fittest? A Darwinian take on Microsoft,
regulation and competition.
May, 1999
Cambridge Massachusetts
Keynote
Conference, Harvard University
April, 1999
Cambridge, Massachusetts
Session: “CyberEthics: The Moral
Challenge of the Internet”
DoSomething, Inc.
April, 1999
Cambridge, Massachusetts
Forum subject: “fairness” in the con-
text of high school policies
ference: The Global Internet
April, 1999
Washington, D.C.
Panel: Self-Regulation Reconsidered
ence, Yale Law School
April, 1999
New Haven, Connecticut
Paper: The Values in Open Code
Georgia State University College
of Law
April, 1999
Atlanta, Georgia
Paper: Open Code, Open Society
a Global Standard?, New Eng-
land School of Law
March, 1999
Boston, Massachusetts
Panel: Is Reconciliation Possible?
kets for Israeli High Tech Com-
panies
March, 1999
Tel Aviv, Israel
Panel: Issues facing high technology
firms in the current economic and le-
gal climate
Electronic Commerce Confer-
ence, University of California-
Berkeley,
March, 1999
Berkeley, California
Panel: Setting (and Choosing) Global
Technical Standards
March, 1999
Washington, D.C.
Topic: Uniform Commercial Code
(UCC) and Spread Spectrum
lege of William and Mary,
February, 1999
Williamsburg, Virginia
Paper: Contestable Rights
of Government,
February, 1999
Cambridge, Massachusetts
Georgia School of Law,
February, 1999
Athens, Georgia
Keynote: Internet Governance and the
Open Source Software Movement
and Policy for Chief Marketing
and Chief Communications Offi-
cers,
February, 1999
Carlsbad, California
Conference: Brand in an Era of Dis-
ruptive Technologies
Panel: Privacy: What’s Public?
What’s Private? And Who Says?
Convergence,
February, 1999
New York, New York
Conference: Media Convergence:
Necessary, Evil or Both? The Legal,
Economic and Cultural Impacts of
Mega Media Mergers
Keynote address: Code and the Com-
mons
Law and Technology, Chicago-
Kent College of Law
Chicago, Illinois
Colloquium: Kent: The School, the
Life and the Legacy
Keynote: Overcoming Antitrust: Inter-
net Governance and the Free Software
Movement
ference, Practicing Law Institute
January, 1999
New York, New York
Keynote: Copyright’s Commons
Planning Meeting, Constitutional
and Legal Policy Institute,
December, 1998
Budapest, Hungary
sity of Virginia Law School,
November, 1998
Charlottesville, Virginia
Conference: Information Literacy
Paper: Cyberlaw: The New Frontier
Federalist Society,
November, 1998
Washington, D.C.
Panel: Property Rights in the 21st
Century
Paper: Property in cSpace
October, 1998
Durham, North Carolina
Paper: Internet Governance
ence, Johns Hopkins University,
October, 1998
Baltimore, Maryland
Seminar: Paparazzi and Privacy
National Lesbian and Gay Asso-
ciation,
October, 1998
Boston, Massachusetts
Panel: Issues in Communications Law
sponsibility (CPSR) Annual Con-
ference,
October, 1998
Cambridge, Massachusetts
Conference: One Planet, One Net: The
Public Interest in Internet Governance
Keynote: Governance
sium, Northwestern University
School of Law
October, 1998
Chicago, Illinois
Commentator on Prof. Owen Fiss’s
“Regulating Television: A New Turn in
the Law?”
tion Policy Research Conference
(TPRC)
October, 1998
Alexandria, Virginia
Seminar: Content Controls
Paper: The Architectures of Mandated
Access Controls
University of California – Ber-
keley,
September, 1998
Berkeley, California
Program
September, 1998
McLean, Virginia
Presentation: Code as Law
Harvard University,
September, 1998
Cambridge, Massachusetts
Keynote: Attention Spam
can Frontier, The Progress &
Freedom Foundation,
August, 1998
Aspen, Colorado
Keynote: Governance
August, 1998
Deer Valley, Utah
July, 1998
Aspen, Colorado
mocracy, New York University
School of Law,
July, 1998
Florence, Italy
ternational University Menéndez
y Pelayo of Valencia,
July, 1998
Valencia, Spain
Keynote: Internet y la proteccion de
los derechos de la personalidad
Revolution in Midstream: An
Anglo-American Perspective,
University of Michigan Law
School,
May, 1998
Ann Arbor, MI
Panel: Law and Public Policy
vard University,
May, 1998
Cambridge, MA
March, 1998
Taipei, Taiwan
Keynote: The Laws of Cyberspace
Seminar: The Architecture of Privacy
http://cyber.harvard.edu/lessigcurres.h
tml
Washington School of Law
February, 1998
Washington, DC
Paper: Textualism and Federalism
January, 1998.
San Francisco, CA.
Paper: Law and Interpretation Sec-
tion: Interpreting 1937..
Constitutional Court of the Re-
public of Georgia
November, 1997
Tbilisi, Georgia
Paper: The History of Enforcement of
Supreme Court Judgments (with Tim
Wu).
November, 1997
Tempe, AZ
Paper: The Laws of Cyberspace
College, University of California,
San Diego,
October, 1997
San Diego, CA
Address: The Laws of Cyberspace
ference
September, 1997
Washington, D.C.
Paper: What Things Regulate Speech
June, 1997
Florence, Italy
Teaching Course in Cyberspace
Workshop,
April, 1997
Boston, MA
Paper: The Law of the Horse: What
Cyberlaw Might Teach.
April, 1997
Nashville, TN
Paper: The Law of the Horse: What
Cyberlaw Might Teach.
tions, National Research Council,
April, 1997
Washington, DC.
April, 1997
Stanford, CA
Paper: The Law of the Horse: What
Cyberlaw Might Teach.
School,
April, 1997
Cleveland, OH
Conference: Presidential Power
Paper: Lessons from a Line Item Veto
Law.
Michigan,
March, 1997
Santa Fe, NM.
March, 1997
San Francisco, CA
Paper: Law, Norms and Code.
March, 1997
Washington, DC
Paper: The Constitution As Code.
shop,
March, 1997
Washington, DC
Paper: Law, Norms, Code.
February, 1997
Cambridge, MA
Paper: Reading the Constitution in
Cyberspace.
February, 1997
New York, NY
Paper: Fidelity and Constraint.
February, 1997
Hamden, CT
Paper: Law, Norms, Code.
December, 1996
Jerusalem, Israel
Paper: Change in Constitutional In-
terpretation
School of Law, November, 1996
Birmingham, AL
Paper: Constitution and Code.
September, 1996
Detroit, MI
Law School, September, 1996
New York, NY
Paper: Fidelity as Translation.
Boulder, September, 1996
Boulder, CO
Paper: The Erie-Effect.
May, 1996
Chicago, IL
Panel discussion.