Stanford CIS

Colette Vogele

Non-Residential Fellow

{Please see http://CMP.LY/0/dIXwL5 for my disclosure statements.}

Non-residential Fellow Colette Vogele is a Senior Copyright Attorney at Microsoft Corporation and the President and co-founder of Without My Consent, a non-profit that empowers individuals harmed by online privacy violations to stand up for their rights. She is a frequent speaker and author on copyright, privacy, and internet content and liability. Her current research interests involve the intersection of privacy rights of individuals, on-line anonymity, free speech and IP. Vogele's current CIS fellow project involves further development of Without My Consent and research around the impact of online harassment on individuals and the public.

During the 2004-2005 academic year, Vogele held a residential fellowship and led litigation on two of the Center's copyright cases: Golan v. Gonzalez, a case challenging the constitutionality of removing thousands of works from the public domain. She also represented the plaintiff in Somma v. Great Ormond Street Hospital, a case defending an author's right to build on works that have entered the public domain. As a non-resident fellow, in 2006, Vogele co-authored the Podcasting Legal Guide: Rules for the Revolution. She also authored the legal issues chapter for the Business Podcasting Book published by (in 2008) Focal Press.

Prior to joining the Center, Vogele litigated copyright, trademark, anti-counterfeiting, trade secret and patent cases at Preston Gates and Ellis (now K&L Gates) in Los Angeles, and Weil Gotshal & Manges LLP in Silicon Valley. She also headed her own firm, Vogele & Associates, from 2005 to 2010 where, in addition to her IP practice, she represetnted victims of online harassment in privacy cases against their perpetrators.

Vogele grew up in the Pacific Northwest and is an Honors Program graduate in Political Science from the University of Washington. She earned her law degree cum laude at George Washington University Law School where she was the Executive Articles Editor for the AIPLA Quarterly Journal, held two internships with the United States Department of Justice, and externed for a United States Magistrate Judge.

When she's not practicing law, she can be found photographing fair use, shamelessly spoiling her dog Pepper, and cooking up some of her mother's delicious Swiss fondue.

Bio Photo by JD Lasica

Recent articles

Blog

Digital Rights Management Report from CRS

The Congressional Research Service, a division of the Library of Congress whose goal is to handle research needs of Congress, recently prepared a report which d…

Blog

Townsend's patent reform roundtable

Last evening I attended the first of three patent reform roundtable discussions being hosted by Townsend and Townsend and Crew. The Townsend attorneys, Ted Her…

Blog

Jailed for a song

This is the ad for a new IPac campaign... Read more about it here and about IPac here.…

Blog

2nd term song by Jibjab

Just in time for the inauguration Jibjab is at it again with a good little jingle about the next 4 years...…

Blog

Yiddish with Dick and Jane under fire

I just learned of what sounds to be an interesting lawsuit filed in Los Angeles by the owners of the Dick and Jane copyright, Pearson Education.  Evidently, Pe…

Blog

Bah humbug.

Those creative folks at Jib Jab have come out with their Santa Claus parody...  ho ho ho.  See www.jibjab.com.…

Blog

Something borrowed

From time to time, my snail mailbox here contains an interesting article sent to me from Paul Lomio, one of the amazing law librarians here at SLS.  Paul recent…

Blog

Safety valves

I came upon a public policy report entitled "The Progress of Science and Useful Arts: Why Copyright Today Threatens Intellectual Freedom" from the Fre…

Blog

Mere formalities

It's been a bit since I last posted, and I will blame the holidays and general busy-ness for my slow down in posting here.  Some of my distraction from blog…

Blog

Looking ahead to 2006

I'm slowly coming out of my post-election depression and ready to look ahead at 2006.  To that end, I'm starting to work with IPac, a non-partisan group…