Wiki Education Foundation-supported course assignment edit

  This article was the subject of a Wiki Education Foundation-supported course assignment, between 15 February 2021 and 15 May 2021. Further details are available on the course page. Student editor(s): Hotpink789!. Peer reviewers: Penguinblueberry, Stellasuperba, CelticsFan3, 99rebound, LowIQPotato, Luckyclover44.

Above undated message substituted from Template:Dashboard.wikiedu.org assignment by PrimeBOT (talk) 19:02, 17 January 2022 (UTC)Reply

Page history edit

2006 deleted page Chris Hoofnagle (content was: 'Chris Hoofnagle (born 1974) is the director of the Electronic Privacy Information Center West Coast Office.' (and the only contributor was 'Buck mulligan')) — Preceding unsigned comment added by DadaNeem (talkcontribs)

External links modified edit

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Bibliography edit

Hi! I plan to update this page and wanted to add my bibliography to the talk page. If anyone has suggestions, please let me know.

1. Hoofnagle, Chris. 2001. “Matters of Public Concern and the Public University Professor.” Journal of College & University Law 27(3):669–707.

2. Kesari, Aniket, Chris Hoofnagle, and Damon McCoy. 2017. “Deterring Cybercrime: Focus on Intermediaries .” Berkeley Technology Law Journal 32(3):1093–1134.

3. Hoofnagle, Chris Jay and Jan Whittington. 2014. “Free: Accounting for the Costs of the Internet's Most Popular Price.” UCLA Law Review 61(3):606–70.

4. Hoofnagle, Chris Jay, Ashkan Soltani, Nathaniel Good, Dietrich J. Wambach, and Mika D. Ayenson. 2012. “Behavioral Advertising: The Offer You Cannot Refuse.” Harvard Law & and Policy Review 6(2):273–96.

5. Hoofnagle, Chris Jay. 2008. “Towards a Market for Bank Safety.” Loyola Consumer Law Review 21(2):155–80.

6. Susser, Daniel. 2019. “Notice After Notice-and-Consent: Why Privacy Disclosures Are Valuable Even If Consent Frameworks Aren't.” Journal of Information Policy 9:37–62.

7. Hoofnagle, Chris, Aniket Kesari, and Aaron Perzanowski. 2019. “The Tethered Economy.” George Washington Law Review 87(4):783–874.

8. Hoofnagle, Chris Jay. 2014. “Alan Westin's Privacy Homo Economicus.” Wake Forest Law Review 49(2):261–317.

9. Hoofnagle, Chris. 2009. “Internalizing Identity Theft .” UCLA Journal of Law & Technology 13(2):1–36.

10. Turow, Joseph, Chris Hoofnagle, Deidre K. Mulligan, and Nathaniel Good. 2007. “The Federal Trade Commission and Consumer Privacy in the Coming Decade.” I/S: A Journal of Law and Policy for the Information Society 3(3):723–50.

11. Hoofnagle, Chris, ed. 2017. “FTC Regulation of Cybersecurity and Surveillance.” Pp. 708–26 in The Cambridge Handbook of Surveillance Law. Cambridge University Press.

12. Hoofnagle, Chris, Jennifer Urban, and Su Li. 2013. “Mobile Payments: Consumer Benefits & New Privacy Concerns.” The European Financial Review 1–19.

13. Fischer-Hübner, Simone, Chris Hoofnagle, Ioannis Krontiris, Kai Rannenberg, and Michael Waidner. 2011. “Online Privacy: Towards Informational Self-Determination on the Internet.” Dagstuhl Manifestos 1(1):1–20.

14. Hoofnagle, Chris, Jennifer Urban, and Su Li. 2012. “Mobile Phones and Privacy.” BCLT Research Paper Series.

15. Perzanowski, Aaron and Chris Hoofnagle. 2017. “What We Buy When We Buy Now.” University of Pennsylvania Law Review 165(2):315–78.

16. Whittington, Jan and Chris Jay Hoofnagle. 2012. “Unpacking Privacy’s Price.” North Carolina Law Review 90(5):1328–70.

17. Hoofnagle, Chris. 2004. “Big Brother’s Little Helpers: How ChoicePoint and Other Commercial Data Brokers Collect and Package Your Data for Law Enforcement.” North Carolina Journal of International Law & Commercial Regulation 29(4):595–637.

18. Hoofnagle, Chris Jay. 2007. “Identity Theft: Making The Known Unknowns Known.” Harvard Journal of Law & Technology 21(1):98–122.

19. Chris Hoofnagle, Bart van der Sloot, and Frederik Zuiderveen Borgesius. 2019. “The European Union General Data Protection Regulation: What It Is and What It Means.” Information & Communications Technology Law 28(1):65–98.

20. Solove, Daniel J. and Chris Jay Hoofnagle. 2006. “A Model Regime of Privacy Protection.” University of Illinois Law Review (2):357–403.

Thank you! Hotpink789! (talk) 01:12, 14 March 2021 (UTC)Reply