Stanford CIS
Lauren Gelman

Lauren Gelman

Lauren is an experienced attorney, frequent speaker and start-up advisor who has worked in the field of Internet law and policy since 1995. She is the founder of BlurryEdge Strategies, a legal and strategy consulting firm located in San Francisco that advises technology companies and investors on cutting-edge legal issues. (Clients include: Lookout Mobile Security, Nest Labs, Fitbit, Github, Strevus, Krux Digital, BoingBoing, Gracenote, Imatchative, Trulia, reddit, Euclid Analytics, Don.na, Imgix, Wickr, private and institutional angels and investors, researchers) She regularly participates on behalf of clients or as an expert in policy debates (NTIA mobile Notices, DOE Smart Energy, W3C Do Not Track, FTC IoT, etc.)

Lauren previously led the Center for Internet and Society at Stanford Law School and taught at the Law School and the Department of Engineering. Prior to that she worked in Washington DC on policy issues for the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) and the ACM Public Policy Committee, and at RealNames in Silicon Valley.

At Stanford Law School, Lauren taught Internet Privacy, Governance in Virtual Worlds, Advanced Cyberlaw and Fair Use, and Privacy and Free Speech Online. She served as the Dean of State of Play Academy (SOPA), a virtual world law and technology community, sat on the Board of Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility (CPSR) and served on the Transportation Security Administration's (TSA) Secure Flight Working Group at the Department of Homeland Security.

Lauren is the co-editor of Securing Privacy in the Internet Age, the author of Privacy, Free Speech and Blurry-Edged Social Networks published by the Boston College Law Review as well as dozens of other articles on Internet issues. Lauren received a B.S. in Biology and Society from Cornell University, an M.S. in Science, Technology and Public Policy from The Elliott School George Washington University, and her law degree from Georgetown University. She is a member of the California Bar.

Recent articles

Blog

Columbine diaries-- public record?

Does private property seized under a search warrant become public record? The Colorado Supreme Court is currently considering this question in a case where the…

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canada gig

September 13, 2005- Speaking on how new tools are competing with or completing traditional media at "News vs. Noise - Issue and Stakeholder Management in t…

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Kevin Sites teams with Yahoo to cover war

With just a video camera and web access, Kevin Sites will be covering war zones for Yahoo at hotzone.yahoo.com.  According to the NYT: Mr. Sites intends to vis…

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Meet CIS (for Stanford students only)

Come meet the people of CIS, learn about our mission and research interests, and find out how you can get involved. Monday, Sept 19 @ 12:30 in room 180. DATE C…

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Journalists Gone Wild

Jay Rosen has a interesting post on PressThink, that I’ll boil down to: whether critical thinking is absent from the reporting on Katrina, or whether its true t…

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Yahoo helps China catch dissident

When can companies resort to "compliance with local law" justifications for despicable acts that censor, imprison, or otherwise impede the human right…

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digit- squatting

He said: the digit-squatter sitting on 1-800-RED-CROSS tried to charge the Red Cross a seven-digit figure to turn over the number, which they desperately need t…

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Flickr Flap

Flickr users are annoyed they need to go through Yahoo's log-in to get to their site and have threatened mass suicide if the policy is not changed.  Susan C…