Privacy crises come in waves, usually spurred by public panics over new technologies and their exploitation by those in power. In the 1890s, it was the evils of ‘instantaneous photography and newspaper enterprise’ that pushed Harvard jurists Samuel Warren and Louis Brandeis to famously advocate for a new common law (‘judge made’) right to privacy. In the mid-twentieth century, the availabi ... (read more)
Jessica Lake
Jessica Lake is a Research Fellow at the Institute for Humanities and Social Sciences at ACU, and author of The Face That Launched a Thousand Lawsuits: The American women who forged a right to privacy (Yale University Press, 2016).