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DTSTAMP:20260428T104333Z
SUMMARY:Constitutionalizing Speech Platforms
DESCRIPTION:We're never going to get a global set of norms for online speec
 h\, but do the platforms pick our global values and constitutionalize them
 ? Something to tie them to the mast when hard issues arise? What would tho
 se values even be? Kate Klonick and Thomas Kadri along with panelists\, Ch
 inmayi Arun\, Kendra Albert\, and Jonathan Zittrain with moderation by Ele
 ttra Bietti\, engage in this discussion.Kate Klonick is&nbsp\;an Assistant
  Professor of Law at St. John's University Law School and an Affiliate Fel
 low at the&nbsp\;Information Society Project&nbsp\;at Yale Law School and 
 New America. She holds a&nbsp\;JD from Georgetown University Law Center\, 
 where she&nbsp\;was&nbsp\;a Senior Editor at&nbsp\;The Georgetown Law Jour
 nal&nbsp\;and the Founding Editor of the&nbsp\;The Georgetown Law Journal 
 Online\; and a PhD from Yale Law School where she&nbsp\;studied under Jack
  Balkin\, Tom Tyler\, and Josh Knobe.&nbsp\;Between law school and her tim
 e at Yale\, she&nbsp\;clerked for the Hon.&nbsp\;Richard C. Wesley of the 
 Second Circuit and the Hon.&nbsp\;Eric N. Vitaliano of the Eastern Distric
 t of New York.Kate has a background in cognitive psychology which she appl
 ies to the study of emerging issues in law and technology. Specifically\, 
 this has included research and work on the Internet's effect on freedom of
  expression and private platform governance. She writes and works on issue
 s related to online shaming\, artificial intelligence\, robotics\, content
  moderation\, algorithms\, privacy\, and intellectual property.Her work on
  these topics has appeared&nbsp\;in the&nbsp\;Harvard Law Review\,&nbsp\;M
 aryland Law Review\,&nbsp\;New York Times\,&nbsp\;The Atlantic\,&nbsp\;Sla
 te\,&nbsp\;The Guardian&nbsp\;and numerous other publications.&nbsp\;Thoma
 s Kadri&nbsp\;is a Ph.D. candidate at Yale Law School\, a Resident Fellow 
 at the Yale Information Society Project\, and a Mellon Fellow.&nbsp\;His r
 esearch looks at the impact of networked technologies on criminal and tort
  law\, with a particular focus on the constitutional implications of cyber
 security and content moderation on online platforms.&nbsp\;He is currently
  working on an article about how platforms are using anti-hacking laws lik
 e the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act to police “public” parts of the int
 ernet.&nbsp\;His work has been published or is forthcoming in the&nbsp\;Mi
 chigan Law Review\, the Southern California Law Review\, the Maryland Law 
 Review\,&nbsp\;the&nbsp\;New York Times\, and&nbsp\;Slate.&nbsp\;He is als
 o an Adjunct Professor at New York Law School\, where he teaches Cybercrim
 e.
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20190409T120000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20190409T131500
LOCATION:23 Everett Street \, Cambridge (Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika) 
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