Tuesday, March 27th, 6:00pm
Columbia University
RSVP and more information can be found here: http://cwgmar2012.eventbrite.com/
The Cyberscholar Working Group is a forum for fellows and affiliates of the MIT, Yale Law School Information Society Project, Columbia University, and the Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard University to discuss their ongoing research. This month's presentations will include:
"The Future Criminal Investigation in the Digital Age"
The presentation features how criminal investigation has been influenced by digitization whether in evidence or case management. And also both positive and negative impact from booming social networking sites.
Harris Chen is currently a Taiwanese public prosecutor at Chiayi District Prosecution Office, specializing in IP crimes, sexual crimes, drug trafficking and insurance fraud. Prior to his service as a prosecutor, Harris had practiced law as legal consultant for the Airforce,court notary and attorney at law. More...
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"Traditional Knowledge – Culture Expression and Access to Knowledge: The Open Questions"
Traditional knowledge (TK), genetic resources and traditional cultural
expressions are economic and cultural assets of indigenous and local
communities and their countries. The World Intellectual Property
Organization – WIPO's work addresses the role that intellectual property
(IP) principles and systems can play in protecting TK and TCEs from
misappropriation, and in generating and equitably sharing benefits from
their commercialization and the role of IP in access to and
benefit-sharing in genetic resources.
Established by the WIPO General Assembly, the WIPO Intergovernmental
Committee on Intellectual Property and Genetic Resources, Traditional
Knowledge and Folklore (IGC) is undertaking text-based negotiations with
the objective of reaching agreement on a text of an international legal
instrument (or instruments), hopefully until the end of the year, which
will ensure the effective protection of TK, traditional cultural
expressions /folklore and genetic resources.
((http://www.wipo.int/tk/en/tk/)
The research describes the conflicting interests and addresses the
complex conceptual and legal barriers regarding TK issues, which remain
unsolved (mainly from an Intellectual Property (IP) perspective) and
therefore, hide the road ahead.
The research, which focuses on traditional cultural expressions, asks
questions, such as: What is a TK?; Shall it be protected under IP laws?;
What are the best ways to protect traditional cultural expressions?;
and What are the purposes of the proposed protections?. The ongoing
discourse about such open questions regarding TK, has given rise to a
broader discussion in the legal community regarding the tension between
the development of intellectual property law regimes as well as
acceptance of WIPO's international treaties and the interests of the
developing world.
The research address these open questions, explore the different
solutions that have been proposed by scholars as well as by the
representatives of the different countries, and proposed a solution.
The lecture will include a short web presentations of the Masai
representative and a short interview with the Director of the
Traditional Knowledge Division at WIPO Geneva, Mr. Wend Wendland.
Shlomit Yanisky-Ravid is an Intellectual Property senior full
time Professor of Law at Ono Academic College (OAC), Israel (Israel's
largest Law School). Currently, she is a Yale Law School ISP Fellow and a
Visiting Researcher.
Prof. Yanisky-Ravid completed her PhD in the direct track for
outstanding students at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. She
conducted a major part of her PhD research at the Swiss Institute of
Comparative Law. Her thesis concerned Rethinking Intellectual Property
Rights of Creations and Inventions Developed by Employees. She holds a
Bachelor's Degree in Law from Tel Aviv University cum laude as was on
the Dean's List for each year of study, a Bachelor's Degree in
Psychology, cum laude from Bar Ilan University and a Bachelor's Degree
in Life Sciences, Bar Ilan University, cum laude.
Previous to visiting Yale Law School she has conducted her research as a
visiting scholar and researcher at Cardozo Law School, Fordham Law
School and as scholarship recipient at the Swiss Institute of
Comparative Law, Switzerland (SICL) and the Max Plant Institute,
Germany. She has also lectured at many institutes around the world, such
as American University, Washington D.C., University of Lausanne Law
School, Switzerland, the Marco Biagi Foundation, University of Modena,
Italy and Warsaw, Poland as well as the World Intellectual Property
Organization (WIPO) and the International Labor Organization (ILO), both
in Geneva, Switzerland. While being at the YLS she is in charge of two
seminars: "Advanced Legal Studies" and (with Slifka)" Law and Society in
I-L: Contemporary Issues".
Prof. Yanisky-Ravid is the winner of many prizes and grants: the
Minerva Center for Human Rights - International Center for Human Rights
grant; Prize for Outstanding Researchers in Memory of Prof. Gadi Harel,
the Lafer Center for Women’s and Gender Studies scholarship for
outstanding researchers, the Silbert Center, Hebrew University of
Jerusalem grant for PhD thesis and the Van Calker Fund Research Grant,
awarded to selected scholars by the SICL.
In 2006 she founded and became the director of the Shalom Comparative
Research Center at OAC, which is active in Israel, Switzerland and the
U.S. The center promotes comparative research through academic
activities by sponsoring and conducting comparative legal research and
international seminars in cooperation with international U.N.
organization such as WIPO and the ILO as well as US Law Schools, and
submits recommendations in the context of international treaties.
