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

Cass Sunstein is blogging at lessig.org

While on vacation, Larry is hosting a great list of guestbloggers-- this week it's Cass Sunstein, a superstar professor from U Chicago Law.  He's done q…

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Censorship in Vietnam

According to the Thanh Nien Daily, The Vietnamese government has announced new regulations over Internet access which will check the identity of all cyber-café…

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US requirements for "journalist" visa

An interesting thread on Joi Ito's blog discusses whether "US visa requirements for journalists cover bloggers?"  The issue is whether someone who…

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Stewart Baker

the President's recent nomination of Stewart Baker to assistant secretary for policy in the Homeland Security Department initially shocked me, but it isn…

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comments

We've been having a horrible time with comment spam so I turned comments off on my site.  I was spending so much time deleting it, and I wasn't really b…

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Guest Blogging

I will be guest blogging for Lisa Stone at Law.com's Legal Blog Watch the week of August 29th.  I'm pretty excited, as I've never guest blogged befo…

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Is more speech always good?

Dan Gillmor's Bayosphere looks like it's gathering steam.  Talking with Dan about legal issues raised by the site really got my mind realing.  Now that…

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podcast

June 23, 2005- Podcast interview with Lisa Stone about BlogHerCon panel on legal issues for bloggers.…

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online delib

May 20, 2005- Speak at Online Deliberation Conference on legal issues and user participation online.…