Dear all,

I'm giving a couple of talks on the East Coast (Harvard, Yale, New York, 
Princeton) on Internet architecture, innovation and network neutrality that 
some of you may find interesting. In addition to discussing the main insights 
from my book, Internet Architecture and Innovation, I explain how these 
insights help us think about non-discrimination rules, in particular about the 
relationship between network neutrality and Quality of Service.

The dates of the talks are:

* Harvard University, Cambridge, MA: Monday, November 8, 12:00pm-1:15pm
* Yale Law School, New Haven, CT: Tuesday, November 9, 12:10pm--1:30pm
* New York University School of Law, New York, NY: Wednesday, November 10, 
2:30pm-3:30pm. 
* Princeton University, Princeton, NJ: Thursday, November 11, 4:30pm-6:00 pm

All events are free and open to the public. 

The full invitation is below. Feel free to forward it to others who might be 
interested in attending.

Best,
Barbara
---
Barbara van Schewick
Associate Professor of Law and (by Courtesy) Electrical Engineering
Director, Center for Internet and Society
Stanford Law School

Author of "Internet Architecture and Innovation," MIT Press 2010
www.netarchitecture.org

Crown Quadrangle
559 Nathan Abbott Way
Stanford, CA94305-8610

Phone:  650-723 8340
E-Mail: [email protected]

---------------------------

VAN SCHEWICK EAST COAST TALKS ON INTERNET ARCHITECTURE, INNOVATION AND NETWORK 
NEUTRALITY

You are cordially invited to one of Barbara van Schewick's book talks on the 
East Coast (Harvard, Yale, New York, Princeton) during the week of November 8. 
For dates and locations, see below. 

Barbara van Schewick, Associate Professor of Law at Stanford Law School and 
Director of Stanford Law School’s Center for Internet and Society, will discuss 
her recently released and widely praised book, Internet Architecture and 
Innovation. 

Professor Marvin Ammori has described the book as "essential reading for anyone 
interested in Internet policy-and probably for anyone interested in the law, 
economics, technology, or start-ups." The book analyzes how the Internet's 
internal structure, or architecture, has fostered innovation in the past; why 
this engine of innovation is under threat; why the "market" alone won't protect 
Internet innovation; and which features of the Internet's architecture we need 
to preserve so that the Internet continues to serve as an engine of innovation 
in the future. 

Whether you are tired of or confused by the network neutrality debate, or 
simply wondering what is at stake, van Schewick's talk will be refreshing and 
illuminating. 

More information on the book, including an overview and excerpts, is available 
at http://netarchitecture.org/ . 

EVENT DETAILS FOR HARVARD EVENT, NOVEMBER 8:

When: Monday, November 8, 12:00 pm-1:15 pm 
Location: Cambridge, MA - Maxwell Dworkin G115, Harvard University - SEAS - 29 
Oxford Street, Cambridge, MA 02138 
More Info: http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/events/2010/11/vanschewick 
RSVP REQUIRED for those attending in person to Amar Ashar ( 
[email protected] ) 

EVENT DETAILS FOR YALE EVENT, NOVEMBER 9:

When: Tuesday, November 9, 12:10 pm-1:30pm 
Location: Room 121, Yale Law School - 127 Wall Street, New Haven, CT 
More Info: http://yaleisp.org/2010/11/van-schewick/ 

EVENT DETAILS FOR NEW YORK EVENT, NOVEMBER 10:

When: Wednesday, November 10, 2:30pm-3:30pm. 
Location: Vanderbilt Hall - Room 216 - NYU Law School - 40 Washington Square 
South, NY, NY 10012 
More Info: Email [email protected] or check 
http://netarchitecture.org/events/ 

EVENT DETAILS FOR PRINCETON EVENT, NOVEMBER 11:

When: Thursday, November 11, 4:30 pm-6pm. 
Location: 101 Sherrerd Hall - Princeton University 
More Info: http://citp.princeton.edu/events/lectures/barbara-van-schewick/ 

ABOUT BARBARA VAN SCHEWICK:

Barbara van Schewick is an Associate Professor of Law at Stanford Law School, 
an Associate Professor (by courtesy) of Electrical Engineering at Stanford’s 
Department of Electrical Engineering and the Director of Stanford Law School’s 
Center for Internet and Society. Van Schewick’s research focuses on the 
economic, regulatory, and strategic implications of communication networks. In 
particular, she explores how changes in the architecture of computer networks 
affect the economic environment for innovation and competition on the Internet, 
and how the law should react to these changes. This work has made her a leading 
expert on the issue of network neutrality. Her papers on network neutrality 
have influenced regulatory debates in the United States, Canada and Europe. In 
2007, van Schewick was one of three academics who, together with public 
interest groups, filed the petition that started the Federal Communications 
Commission’s network neutrality inquiry into Comcast’s
  blocking of BitTorrent and other peer-to-peer protocols. She has testified 
before the FCC in en banc hearings and official workshops. A more complete bio 
can be found here: http://netarchitecture.org/author/ 

SELECTED REVIEWS:

Lawrence Lessig, Another Deregulation Debacle , New York Times Room for Debate, 
August 10, 2010: 
“ As much as anything else, the economic success of the Internet comes from its 
architecture. The architecture, and the competitive forces it assures, is the 
only interesting thing at stake in this battle over “network neutrality.” And 
yet, the most senior economic advisers in the White House don’t seem to know 
what that means. They could, if they took the time. Barbara van Schewick’s 
extraordinary new book, “Internet Architecture and Innovation,” is perhaps the 
best explication of this point so far for those who should be studying these 
hard, new policy questions.” 

Brad Burnham, Internet Architecture and Innovation , Union Square Ventures 
Blog, August 10, 2010: 
“Barbara van Schewick’s book, Internet Architecture and Innovation, is out and 
everyone who cares about the future of the Internet should click here and buy a 
copy. It is not an easy read, but the architecture of the Internet and the ways 
in which that architecture is directly responsible for the explosion of 
innovation over the last 15 years is not an easy topic. … Barbara makes a 
compelling case. I hope everyone involved in this noisy debate reads this 
book.” 

Marvin Ammori, Internet Policy: Most Important Book in Years is Now Out , 
Marvin Ammori Blog, August 11, 2010: 
“ There’s a new book out on Internet policy that is essential reading for 
anyone interested in Internet policy—and probably for anyone interested in the 
law, economics, technology, or start-ups. … Barbara van Schewick’s new book, 
“Internet Architecture and Innovation,” is one of the very few books in my 
field in the same league as Larry Lessig’s Code, in 2000, and Yochai Benkler’s 
Wealth of Networks, in 2006, in terms of its originality, depth, and importance 
to Internet policy and other disciplines. I expect the book to affect how 
people think about the Internet; about the interactions between law and 
technical architectures in all areas of law; about entrepreneurship in general. 
I also think her insights on innovation economics, which strike me as far more 
persuasive than lawyers’ usual assumptions, should influence “law and 
economics” thinking for the better. …" 

Susan Crawford, The FCC Needs to Do the Right (& the Hard) Thing , Salon - The 
GigaOM Network, August 12, 2010: 
“Net neutrality is actually a very old idea. The idea is that when you’re 
making point-to-point basic transportation (of information or people) available 
to the public, you’re not supposed to discriminate against uses of your 
network. (Barbara van Schewick has a marvelous new book out about this ...)” 

David P. Reed, MIT Media Laboratory, Book Jacket: 
“This is an important book, one which for the first time ties together the many 
emerging threads that link the economic, technical, architectural, legal, and 
social frameworks of the birth and evolution of the Internet.” 

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