Search for: "Harlan Yu" Results 21 - 40 of 65
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4 Dec 2011, 6:02 pm by Daniel Solove
Panelists: Daniel Barth-Jones, PhD, MPH, Assistant Professor of Clinical Epidemiology, Columbia University Mitra Rocca, Associate Director in Medical Informatics, Food and Drug Administration, Sentinel Project Harlan Yu, Ph.D. candidate in the Computer Science Department and the Center for Information Technology Policy at Princeton University Moderator: Marcy Wilder, Partner and Co-Director of the Hogan Lovells Privacy and Information Management Practice  11:30-… [read post]
16 Sep 2011, 10:16 am
Harlan Yu, an open government expert at Princeton's Center for Information Technology Policy, points to the 2002 law authorizing the PACER fees, which states that those fees may be charged "only to the extent necessary" to cover the costs of providing public access. [read post]
16 Jun 2011, 10:51 am
“Technologically speaking,” said Harlan Yu, a PhD candidate at Princeton University’s Computer Science program, “the Do Not Track train has left the station. [read post]
5 May 2011, 5:30 pm by Joseph Lorenzo Hall
CITP's Harlan Yu includes an interesting discussion of the problems with DOM flag granularity and access control problems when third-party code included in a first-party site runs as if it were first-part code. [read post]
5 May 2011, 5:30 pm by Joseph Lorenzo Hall
CITP's Harlan Yu includes an interesting discussion of the problems with DOM flag granularity and access control problems when third-party code included in a first-party site runs as if it were first-part code. [read post]
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14 Feb 2011, 12:00 pm by Nicholas Moline
Wayne, Stanford Law School; Harlan Yu, Princeton University; James Boyle, Duke Law School; Richard A. [read post]
We
14 Feb 2011, 12:00 pm by Nicholas Moline
Wayne, Stanford Law School; Harlan Yu, Princeton University; James Boyle, Duke Law School; Richard A. [read post]
3 Feb 2011, 6:46 pm by legalinformatics
Filed under: Applications, Others' scholarly or sophisticated blogposts, Policy debates, Policy Materials, Technology developments, Technology tools Tagged: Aaron Swartz, Carl Malamud, Center for Information Technology Policy, CITP, Court docket systems, Court documents, Court information systems, Crowdsourcing and legal information systems, Ed Felten, Free access to law, Harlan Yu, Judicial information systems, Law.gov, Open government data, PACER, Public access to legal… [read post]
3 Feb 2011, 2:27 am by Stephen Schultze
Afterwards, two graduate students, Harlan Yu and Tim Lee, came up to me and made an interesting suggestion. [read post]
26 Jan 2011, 6:55 pm by Timothy B. Lee
These predictions are the result of discussions that included myself, Joe Hall, Steve Schultze, Wendy Seltzer, Dan Wallach, and Harlan Yu, but note that we don't individually agree with every prediction. [read post]
11 Jan 2011, 8:15 pm by Jim Harper
I laughed out loud when I read the following line in Harlan Yu’s post, “Some Technical Clarifications About Do Not Track“: “[T]he Do Not Track header compels servers to cooperate, to proactively refrain from any attempts to track the user. [read post]
9 Dec 2010, 9:03 pm by Adam Thierer
Wow, what a year for cyberlaw and information technology policy books! [read post]
8 Sep 2010, 8:12 am by legalinformatics
Filed under: Articles and papers, Conference papers, Interviews Tagged: Alex Howard, Fees for access to court records, Free access to law, Gov 2.0 Summit, Harlan Yu, Law.gov, PACER, Privacy in court records, Public access to legal information, RECAP [read post]
18 Aug 2010, 10:57 am by Eric Lipman
Harlan Yu at Freedom to Tinker posted yesterday that the study has been completed, and while the results have not officially been released, he did find an interview with Bankruptcy Judge J. [read post]
17 Aug 2010, 1:13 pm by legalinformatics
Harlan Yu of the Princeton University Center for Information Technology Policy (CITP) has posted Assessing PACER’s Access Barriers, on the CITP blog Freedom to Tinker. [read post]
6 Aug 2010, 4:37 am
 Harlan Yu, a grad student at Princeton’s CTIP built FedThread.org, and a small group of developers built govpulse.us, each a cool, innovative way to look at the Federal Register. [read post]
3 Aug 2010, 1:25 pm by legalinformatics
Stephen Schultze and Harlan Yu, both of the Princeton University Center for Information Technology Policy, today announced (here and here) the launching of The RECAP Archive, a new Web interface to RECAP, the free database of U.S. federal court documents. [read post]
12 Mar 2010, 8:26 am by Joe Calandrino
[This is the fifth and final post in a series on best practices for government datasets by Harlan Yu and me. [read post]