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Please note: For the full one-hour show with music that airs from 5-6 PM PST on Wednesdays, you need to listen live on KZSU-FM. If you are in the San Francisco Bay area, you can also tune to 90.1 FM. Otherwise, the current state of United States copyright law prevents me from offering the music.

You’ll find the interviews without the music, listed by show air-date and guest in reverse chronological order, below. As always, you can also find the show by iTunes podcast here and on the CIS website. Also, if you subscribe to the rss feed, you will get links to the show as they are posted. Listen and/or download, and enjoy!

Show 120, August 11: Prof. Rob Frieden of Penn State’s College of Communications discussing Winning the Silicon Sweepstakes.

Show 119, August 4: Profs. Eduardo Penalver of Cornell Law and Sonia Katyal of Fordham Law discussing Property Outlaws.

Show 118, July 28: Paul Jones of ibiblio.org.

Show #117, July 21: Laura DeNardis, Executive Director of the Information Society Project at Yale Law School and author of Protocol Politics: The Globalization of Internet Governance.

Show #116, July 14: Prof. Shubha Ghosh of the University of Wisconsin Law School.

Show #115, July 7: Jeremy Malcolm of Consumers International.

.Show # 114, June 30: Greg Nojeim, Senior Counsel at the Center for Democracy and Technology.

Show # 113, May 26: Prof. Ken Wark of the Eugene Lang College at the New School.

Show #112, May 19: Profs. Danielle Citron of University of Maryland School of Law and Frank Pasquale of Seton Hall School of Law discussing Fusion Centers.

Show # 111, April 28: Prof. Bobbi Kwall of DePaul College of Law, author of The Soul of Creativity.

Show #110, March 10: Prof. Manuel Castells of the University of Southern California — Annenberg School of Communication, author of Communication Power

Show #109, February 17: Prof. Christopher Kelty of the University of California Los Angeles, author of Two Bits: The Cultural Significance of Free Software.

Show #108, January 27: Kazys Varnelis of Columbia University, author of Networked Publics.

Show #107, January 20: Prof. Derek Bambauer of Brooklyn Law School and Oliver Day of Harvard Law School’s Berkman Center for Internet and Society discussing The Hacker’s Aegis: Protecting Software Security Research Against Intellectual Property.

Show #106, January 13, 2010: Prof. Tarleton Gillespie of Cornell University, author of Wired Shut.

Show #105, December 2: Prof. Wendy Hui Kyong Chun of Brown University, author of Control and Freedom: Power and Paranoia in the Age of Fiber Optics.

Show #104, November 25: Prof. James Grimmelmann of New York Law School discussing Google Book Search.

Show #103, November 18: Prof. Alexander Halavais of Quinnipiac University, author of Search Engine Society.

Show #102, November 11: Prof. Geert Lovink of the Amsterdam University of Applied Sciences, author of Zero Comments and co-editor of Open 13.

Show #101, November 4: Larry Downes, author of The Laws of Disruption.

Show #100, October 28: William Patry, Esq., Senior Copyright Counsel at Google, author of Moral Panics and the Copyright Wars.

Show #99, October 21: Prof. Elizabeth Townsend Gard and Justin Levy of Tulane University Law School, creators of the forthcoming Durationator.

Show # 98, October 14: Prof. Jacqui Lipton of Case Western Reserve University School of Law.

Show #97, October 7: Annalee Newitz of techsploitation.com and co-editor of She’s Such a Geek.

Show #96, August 19: Prof. Michael Heller of Columbia Law School, author of The Gridlock Economy: How Too Much Ownership Wrecks Markets, Stops Innovation, and Costs Lives.

Show #95, August 12: Kevin Bankston of the Electronic Frontier Foundation.

Show #94, August 5: Prof. John Tehranian of Chapman University School of Law, author of Whitewashed: America’s Invisible Middle Eastern Minority.

Show #93, July 29: Prof. James Boyle of Duke Law School, author of The Public Domain: Enclosing the Commons of the Mind

Show #92, July 22: Dr. Susan Maret of San Jose State University, co-editor of Government Secrecy: Classic and contemporary readings.

Show #91, July 8: Prof. John Kunich of Charlotte School of Law, co-author of Cubs Fans’ Leadership Secrets: Learning to Win From a “Cursed” Team’s Errors.

Show #90, July 1: Prof. Michael Geist of the University of Ottawa.

Show #89, June 3: Profs. Dan Burk of U.C. Irvine School of Law and Mark Lemley of Stanford Law School, co-authors of The Patent Crisis and How the Courts Can Solve It.

Show #88, May 27: Prof. Gary Small of UCLA, co-author of iBrain: Surviving the Technological Alteration of the Modern Mind.

Show #87, April 8: Prof. Ronald Deibert of the University of Toronto, discussing Tracking GhostNet, Access Denied and Citizen Lab.

Show #86, March 11: Andrew Lewman and Prof. Wendy Seltzer of the Tor Project.

Show #85, February 18: Prof. Ned Snow of the University of Arkansas School of Law on the perils of copyright.

Show # 84, February 4: Robert Wallace, co-author of Spycraft.

