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Jonathan ZittrainProfessor of Law & Co-Founder & Director of the Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard University |
| Contributions |
| Blog Feed |
| Books |
| Contributions |
| Video: Minds for Sale | |
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October 27 2010
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Jonathan Zittrain reprises his popular Minds for Sale talk at Harvard Law School. He presents the potential dark side of cloud labor, discusses how cloud computing is not just for computing anymore, and takes questions from the Harvard Law School Alumni Community. |
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| Video: Civic Technologies and the Future of the Internet | |
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November 19 2009
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Harvard law professor and author Jonathan Zittrain discusses the unusual and distinctive technologies whose power increases in proportion to the people participating in them, contrasted with other technologies that leverage what the few can impose on the many - whether a PC virus maker who crashes millions of machines or a law enforcement officer who can use new consumer platforms to spy far easier than before. |
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| Video: Minds for Sale | |
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November 18 2009
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A new range of projects are making the application of crowdsourcing as purchasable over the cloud as additional server rackspace. Professor of Law and co-founder of the Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard, dives into the ethics and issues surrounding cloud labor. |
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| Video: The Web as Random Acts of Kindness | |
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September 22 2009
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Cybersecurity Expert and Social theorist, Jonathan Zittrain, explains how the Internet is held together by millions of disinterested acts of kindness, curiosity and trust. |
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| Article: Jonathan Zittrain: Still Worried | |
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August 10 2009
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As a cyberlaw expert, Zittrain, has his worries about the shift to the cloud. His arguments generated a big response during this show so he clarifies some of his points and explains further his worries about cloud computing. |
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| Podcast: From Desktop to the Digital Cloud | |
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August 10 2009 - NPR On Point
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The Co-Founder of the Berkman Center for Internet & Society & Harvard Law Professor, Jonathan Zittrain and Technology Columnist for the Wall Street Journal, Kara Swisher, discuss the possibilities and potential dangers of cloud computing. |
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| Article: Lost in the Cloud | |
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July 09 2009
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Many people consider the development of Cloud Computing to be as sensible and inevitable as the move from answering machines to voicemail. As more and more of our information is gathered from and shared with others - through Facebook, MySpace or Twitter - having it all online can make a lot of sense. The cloud, however, comes with real dangers. |
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| Video: Civic Technologies and the Future of the Internet | |
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May 04 2009
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Dartmouth College Institute for Security, Technology, and Society presents Professor Jonathan Zittrain, Harvard Law School on Civic Technologies and the Future of the Internet. |
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| Video: Jonathan Zittrain Introduces Herdict - A ScreenTour | |
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March 30 2009
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Jonathan Zittrain, the inspiration behind Herdict.org, the community driven site that tracks web filtering around the world, introduces some of the most exciting features of the site. |
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| Video: Jonathan Zittrain IdeasProject Interview | |
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February 06 2009
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Renowned Cyberlaw scholar Johnathan Zittrain talks about how ubiquitous human computing has enabled companies to attack any number of problems by throwing more minds at them the way they might throw servers at a website traffic problem. |
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| Video: Jonathan on the Colbert Report | |
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June 17 2008
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Jonathan on the Colbert Report |
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| Video: Berkman@10: Future of the Internet | |
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June 11 2008
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Jonathan Zittrain talks about the internet within the context of his book: "The Future of the Internet - And How to Stop It". |
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| Video: The Future of the Internet and How to Stop It | |
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March 27 2008
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Author Jonathan Zittrain discusses his book "The Future of the Internet and how to Stop It". |
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| Video: Google DC Talks: The Future of the Internet | |
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March 20 2008
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Harvard's Jonathan Zittrain discusses his new book "The Future of the Internet - and How to Stop It" with a response by Professor Larry Lessig and an introduction by Google's own Vint Cerf. |
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| Video: Jonathan Zittrain's iLaw Course | |
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July 23 2004
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Jonathan Zittrain's dynamic course on the web and law. |
