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Cyber Crime and
Online Privacy
Orin
S. Kerr Associate
Professor of Law
Author of Searching and Seizing Computers and Obtaining
Electronic Evidence in Criminal Investigations (Department of Justice),
Professor Kerr is an expert on computer crime; cyberlaw; wiretapping; electronic
evidence; privacy; Internet law; patent law.
Office: (202) 994-4775
Lance Hoffman Professor of Computer
Science
Dr. Lance J. Hoffman is known for his pioneering research on computer
security and risk analysis, and for his interdisciplinary work in computer
privacy issues. Dr. Hoffman is the author or editor of five books and numerous
articles on computer security and privacy. His 1990 book, "Rogue Programs:
Viruses, Worms, and Trojan Horses," received wide critical acclaim, and his work
on cryptographic policy, "Building in Big Brother," was the first book devoted
to the topic. Previously a national lecturer for the Association for Computing
Machinery and a distinguished visitor for the Institute of Electrical and
Electronics Engineers, Dr. Hoffman has lectured around the world on computer
security and privacy and on the vulnerability of society to computer systems. He
served as general chairman of the Second Conference on Computers, Freedom, and
Privacy, held in March 1992 in Washington. He is past chair of the IEEE
Committee on Communications and Information Policy's Subcommittee on Information
Security and Applications.
Office: (202) 994-4955 Home: (301) 656-6205
Peter Swire Visiting Professor of Law
From 1999 until early 2001, Professor Swire served as the Clinton
Administration's chief counselor for privacy in the U.S. Office of Management
and Budget. In that position, he was White House coordinator for the proposed
and final medical privacy rule and played a leading role on topics including
Internet privacy, encryption, public records and privacy, financial privacy,
e-commerce policy, and computer and surveillance issues. He is co-author of None
of Your Business: World Data Flows, Electronic Commerce, and the European
Privacy Directive, published by Brookings in 1998. With Lawrence Lessig, he is
editor of the Cyberspace and Law Abstracts of the Social Science Research
Network.
Office: (202) 994-0812 Home: (301) 213-9587
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