must attribute the work as from “Class# Information Privacy by Brian Rowe, 2010; First published by Seattle University Law”

To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
Creative Commons License preserve your”fair use”, under Section 107 of the copyright act. Learn about those rights and use them!

All work products of your student colleagues are under All Rights Reserved and you must approach them to reuse their work beyond what fair use allows.

Note that the class blog is default licensed under a CC BY license, if you want your work on the blog under a different license you must state that at the end of your blog post! (This is an example of opt-out licensing which we will discuss the ethics of in class) If you have any questions regarding copyright, fair use or Creative Commons, please feel free to ask the instructor for guidance.

Privacy
To support an academic environment of rigorous discussion and open expression of personal thoughts and feelings, we, as members of the academic community, must be committed to the inviolate right of privacy of our student and instructor colleagues. As a result, we must forego sharing personally identifiable information about any member of our community including information about the ideas they express, their families, life styles and their political and social affiliations. If you have any questions regarding whether a disclosure you wish to make regarding anyone in this course or in the law school community violates that person’s privacy interests, please feel free to ask the instructor for guidance.
Knowing violations of these principles of academic conduct, or privacy may result in University disciplinary action under the Student Code of Conduct.

Credit:
This syllabus was influenced by many other professors’ syllabus.  Two people that have greatly influenced this syllabus are Prof. Marc Rotenberg of Georgetown University Law Center and Executive Director of the Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC), and Adam Moore author of “Justifying Informational Privacy Rights.”San Diego Law Review 45 (spring 2008) and mentor from University of Washington’s iSchool.

If you made it this far in post I must thank you, I know I am breaking all the rules of blogging by posting a 7 page syllabus as part of the post.  Please feel free to comment here or via private email at: Brian <at> BrianRowe.org

Best Practices for Blogging

Two weeks ago in my International Human Rights Clinic we had a class on press releases without one mention in the readings of how to promote press online.  My critical response for the week focused on how to blog.  Here are the highlights:

  • Add visuals – Visuals draw people to text, they also get you hits from Google image search.
  • Make headlines simple and direct, do not hide the ball with a witty headline
  • Add meta data and tags to increase Search Engine Optimization
  • Use broadcast tools to promote the press release – Twitter, Facebook, Digg, reddit, your blog, your orgs blog, list serves, Slide share, YouTube. In the human rights context use Witness for videos and for legal docs use JD Supra.
  • License your work for others to share your message with Creative Commons Licenses (this blog is under a public domain dedication)
  • Consider using multi media – a cheap 5 min video will get you 10X the number of hits a text post will over the long term
  • Provide links to related works
  • Invite community feed back – open comments
  • Enable community action – do not just give people a story give them a way to take action!
  • Provide links to related articles – see end of post
  • Make it easy for your reader to educate themselves through the press release with links. (to wikipedia or relevant sites)
  • Promote others that are talking about the same topic (see Cory’s video at end of post)
  • Keep it short 200- 400 words for short posts, no more then 1500 words ever.  If you are going over 750 word you better have an amazing reason.

Cory Doctorow: How to be an uber blogger:

Further reading:
Slate Review of Huffington’s guide on how to blog
Four steps to a great Nonprofit Blog by Sarah Davies

Take Action: Start a blog through WordPress

Seattle University Law Joins Facebook

su-law-on-facebook
It is nice to see the school reaching out to online communities, the next step is to populate the page with student generated content to move into Web 2.0. Here is the full press release:

To be effective as lawyers in the service of justice requires that we understand both legal theory and how our actions will be received in the real world. To be effective as a law school also requires that same real-world context. As the world changes around us, we must change with it — or risk becoming irrelevant.

So today we’re launching a Facebook page as a way to keep in touch with students, alumni and colleagues. You’ll be able to find out at a glance about many of the things that are happening around the law school, see photos or video of law school events and connect directly with other friends of the law school.

Please become a fan of our page at http://www.facebook.com/pages/Seattle-WA/Seattle-University-School-of-Law/51348305898

PILF Grant to work at CC this Summer!

