People

Katherine Strandburg

Katherine Strandburg (Director)
katherine.strandburg@nyu.edu

Katherine Strandburg specializes in innovation policy and information privacy law, focusing on the interplay between social behavior and technological change.  She has authored amicus briefs to the Supreme Court and federal appellate courts on these issues. Recent publications include a First Amendment critique of “metadata" surveillance and the co-edited book, Governing Knowledge Commons. Professor Strandburg graduated with high honors from the University of Chicago Law School and served as a law clerk to the Honorable Richard D. Cudahy of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit. Prior to her legal career, she was a physicist at Argonne National Laboratory, having received her Ph.D. from Cornell University and conducted postdoctoral research at Carnegie Mellon.

Florencia Marotta-Wurgler

Florencia Marotta-Wurgler (Faculty Fellow)
wurglerf@mercury.law.nyu.edu

Florencia Marotta-Wurgler teaches and does research on Internet and consumer standard form contracts, and privacy. Her published research has addressed online standard form contracting with delayed disclosure, contracting in the presence of seller market power, and dispute resolution clauses in consumer standard form contracts. Her current research focuses on a large empirical project on online privacy policies, disclosure, and the effectiveness of the Federal Trade Commission's enforcement actions against firms for privacy violations. She has participated in FTC hearings, testified before the US Senate, and presented her scholarship at more than 125 conferences and universities around the world.

Ira Rubinstein

Ira Rubinstein (Faculty Fellow)
ira.rubinstein@nyu.edu

Ira Rubinstein is a Senior Fellow at the Information Law Institute (ILI), NYU School of Law, and teaches courses in privacy law. His research interests include Internet privacy, surveillance, big data, and Internet security. Rubinstein lectures and publishes widely on issues of privacy and security and has testified before Congress on these topics five times. He previously spent 17 years in Microsoft's law department, most recently as Associate General Counsel, running the Regulatory Affairs and Public Policy group. In 2010, he joined the Board of Directors of the Center for Democracy and Technology. Rubinstein graduated from Yale Law School in 1985.

Jason Schultz

Jason Schultz (Faculty Fellow)
jason.schultz@nyu.edu

Jason M. Schultz is a Professor of Clinical Law, Director of NYU's Technology Law & Policy Clinic, and Co-Director of the Engelberg Center on Innovation Law & Policy. His clinical projects, research, and writing primarily focus on practical frameworks and policy options to help traditional areas of law such as intellectual property, privacy, consumer protection, and civil rights adapt in light of new technologies and the challenges they pose. His most recent work focuses on the social and legal implications of machine learning, artificial intelligence, and the Internet of Things.

Helen Nissenbaum

Helen Nissenbaum (Faculty Partner, Cornell Tech)
hn288@cornell.edu

Helen Nissenbaum is Professor of Information Science at Cornell Tech. Her research takes an ethical perspectives on policy, law, science, and engineering relating to information technology, computing, digital media and data science. Topics have included privacy, trust, accountability, security, and values in technology design. Her books include Obfuscation: A User's Guide for Privacy and Protest, with Finn Brunton (MIT Press, 2015) and Privacy in Context: Technology, Policy, and the Integrity of Social Life (Stanford, 2010). Grants from the NSF, AFOSR, and the U.S. DHHS-ONC have supported her work. Recipient of the 2014 Barwise Prize of the American Philosophical Association, Nissenbaum has contributed to privacy-enhancing software, including TrackMeNot and AdNauseam. Nissenbaum holds a Ph.D. in philosophy from Stanford University and a B.A. (Hons) in philosophy and mathematics from the University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa. Helen is the former director of the Information Law Institute at NYU School of Law and the founder of the Privacy Research Group. 

Moritz Schramm

Moritz Schramm (Faculty Fellow)
moritz.schramm@nyu.edu

Moritz Schramm is a Research Scholar at Guarini Global Law & Tech, a Fellow at the Institute for International Law and Justice, and an Adjunct Professor of Law at New York University School of Law. At NYU, he convenes the Guarini Colloquium on Legal Controls of Digital Corporations and teaches European Union law. His research explores global private and regulatory governance, with a particular focus on socio-legal perspectives. Moritz is the author of the forthcoming monograph The Emulation of Courts in the Digital World: Platforms, the Oversight Board, and the Digital Services Act (CUP) and has published articles and book chapters across law and social sciences. He has received multiple international awards for his work and serves as an editor for Verfassungsblog and the European Journal of Legal Studies.

