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Daily Dashboard | Can Intellectual Privacy Survive in the Digital Age? Related reading: Evolving privacy law 'exciting' for IAPP Westin Scholar

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In a column for The Christian Science Monitor, Evan Selinger talks to Washington University Prof. Neil Richards about his new book, Intellectual Privacy: Rethinking Civil Liberties in the Digital Age. Richards says intellectual privacy “is about needing to have protections from being watched and interfered with when we’re making up our minds about the world—when we’re reading, surfing the web, talking on the phone and sending email to confidants.” Richards adds our intellectual property and, therefore, our free society are currently being threatened because “companies and the government have so much control over our intimate information that people live in a state of perpetual uncertainty and sometimes fear.” Editor’s Note: Sarah Lewis will speak to this issue in her keynote address next week to the IAPP Global Privacy Summit.
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