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| The Future of the Internet -- And How to Stop It Jonathan Zittrain is Professor of Law at Harvard Law School and co-founder of the Berkman Center for Internet and Society at Harvard Law School |
| January 27 2012 |
| This semester, we’re starting an exciting new class, aimed not at lawyers, but undergraduate CS students here at Harvard. It’s called CS42: Controlling Cyberspace – and we’re sharing the syllabus online. Anything big we’re missing? Description: Why does the Internet environment exist in the form it does today? What does its future, and the future [...] ... read more >> |
| January 27 2012 |
| Computers Gone Wild: Impact and Implications of Developments in Artificial Intelligence on Society was an informal discussion that took place at Harvard Law School on December 8th, 2011. Hosted by Jonathan Zittrain, Marin Soljačić and the Berkman Center for Internet & Society, we brought together eighteen mostly local guests to discuss the ways that AI is changing [...] ... read more >> |
| January 25 2012 |
| Ideas for a Better Internet, or i4bi, is an interdisciplinary course at Harvard and Stanford that challenges students from law, computer science, and public policy to come up with novel and plausible ways to improve the Internet and its use. i4bi centers on immersing participants in Internet history, technologies, and politics, so that students can [...] ... read more >> |
| December 14 2011 |
| Here at Future of the Internet, we’ve already talked a little bit about Apple’s content requirements for both the iOS and Mac App Stores in JZ’s The PC is Dead post. As JZ said, “Pulitzer Prize-winning editorial cartoonist Mark Fiore found his iPhone app rejected because it contained “content that ridicules public figures.” Fiore was well-known enough [...] ... read more >> |
| December 07 2011 |
| Last week several members of Congress — Senators Wyden, Cantwell, Moran, and Paul, and Reps. Issa, Lofgren and Chaffetz — floated a proposal to substitute for the contentious proposed Stop Online Piracy Act, previously discussed here. Sen. Wyden’s office has commented on the compromise, and TechDirt has a writeup and a copy of the document [...] ... read more >> |
| December 02 2011 |
| A Close Look at SOPA Jonathan Zittrain, Kendra Albert and Alicia Solow-Niederman This document is a guide to the Stop Online Piracy Act as proposed in the United States House of Representatives. Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA), H.R. 3261, 112th Cong. (2011). It represents our notes as we sought to understand exactly what it does and [...] ... read more >> |
| November 30 2011 |
| From Technology Review: The Personal Computer Is Dead Power is fast shifting from end users and software developers to operating system vendors. By Jonathan Zittrain The PC is dead. Rising numbers of mobile, lightweight, cloud-centric devices don’t merely represent a change in form factor. Rather, we’re seeing an unprecedented shift of power from end users [...] ... read more >> |
| November 29 2011 |
| During the 1990s, PCs ran whatever software was installed on them. Users bought software (not yet called apps) from physical stores or got a copy from their friends. They stuck the CD in the drive, and went through the installation process, or dragged the application to their application folder. The code was “signed” by the [...] ... read more >> |
| August 15 2011 |
| John Battelle asked me a few Qs about my thinking on the themes in The Future of the Internet in the three years since the book came out (four since it was drafted!). John’s review is available on his blog, and I’ve reproduce the core of it here: JBAT: - You wrote the Future of [...] ... read more >> |
| Books |
April 18 2008 This book explains the engine that has catapulted the Internet from backwater to ubiquity - and reveals that it is sputtering precisely because of its runaway success. With the unwitting help of its users, the generative Internet is on a path to a lockdown, ending its cycle of innovation - and facilitating unsettling new kinds of control. New Cloud Computing platforms from Google and Facebook are rightly touted - but their applications can be monitored and eliminated from a central source. As tethered appliances and applications eclipse the PC, the very nature of the Internet - its generativity, or innovative character - is at risk. The Internet's current trajectory is one of lost opportunity. Its salvation, as this author argues, lies in the hands of its millions of users. Drawing on generative technologies like Wikipedia that have so far survived their own successes, this book shows how to develop new technologies and social structures that allow users to work creatively and collaboratively and participate in solutions. |
February 19 2008 Many countries around the world block or filter Internet content, denying access to information - often about politics, but also relating to sexuality, culture, or religion - that they deem too sensitive for ordinary citizens. Access Denied documents and analyzes Internet filtering practices in over three dozen countries, offering the first rigorously conducted study of this accelerating trend. |
August 03 2005 This casebook explores Internet Law as a coherent if organic whole - integrating the historical sweep of the global Internet's development with both the opportunities an problems it has brought about. The book is broad and thorough enough to be the primary or sole text for a variety of Internet-related courses, while deep enough to bring students through the important nuances of such doctrinal topics as copyright, privacy and jurisdiction without assuming any particular prior exposure to these subfields. |
August 03 2005 This volume is devoted to exploring the technological, legal, and policy issues arising from widespread unauthorized copying of copyright material. The book explains the history of "trusted systems" that permit publishers to control how the public relates to their materials and assesses the likelihood that such systems can come into common use. Legal and policy choices that are designed to encourage the development of such systems are discussed, along with the implications for the future of both information technology and intellectual property law. |
August 27 2004 This is a secondary text that can be used with any casebook to give students a demonstration of the practical dimensions to tort law alongside the doctrine that they are already learning. The Torts Game is designed to engage student’s interest as it reviews main topics. |