Nathalie Smuha

Nathalie Smuha (Faculty Fellow)
nathalie.smuha@nyu.edu

Nathalie A. Smuha is a legal scholar and philosopher at the KU Leuven Faculty of Law, where she examines legal and ethical questions around AI and digital technologies. She is also Adjunct Professor at NYU School of Law, and an affiliate member of Guarini Global Law & Tech. Her research and teaching focuses particularly on AI’s impact on human rights, democracy and the rule of law. She is the author of Algorithmic Rule By Law: How Algorithmic Regulation in the Public Sector Erodes the Rule of Law (CUP, 2024), and the editor of the forthcoming Cambridge Handbook of the Law, Ethics and Policy of AI. Her work has been the recipient of several awards. In addition, she regularly advises governments and international organizations on AI policy. Previously, she worked at the European Commission, where she coordinated the work of the High-Level Expert Group on AI and contributed to Europe’s AI strategy. She is also a member of the OECD Network of Experts on AI and acted as a scientific expert in the Council of Europe’s (Ad Hoc) Committee on AI.

Sunoo Park

Sunoo Park (Faculty Fellow)
sunoo.park@nyu.edu

Sunoo Park is an Assistant Professor of Computer Science at NYU's Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences and Affiliated Interdisciplinary Faculty at the NYU School of Law. Her research is in technology law and policy, with particular interest in the security, privacy, and transparency of digital technologies. In computer science, she does research in cryptography and computer security. She received her J.D. at Harvard Law School, her Ph.D. in computer science at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), and her B.A. in computer science at the University of Cambridge.

Michal Shur-Ofry

Michal Shur-Ofry (Visiting Faculty Fellow)
michalshur@huji.ac.il

Michal Shur-Ofry is an Associate Professor at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem Law Faculty, where she researches and teaches in the areas of Intellectual Property, Law and Technology, and Law and Complexity Theory. She received her LL.B. (Magna cum Laude) and Ph.D. from the Hebrew University and her LL.M. from University College London, as a Chevening–Sainer Scholar. Her recent scholarship focuses on the application of insights from complexity and network theory to the design of legal rules and policies. In addition, she explores regulatory responses to the systemic effects of AI, and is also interested in the intersection between law and collective memory. She has authored numerous publications in these areas, and is currently working on a book on “Law and Complexity” (forthcoming with Cambridge University Press).

Ignacio Cofone

Ignacio Cofone (Visiting Faculty Fellow)
ignacio.cofone@nyu.edu

Ignacio is the Professor of Law & Regulation of AI at the University of Oxford (Faculty of Law and Institute for Ethics in AI). His work centers on regulatory design and remedies for immaterial data and AI harms, such as privacy and discrimination. His book, The Privacy Fallacy: Harm and Power in the Information Economy (2024), for example, argues that AI requires restructuring privacy and data protection law based on duties of nonexploitation because basing these bodies of law on individual control has become ineffective. He is visiting NYU during Spring 2025.

Thomas Streinz

Thomas Streinz (Faculty Affiliate)
thomas.streinz@law.nyu.edu

Thomas Streinz is Joint Chair in Law with interests in regulatory theory and regulatory institutions at the European University Institute’s Law Department and the Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies in Florence. His current research interests focus on digital governance and global law and technology, in particular the regulation of the global data economy and the governance of digital infrastructures. He leverages insights from the social sciences – in particular science and technology studies, infrastructure studies, media and communication studies, and (critical) data studies – for socio-techno-legal research. As an Adjunct Professor of Law at New York University’s School of Law, Professor Streinz convened colloquia on the regulation of global digital corporations, taught courses on Global Data Law, and conducted interdisciplinary seminars on selected topics in Global Tech Law. Professor Streinz was the inaugural Executive Director of the Guarini Global Law and Tech initiative at NYU Law, where he remains a Senior Fellow.

