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Elissa Redmiles

Dr. Elissa M. Redmiles is the Clare Luce Boothe Assistant Professor of Computer Science at Georgetown University and a Faculty Associate at the Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society at Harvard University. Dr. Redmiles uses computational, economic, and social science methods to understand users’ security, privacy, and online safety-related decision-making processes with a particular focus on safety in intimate interactions. Her research has been recognized with multiple paper awards and other recognitions from USENIX Security, ACM CCS, ACM CHI, ACM CSCW, and ACM EAAMO. Dr. Redmiles has been invited to present her work at the White House and has had research featured in popular press publications such as the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Scientific American, Rolling Stone, Wired, and Forbes.

Twitter: @eredmil1

Associated Works

“Nudes? Shouldn’t I charge for these?”: Motivations of New Sexual Content Creators on OnlyFans

Visiting Scholar Elissa Redmiles and coauthors conduct qualitative interviews to better understand the factors motivating creators to begin making sexual content on OnlyFans.

Power in Computer Security and Privacy: A Critical Lens

Visiting Scholar Elissa Redmiles and coauthors bring a critical theoretical lens to computer security and privacy.

The Misinformation Paradox: Older Adults are Cynical about News Media, but Engage with It Anyway

In a study with coauthors Imani Munyaka and Eszter Hargittai, Visiting Scholar Elissa Redmiles finds that older adults who are cynical about media "continue to read and share news they distrust."

Political Affiliation Influences Our Fear of Data Collection

Visiting scholar Elissa Redmiles and colleagues report on their original research: Americans’ fears about governmental data surveillance are changeable, based on which party is in power.

Toward Safer Intimate Futures: Recommendations for Tech Platforms to Reduce Image Based Sexual Abuse

'22-'23 Visiting Scholar Elissa Redmiles co-authors this report outlining how platforms can mitigate the risk of image-based sexual abuse when consenting adults share intimate images.

Safe Digital Intimacy

Alum Elissa Redmiles and her team have launched safedigitalintimacy.org, a resource for tech platforms and policy makers to prevent image-based sexual abuse online.