I just heard back for the Seattle University Public Interest Law Foundation and they have decided to approve me for a PILF Summer Grant. This is a $4000 grant for 10 weeks. I will be working at Creative Commons in San Francisco from June 9th through August 15th. This is Great!

Dear Brian:

Congratulations!

You have been chosen to receive a PILF summer grant for 2007. We know that this is unusual in that you were expecting to be interviewed before any decisions were made. However, the committee has selected a few applicants to receive grants based solely on the exceptional nature of their written applications.


The Committee is obviously impressed with your proposal and your commitment to public interest and wishes you good luck with your project. We have selected this procedure in order to make the very difficult decisions we have to make regarding who will be able to take advantage of the significant, but limited, funding available. We believe that this is the fairest way of proceeding in light of the large number of strong applications we received. One of the downsides of proceeding in this fashion, from our point of view, is that we do not get the chance to meet you as we would if we had interviewed you. Should you have any questions regarding your summer project or a career in public interest law, please feel free to contact any of us as we would be delighted to speak with you.

Once again, congratulations and good luck.

Now I just need to find housing in SF.

SU Law: Increasing Access to Justice Through Technology, Bob Cohen

Bob Cohen gave a great talk today at Seattle University Law on using technology to reach under-served populations. Here are my notes on the talk:

The general rule you need to keep in mind when working with low income folks is that only 20 percent have access to legal services. This means that access to justice is not the reality in the system and that the justice system may be viewed negatively due to the real lack of access.

Orange County uses a three tier approach to providing legal services:

  • 1st Tier – Initial Access = Once people access the system it is often very late in the legal process. A key is getting connected with people ASAP in the legal process. For Orange County this means providing hotlines where people can call in with issues and physical locations where people can come and ask questions.
  • 2nd Tier – Interactive Community Assistance Network I-CAN! This is a system that works with clients to create documents to file directly with a court. This was extended to IRS tax filings in 2004 which directly helps households file taxes and gain earn income tax credits. www.icanefile.org
  • 3rd Tier – Access to attorneys – This is primarily for individuals who are facing actions in court. Unfortunately only 30 to 40 percent of the need is meet at this level due to financial limits.

Beyond providing services Bob also focused on how to communicate your message for the public. One of those strategies is the communicate through new media. An example of this the Maria Shriver EITC Initiative You-Tube video.

This provides a way to both educate the public about programs and a proactive media approach for creating a positive image of the program. This event was hosted by Public Interest Law Foundation and Students for Free Culture.

Upcomming Event: Making A Difference: Using Your Law Degree

If you have the chance I recommend attending the “Making A Difference: Using Your Law Degree to Make the World a Better Place No Matter Where You Go in Your Career – and Life.”

Seattle University School of Law
Thursday, February 28, 2008
5:00 p.m. to 7:20 p.m. • Room C1
Seattle University School of Law, Sullivan Hall
12th and Columbia

Judge Horowitz and Professor McKay continue their popular series by focusing on the development of excellent professional skills and exploring the opportunities and barriers to serving the public interest as a lawyer. Working for the powerless and the poor requires that attorneys continuously learn and improve their skills throughout their careers. This requirement is essential not only to personal success, but as much, if not more, for making a difference in the lives of clients and in the community. Along with exciting guest speakers, Judge Horowitz and Professor McKay will explore opportunities for public service, lay bare existing barriers to these opportunities, and demonstrate the importance of skills development in attaining and exercising personal and professional freedom. They will explain and show how public service choices on often unpredictable opportunities and barriers can shape our professional lives – and our lives as a whole.

This is the third in the four-part series “Making A Difference: Using Your Law Degree to Make the World a Better Place No Matter Where You Go in Your Career – and Life,” aimed at encouraging students, lawyers and others to make a place for public service in their careers and their lives.

To view videos of the first two symposiums, go to: http://media.law.seattleu.edu/public/events/events.htm

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Activist & Legal Scholar

Information Technology Geek, Free Culture Activist, Copyright & Patent Reformer, Privacy Wonk, Access to Justice Advocate, Disability Rights Exponent, Public Speaker