David Stein

David Stein (Faculty Affiliate, Northeastern University)

Stein is an Assistant Professor of Law and Computer Science at Northeastern University. He studies how law and technology influence each other. Prior to joining Northeastern, he was an ILI Fellow and a research scholar at the Guarini Institute for Global Law and Tech. Before that, he spent a decade in the tech industry. He has a JD from NYU, and an MEng and SB from MIT.

Albert Fox Cahn

Albert Fox Cahn (ILI Practitioner-in-Residence)

Albert Fox Cahn is the Surveillance Technology Oversight Project's (S.T.O.P.'s) founder and executive director, and he is also a fellow at Yale Law School's Information Society Project and Ashoka.  Albert is a frequent commentator on civil rights, privacy, and technology matters.  He is a contributor to the New York Times, Boston Globe, Guardian, WIRED, Slate, NBC Think, Newsweek, and dozens of other publications.  Albert previously served as an associate at Weil, Gotshal & Manges LLP, where he advised Fortune 50 companies on technology policy, antitrust law, and consumer privacy. In addition, to his work at S.T.O.P., Albert serves on the New York Immigration Coalition's Immigrant Leaders Council, the New York Immigrant Freedom Fund's Advisory Council, and is an editorial board member for the Anthem Ethics of Personal Data Collection.  He received his J.D., cum laude, from Harvard Law School (where he was an editor of the Harvard Law & Policy Review), and his B.A. in Politics and Philosophy in Brandeis University.

Sebastian Benthall

Sebastian Benthall (Senior Research Fellow)

Dr. Sebastian Benthall is a Senior Research Fellow at the Information Law Institute, as well as a Research Scientist at the Information Law Institute. His work has been funded by the NSF, DARPA, Sloan Foundation, Future of Life Foundation, and the Microsoft Corporation. His research involves applications of computational economics and multi-agent systems techniques to problems of data protection and AI governance.

Kat Geddes

Kat Geddes (ILI Fellow)

Kat Geddes is a joint postdoctoral fellow at NYU School of Law and the Digital Life Initiative at Cornell Tech. She studies the normative incompatibilities between law and data science as competing modes of governance, and competing epistemologies. She recently defended her JSD dissertation, "Computational Prediction: The Co-Evolution of Law and Technology," at NYU School of Law. Prior to academia, Kat worked as a judicial clerk and litigation associate in Sydney, Australia. She holds an LLB/B.Comm from the University of New South Wales, an LLM from Cambridge University, an MPP from the Harvard Kennedy School of Government, and a JSD from NYU Law.

Omar Vasquez Duque

Omar Vasquez Duque (ILI Affiliate)

Omar’s research applies behavioral insights to competition policy, business law, and the regulation of the digital economy. He has formal training in law, behavioral science, and econometrics. Before starting his doctoral studies at Stanford, he worked as a competition expert for the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development and as an antitrust enforcer at the Chilean Antitrust Agency. He also undertook a research visit at the University of Oxford’s Centre for Competition Law and Policy before enrolling at Harvard Law School as an LL.M. student. Omar’s research has appeared in the Journal of Competition Law and Economics, the UC SF Law Review (formerly Hastings Law Journal), the Maryland Law Review, among others. He has presented his research at leading law and economics and economic policy conferences, such as the American Law and Economics Association Annual Meeting, the Conference on Empirical Legal Studies, the main panel of the Academic Society for Competition Law (ASCOLA) Annual Meeting, and CRESSE. His research has been cited by the U.S. Department of Commerce, the OECD, and the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission. It has also been featured by ProMarket, Barron’s, and Competition Policy International. Before moving to New York City, Omar was a lecturer at Stanford University and an academic fellow at the Rock Center for Corporate Governance.

 Michael Beauvais

Michael Beauvais (ILI Affiliate)

Michael Beauvais is a doctoral candidate at the University of Toronto Faculty of Law. His dissertation explores a legally justified informational privacy interest of children from their parents. Beyond youth privacy, he is interested in how technologies and law structure and mediate interpersonal relationships. He also researches and publishes on privacy and data protection issues in biomedical research where he focuses on international data transfers and European data protection law.

