Elon Law Professor David Levine presented recently at Albany School of Law and MIT.
On April 5, Levine spoke at a symposium at Albany School of Law titled, “Government/Information/Networks/Technology.” The symposium covered a series of topics that included cybersecurity, freedom of information law and other topics related to computer networks and information security. Levine’s presentation was part of a panel entitled “Watched and Being Watched.” Also participating in the panel were Bryan Choi of the Yale Law School Information Security Project and Nadiha Syed of Levine Sullivan Koch & Schulz, LLP.
On May 3, Levine presented a paper at the Media In Transition Conference at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology entitled “Tailoring Trade Secrecy: The Moral Imperative of Industry-Specific Application of Doctrine,” co-authored by Frank A. Pasquale III of Seton Hall University School of Law. The paper discussed, among other topics, a potential for future conflict between people seeking information in various fields (finance, media, energy, etc.) and firms who wish to preserve the secrecy of their methods.