Preview
Creation Date
3-11-2021
Description
The increasing amount of data being concentrated in a few corporations has led to calls for antitrust remedies. Yet, these remedies could compromise user privacy. Are such remedies needed? And if so, to what extent should such privacy concerns be considered?
Sweeping data protection laws have been passed in recent years, including the EU’s General Data Protection Regulation and the California Privacy Rights Act. What lessons do these laws’ track records provide policymakers? Do they call for more federal regulation, state regulation, or a re-thinking of this type of government regulation altogether?
Join our panels of experts virtually as they discuss these timely and important topics.
Event Schedule 12 pm panel: Data privacy consiDerations in antitrust law
- Erika Douglas, Temple University Beasley School of Law
- Abbey Stemler, Indiana University Kelley School of Business
- Maurice Stucke, University of Tennessee College of Law
- Maureen Ohlhausen, Baker Botts Dina Srinivasan, Yale University
- Ashley Keller, Keller Lenkner LLC
- Moderator: Roger Alford, Notre Dame Law School
1:30 pm panel: lessons from the GDPR and CPRA
- Woodrow Hartzog, Northeastern University School of Law
- Margot Kaminski, University of Colorado Law School
- Neil Richards, Washington University in St. Louis School of Law
- Jessica Lee, Loeb & Loeb LLP
- Moderator: Stephen Yelderman, Notre Dame Law School