His doctoral work is supported by a Canada Graduate Scholarship (CGS-D) from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada and by a fellowship at the Schwartz Reisman Institute for Technology and Society at the University of Toronto. 

 

Ben Sobel (ILI Affiliate)

Ben Sobel is a lawyer, a scholar of information law, and a postdoctoral fellow at the Digital Life Initiative at Cornell Tech in New York City and affiliate scholar at the NYU Information Law Institute. His work examines how law and technology construct legal significance out of raw information.

Ben is a graduate of Harvard College and Harvard Law School. He previously served as a law clerk to Chief Judge David Barron and Judge Michael Boudin of the United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit, and to Judge Pierre Leval of the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. He has also served as a Lecturer on Law at Harvard Law School.

Ben’s scholarship has been cited in briefs submitted to the Supreme Court of the United States, a copyright treatise, and the 2024 Economic Report of the President. His publications are available on his homepage, bensobel.org.

Sevinj Novruzova

Sevinj Novruzova (ILI Affiliate)

Mrs. Sevinj Novruzova is a Visiting Fulbright Postdoctoral Scholar at NYU Law School Information Law Institute. Her current project relates to Comparative analysis of Azerbaijan, Turkey and Russia data protection legal provisions and practices with reference to US Federal Data Protection Act from perspective of sustainable businesses.

She has more than 14 years’ experience in the legal and compliance contexts. She is currently an Adjunct Professor of Khazar University. She has several publications in UK, Turkey, and Azerbaijan. Her recent book has been published in Ankara, Turkey under the name of Duty of Care of Banks in Electronic Banking. She is also contributor on corporate compliance issues to AMCHAM, Turkish Ethics and Integrity Society, Azerbaijan Ethics and Compliance Network, Corruption & Transparency Working Group of the Commission on Business Environment & International Ratings.

Mrs. Novruzova holds a PhD degree in Commercial Law from Selcuk University, Turkey and a master’s degree in international Private Law from Ankara State University, Turkey.

Silvia A. Carretta

Silvia A. Carretta (ILI Affiliate)

Silvia A. Carretta is a joint doctoral candidate at the law faculty of Uppsala University (Sweden) and the Wallenberg Graduate School on AI, Autonomous Systems and Software Program - Humanities and Society (WASP-HS). She is also a fellow at the Digital Life Initiative at Cornell Tech (USA). 

Silvia’s research studies the accountability of artificial intelligence under the lens of private law and, in particular, the impact of algorithmic online content moderation on users’ fundamental rights. She regularly lectures in advanced courses at the law faculty and has several publications around her research interests (which include intellectual property law, law and technology, and private law issues connected to upcoming AI shifts in society).

As a scholar-practitioner, Silvia acts as Chief Legal Officer for Women in AI, a global do-tank working towards gender-inclusive AI. She has been a member of the Milan Bar Association since 2017. Silvia holds a Law degree and an LL.M. in Private International Law and Arbitration from the Catholic University of Milan (Italy) as well as an LL.M. in European Intellectual Property Law from Stockholm University (Sweden).

Neli Frost

Neli Frost (ILI Affiliate)
neli.frost@worc.ox.ac.uk

Neli Frost is a Research Fellow at the University of Oxford. She researches at the intersection of public (and international) law, technology, and democratic jurisprudence, with a particular interest in the ways in which digital and artificial intelligence technologies disrupt democratic principles, structures, and institutions. She received her Ph.D. in Law from the University of Cambridge. Prior to joining the University of Oxford, she was a Hauser Global Fellow at NYU School of Law.

Stav Zeitouni

Stav Zeitouni (ILI Affiliate)

Stav Zeitouni is a Postdoctoral Scholar at the Center for Private Law Theory at UC Berkeley. Her work examines the intersection of privacy and property from a law and psychology perspective, as well as propertization in information law more broadly. She holds a J.S.D. and an LL.M. in Legal Theory from NYU and an undergraduate degree in law and psychology from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. Prior to her graduate studies, she clerked in the Office of the Attorney General in Israel.

