For background on the significance of the Gonzalez and Taamneh cases, see RSM Research Assistant Dylan Moses’ write-up. Ten amici—including the Knight First Amendment Institute, Public Knowledge, EPIC, and the Cato Institute—also shared their perspectives with RSM.
Follow along here as our panel of internet law experts react to the Supreme Court oral arguments in Gonzalez v. Google. Featuring:
- Mary Anne Franks, President of Cyber Civil Rights Initiative and Professor at the University of Miami School of Law
- Mike Godwin, former counsel at Wikimedia Foundation and Electronic Frontier Foundation
- James Grimmelmann, author of Internet Law: Cases and Problems and Professor at Cornell Law School and Cornell Tech
- Gus Hurwitz, Director of the Nebraska Law & Technology Center and Professor at Nebraska Law School
- Jeff Kosseff, author of The Twenty-Six Words that Created the Internet and Professor of Law at the U.S. Naval Academy
- Emma Llanso, Director of the Free Expression Project at the Center for Democracy and Technology
- Alan Rozenshtein, Senior Editor at Lawfare and Professor at the University of Minnesota Law School
- Eugene Volokh, Founder of Volokh Conspiracy and Professor at UCLA Law School
- Benjamin Wittes, Senior Fellow at Brookings Institution and Editor in Chief at Lawfare
- Jonathan Zittrain, Faculty Director of the Berkman Klein Center and Professor at Harvard Law School
Moderated by Kate Klonick, Institute for Rebooting Social Media Visiting Scholar at Harvard’s Berkman Klein Center and Professor at St. John’s University Law School