Log in

goodpods headphones icon

To access all our features

Open the Goodpods app
Close icon
The Cyberlaw Podcast - Episode 415: “And the Prize for Most Lawyer-Whipped Cyberforce on the Planet Goes to …”
plus icon
bookmark

Episode 415: “And the Prize for Most Lawyer-Whipped Cyberforce on the Planet Goes to …”

07/05/22 • 37 min

The Cyberlaw Podcast
plus icon
bookmark

Previous Episode

undefined - The Cyberlaw Podcast: A Small Door and Too Many Fat Men: Congress’s Tech Agenda

The Cyberlaw Podcast: A Small Door and Too Many Fat Men: Congress’s Tech Agenda

It’s that time again on the Congressional calendar. All the big, bipartisan tech initiatives that looked so good a few months ago are beginning to compete for time on the floor like fat men desperate to get through a small door. And tech lobbyists are doing their best to hinder the bills they hate while advancing those they like.

We open the Cyberlaw Podcast by reviewing a few of the top contenders. Justin (Gus) Hurwitz tells us that the big bipartisan compromise on privacy is probably dead for this Congress, killed by Senator Maria Cantwell (D-WA) and the new politics of abortion. The big subsidy for domestic chip fabs is still alive, Jamil Jaffer but beset by House and Senate differences, plus a proposal to regulate outward investment by U.S. firms that would benefit China and Russia. And Senator Amy Klobuchar’s (D-MIN) platform anti-self-preferencing bill is being picked to pieces by lobbyists trying to cleave away Republican votes over content moderation and national security.

David Kris unpacks the First Circuit decision on telephone pole cameras and the fourth amendment. Technology and Fourth Amendment law is increasingly agoraphobic, I argue, as aging boomers find themselves on a vast featureless constitutional plain, with no precedents to guide them and forced to fall back on their sense of what was creepy in their day.

Speaking of creepy, the Australian Strategic Policy Institute (ASPI) has a detailed report on just how creepy content moderation and privacy protections are at TikTok and WeChat. Jamil gives the highlights.

Not that Silicon Valley has anything to brag about. I sum up This Week in Big Tech Censorship with two newly emerging rules for conservatives on line: First, obeying Big Tech’s rules is no defense; it just takes a little longer before your business revenue is cut off. Second, having science on your side is no defense. As a Brown University doctor discovered, citing a study that undermines Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) orthodoxy will get you suspended. Who knew we were supposed to follow the science with enough needle and thread to sew its mouth shut?

If Sen. Klobuchar fails, all eyes will turn to Lina Khan’s Federal Trade Commission, Gus tells us, and its defense of the

Next Episode

undefined - “And the Prize for Most Lawyer-Whipped Cyberforce on the Planet Goes to …”

“And the Prize for Most Lawyer-Whipped Cyberforce on the Planet Goes to …”

Episode Comments

Generate a badge

Get a badge for your website that links back to this episode

Select type & size
Open dropdown icon
share badge image

<a href="https://goodpods.com/podcasts/the-cyberlaw-podcast-217762/episode-415-and-the-prize-for-most-lawyer-whipped-cyberforce-on-the-pl-24593311"> <img src="https://storage.googleapis.com/goodpods-images-bucket/badges/generic-badge-1.svg" alt="listen to episode 415: “and the prize for most lawyer-whipped cyberforce on the planet goes to …” on goodpods" style="width: 225px" /> </a>

Copy