Tomer Kenneth

Tomer Kenneth (ILI Affiliate)
TKenneth@law.usc.edu

Dr. Tomer Kenneth is a visiting assistant professor at USC Gould School of Law, and an affiliated fellow at the Information Law Institute at NYU School of Law. He studies decision-making about facts in law and politics, and his primary research areas include evidence, legal theory, political theory, and law and technology. Kenneth graduated from NYU Law with a JSD and a LLM (legal theory). His scholarship was published in the Yale Journal of Law and the Humanities, Harvard Journal on Legislation, and Duke Law Journal Online, among others. At the ILI, Kenneth focuses on the intersection of evidence law and innovative technologies.

Federica Fedorczyk

Federica Fedorczyk (ILI Affiliate)
ff2346@nyu.edu

Federica Fedorczyk is a Postdoctoral Emile Noël Fellow at NYU and a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at EURA (Sant’Anna School of Advanced Studies in Pisa). She works on AI regulation and ethics. At NYU, she is critically analysing the European AI Act, focusing on potential top-down misuse of AI by governments and exploring innovative approaches for a democratization of AI. Her primary research interests include the intersection between AI and democracy, the innovative concept of smart prisons and digital rehabilitation, as well as gender-based crimes and gender discrimination.

She recently obtained a Ph.D. in Criminal law at Sant’Anna School of Advanced Studies. In her dissertation ‘Artificially Intelligent Criminal Justice? A policy oriented critical plea’ she investigated how the use of AI is transforming the criminal justice system and the risks of new forms of digital authoritarianism. She has been Visiting Ph.D. Researcher at Fordham Law School in New York City (2023) and Doctoral Research Visiting Fellow at the Max Planck Institute for the Study of Crime, Security and Law in Freiburg (2024), where she was awarded a Scholarship for her research project. In addition to her academic activities, Federica is a lawyer and has also served as a legal trainee at the Avvocatura Generale dello Stato and as a judicial clerk at the Criminal Public Prosecutor Office, where she was part of the anti-violence pool specialized in crimes against women, children, and other vulnerable victims.

Misa Scognamiglio

Misa Scognamiglio (ILI Affiliate)

Misa Scognamiglio is a PhD student at the University of Siena. She graduated summa cum laude in Law from Roma Tre University with a dissertation on punitive damages. Her doctoral research focuses on algorithmic discrimination and the remedies to deal with discrimination based on ethnicity, sex, religion, age, disability, etc.

Headshot of student Ngozi Nwanta.

Ngozi Nwanta (JSD Fellow)

Ngozi is a JSD student from Nigeria researching on governance of digital identifiable information in credit markets and their implications for financial inclusion and development. She holds an LLM from NYU Law School during which she worked on grassroot contestations involving digital identification schemes in West Africa as well as data governance platforms involving the use of blockchain as a trust architecture for biometric identification systems. Ngozi has worked with the Doing Business unit of the World Bank as an NYU IFD fellow. Prior to her graduate studies at NYU, she worked as a corporate and dispute resolution lawyer in Nigeria and received a Bachelor of Laws degree (first class honors) from the University of Nigeria.

Picture of Yijao Wang

Yijiao Wang (JSD Fellow)
yijiao.wang@nyu.edu

Yijiao Wang is a JSD candidate at NYU. She holds an LL.M. in Legal Theory from NYU Law and an LL.B. from the University of Hong Kong. Her research interests include intellectual property theories, computational creativity, philosophy of mind, and authorship in AI-assisted work. During her LL.B she worked at Law, Innovation, Technology, and Entrepreneurship (LITE) Lab on a collaborative project with FedEx Express on law and automation and together with LITE Lab won the 2022 International Industry Award for Legal Innovation from Corporate Legal Operations Consortium.

Ming Yi

Ming Yi (JSD Fellow)

Ming is a JSD candidate from China. Her research focuses on the Governing Knowledge Commons framework and applying it to power sensitive issues. In general, she is interested in law and technology, law and society and commons theory. She holds an LL.M. from NYU Law and an LL.B. from the University of Hong Kong.

 

Administrator

Nicole Arzt
NYU School of Law
40 Washington Square South
Room 336
New York, NY 10012-1066
(212) 998-6013
nicole.arzt@nyu.edu