Don't miss the upcoming Distinguished Lecture at the UC Berkeley School of
Information:

*NSA Spying, Snowden, and Sparking
Change*<http://www.ischool.berkeley.edu/newsandevents/events/dls/20140205nsaspying>
With *Cindy Cohn, Electronic Frontier Foundation, and Nicole Ozer, ACLU*

Wednesday, February 5, 2014, 4:10 pm - 5:30 pm
210 South Hall

Don't miss what promises to be a very timely and engaging conversation with
Cindy Cohn, legal director of the Electronic Frontier Foundation, and
Nicole Ozer, technology and civil liberties director at the ACLU of
Northern California. They will be exploring the latest updates related to
NSA spying -- what we now know, what we still don't know, and opportunities
in Congress, the courts, companies, and in communities to rein in
warrantless surveillance and better safeguard privacy and free speech.

*Cindy Cohn* is the legal director for the Electronic Frontier Foundation
as well as its general counsel. She is responsible for overseeing the EFF's
overall legal strategy and supervising EFF's fourteen staff attorneys. Ms.
Cohn first became involved with the EFF in 1993, when the EFF asked her to
serve as the outside lead attorney in Bernstein v. Dept. of
Justice<https://www.eff.org/cases/bernstein-v-us-dept-justice>,
the successful First Amendment challenge to the U.S. export restrictions on
cryptography. Outside the courts, Ms. Cohn has testified before Congress,
been featured in the New York Times, San Francisco Chronicle, and elsewhere
for her work on digital rights and has traveled onto the Internet with Stephen
Colbert<https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2010/07/eff-legal-director-cindy-cohn-colbert-report>.
The
National Law Journal named Ms. Cohn one of 100 most influential lawyers in
America in 
2013,<http://www.law.com/jsp/nlj/PubArticleNLJ.jsp?id=1202593197565&The_100_Most_Influential_Lawyers_in_America&slreturn=20130312173616>noting:
"[I]f Big Brother is watching, he better look out for Cindy Cohn.'

*Nicole Ozer* is the director of the Technology and Civil Liberties Project
at the ACLU of Northern California and manages the organization's work on
new technology, privacy, and free speech. Nicole is a nationally recognized
expert on issues at the intersection of consumer privacy and government
surveillance and free speech and the Internet, is regularly quoted in
print, television, and radio outlets, and has written several influential
publications, including *Privacy & Free Speech: It's Good for
Business, *<http://www.aclunc.org/business/primer>a
primer of dozens of case studies and tips for baking safeguards into the
business development process, and *Putting Online Privacy Above the Fold:
Building a Social Movement and Creating Corporate
Change*<http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2083733>(NYU
Review of Law & Social Change, 2012). Nicole graduated *magna
cum laude* from Amherst College, studied comparative civil rights history
at the University of Cape Town, South Africa, and earned her J.D. with a
Certificate in Law and Technology from Boalt Hall School of Law, University
of California Berkeley.
More information:
http://www.ischool.berkeley.edu/newsandevents/events/dls/20140205nsaspying
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