Prof. Yanisky-Ravid's research focuses on the theoretical and
comparative aspects of Intellectual Property, Employment Law and
Equality. Her forthcoming book, titled "Intellectual Property at the
Workplace", concerns the rights of authors and inventors with respect to
IP works developed within the workplace. She recently published
pioneering research on IP and gender, exposing the interaction between
the gender analyses of patent laws and lack of accessibility of women to
IP rights. Her research also includes understanding Intellectual
Property rights according to economic and social theories as well as
rethinking the justifications to Intellectual Property. Prof.
Yanisky-Ravid's research at the ISP considers the question of the
accessibility of persons with print disabilities to Intellectual
Property products, Traditional Knowledge (mainly culture) and Freedom of
Association of workers from the entertainment field. Over the past few
years, she has continued researching and lecturing about novel topics
related to Intellectual Property (IP), such as: IP ownership, employees'
IP rights, incentive to invent and considerations, Alternative Dispute
Resolution (ADR) of IP conflicts, and IP and gender. She is about to
further her research and publish her findings and analysis of such
topics in a book addressing nontraditional topics which will be titled
"Beyond IP". The subjects of her work aim to influence reforms on local
and international levels using international convention tools.
Prof. Yanisky-Ravid is involved with policy making as the academic
representative and member of the National Governmental Committee of Fair
Trade in Israel; Board Member, Israel Association for Labor Law and
Social Security; consultant to the Knesset (Parliament) Committee of
Women's Rights and to Israel's Knesset Members and Deputy Minister for
Women and Students; Member, Intellectual Property Law and Technology
Forum, The Hebrew University, Jerusalem; committee chairperson for the
Legislation Amendments Committee, the committee responsible for
amendments in legislation, as a part of the Israel Bar Association as
well as in the international level as, for example WIPO's member of the
Inert- regional Experts of Traditional Knowledge.
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"Comparing Management-Based Regulation and Prescriptive Legislation: How to Improve Information Security Through Regulation"
Information security regulation of private entities in the United States
can be grouped into two general categories. The first category is
prescriptive legislation, which lays out performance standards requiring
regulated entities to achieve (or avoid) specified conditions. The
most notable examples are state Security Breach Notification statutes.
The second category is management-based regulatory delegation, under
which administrative agencies promulgate regulations requiring
organizations to develop (and sometimes adhere to) security plans which
must be designed to achieve specified aspirational goals. Notable
examples include the Privacy and Security Rules of the Health Insurance
Portability and Accountability Act, the security regulations in
Gramm-Leach-Bliley, and the enforcement actions of the Federal Trade
Commission.
This paper examines these two categories and presents the results of an
empirical study comparing their efficacy at addressing organizations’
failures to protect sensitive consumer information. It uses
quantitative data on security breach incidence and qualitative data
gathered from interviews with key Chief Information Security Officers.
The quantitative analysis reveals that a combination of the two types of
regulation is four times more effective at preventing breaches than is
prescriptive legislation alone. It also suggests that this combination
is substantially more effective than is management-based regulation
alone. The qualitative analysis suggests that prescriptive legislation
weakens the role of security professionals within organizations, while
management-based regulation strengthens their role. Additionally, the
qualitative analysis suggests that a lack of guidance as to what
constitutes “reasonable” security hampers security professionals’
ability to advise organizations properly on achieving regulatory goals.
These results suggest that a blend of prescriptive legislation and
management-based regulatory delegation is optimal, and suggest three
specific policy recommendations. First, regulators should increase the
use of performance-based standards, specifically standards not tied to
specific means of implementation. Second, management-based regulatory
models should be expanded to other industrial sectors beyond finance and
healthcare, perhaps through the promulgation of proactive regulations
by the FTC consistent with its history of enforcement action. Third,
regulators should provide more proactive guidance as to the definition
of reasonable security, so as to avoid a “race to the bottom” in the
development security plans to address management-based regulatory goals.
David Thaw is a Research Associate at the University of Maryland
Department of Computer Science and the Maryland Cybersecurity Center. He
is also an Affiliated Fellow of the Information Society Project at Yale
Law School. David's research examines the effect of regulation on
information security practices, cybercrime, practical (usable)
cybersecurity, and other issues at the intersection of law, technology,
and policy. David received his Ph.D. from UC Berkeley's School of
Information and his J.D. from Berkeley Law (Boalt Hall). Prior to
joining the faculty at Maryland, David practiced privacy and data
security law in Washington, DC.
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"Analyzing Russian Social Media"
We'll take a look at the evolution of the Berkman Center's work on Russian weblogs and Twitter, as it has developed over the last two years. Early work required grappling with unique features of the Russian blogosphere, which is distinctly different from many other national networks. Recent work had focused on Twitter (see the newly released paper: http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/publications/2012/mapping_russian_twitter). The next stage involves 'multilayer' analysis of weblogs and Twitter, tracking a set of key issues in both online genres over the course of a year.
John Kelly is the founder and lead scientist of Morningside Analytics. His research blends social network analysis, content analysis, and statistics to solve the problem of making complex online networks visible and understandable. Kelly has directed studies of numerous domestic and international social media networks. He has a Ph.D. in Communications from Columbia University, and has also studied communications at Stanford and at Oxford's Internet Institute. He is an Affiliate at the Berkman Center for Internet and Society at Harvard University, where he works with leading academics to design and implement empirical studies of the Internet’s role in politics and social action around the globe.
Last updated March 22, 2012