Show 83, January 28: Prof. Mireille Hildebrandt of the Vrije Universiteit Brussel (Belgium), co-editor of Profiling the European Citizen.

Show #82, January 14, 2009: Zohar Efroni, Non-Resident Fellow at CIS, discussing Israeli copyright law.

Show #81, December 3: Prof. John Palfrey of Harvard Law School, co-author of Born Digital.

Show #80, November 19: Jeff Howe, author of Crowdsourcing.

Show #79, November 12: Prof. Mark Bauerlein of Emory University, author of The Dumbest Generation: How the Digital Age Stupefies Young Americans and Jeopardizes Our Future (Or, Don’t Trust Anyone Under 30)

Show # 78, October 29: Michael Gollin, Esq. of Venable LLP, author of Driving Innovation.

Show #77, October 22: David Rice, author of Geekonomics: The Real Cost of Insecure Software.

Show #76, October 15: Prof. Paul Ohm of the University of Colorado Law School, author of The Rise and Fall of Invasive ISP [Internet Service Provider] Surveillance.

Show #75, October 8: Profs. David Levine and Michele Boldrin of Washington University in St. Louis, authors of Against Intellectual Monopoly.

Show #74, October 1: Prof. Hal Abelson of MIT, Ken Ledeen, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Nevo Technologies, and Dean Harry Lewis of Harvard College/Harvard University, authors of Blown to Bits.

Show #73, September 3: Prof. Neil Netanel of UCLA School of Law, author of Copyright’s Paradox.

Show #72, August 27: Michel Bauwens of the Foundation for P2P [Peer-to-Peer] Alternatives.

Show #71, August 20: Prof. Timothy Holbrook of Chicago-Kent College of Law.

Show #70, July 23: Prof. Michael Meurer of Boston University School of Law, co-author of Patent Failure.

Show #69, July 16: Prof. John Tehranian of Chapman University School of Law.

Show #68, July 9: Morley Winograd of USC Marshall School of Business and Michael Hais, former vice president at Frank N. Magid Associates, authors of Millennial Makeover.

Show #67, June 4: Prof. Jonathan Zittrain of Harvard Law School, author of The Future of the Internet — And How to Stop It.

Show #66, May 28: Matt Mason, author of The Pirate’s Dilemma.

Show #65, May 21: Alex Wright, author of Glut: Mastering Information Through the Ages.

Show #64, May 14: Dan (Danny) Breznitz, Assitant Professor at the Sam Nunn School of International Affairs and the School of Public Policy at Georgia Institute of Technology, author of Innovation and the State.

Show #63, May 7: Prof. Robert Friedel of the University of Maryland, author of A Culture of Improvement: Technology and the Western Millennium.

Show #62, April 23: Prof. Mark Lemley of Stanford Law School.

Show #61, April 9: Prof. Roberta “Bobbi” Kwall of DePaul University College of Law.

Show #60, February 20: Prof. Brett Frischmann of Loyola University Chicago School of Law on infrastructure and commons management.

Show #59, February 13: Prof. John Willinsky of Stanford University discussing his book The Access Principle.

Show #58, January 23: Erik Davis, discussing his books “The Visionary State: A Journey Through California’s Spiritual Landscape” and (because I have to) “Led Zeppelin’s Zoso” (33 1/3).

Show #57, January 16, 2008: Prof. Kristin Lord, GWU Elliott School of International Affairs, discussing her book “Perils and Promise of Global Transparency: Why the Information Revolution May Not Lead to Security Democracy or Peace.”

Show #56, November 7: David Weinberger, discussing his book “Everything Is Miscellaneous.”

Show #55, October 24: Prof. Rebecca Tushnet of Georgetown Law School, discussing copyright and trademark law.

Show #54, October 17: Dean Jon Garon of Hamline University School of Law, discussing his forthcoming book “Own It – The Law & Business Guide to Launching a New Business through Innovation, Exclusivity and Relevance.”

Show #53, October 10: Prof. Daniel Solove of George Washington School of Law, discussing his new book “The Future of Reputation: Gossip, Rumor, and Privacy on the Internet.”

Show #52, October 3: Prof. James Grimmelmann of New York Law School, discussing some of his recent articles.

Show #51, August 29: Prof. Robert Markley of the University of Illinois — Urbana-Champaign, discussing his book (ed.) “Virtual Realities and Their Discontents.”

Show #50, August 22: Peter Morville, discussing his book “Ambient Findability”

Show #49, August 15: CIS Non-Resident Fellow Bruce Cahan on spatial technology.

Show #48, August 8: Alan Morrison, Senior Lecturer, Stanford Law School, on public interest litigation.

Show #47, August 1: Ben Klemens of the Brookings Institution, discussing his book “Math You Can’t Use”.

Show #46, July 25: Adjunct Prof. Larry Downes of U.C. Berkeley School of Information (and CIS Non-Resident Fellow) on business innovation.

Show #45, July 18: Todd Davies, Associate Director and Lecturer, Symbolic Systems Program, Stanford, on behavioral economics in technology.

Show #44, July 11: Jaime King, Fellow in Stanford Law School’s Center for Law and the Biosciences.

Show #43, July 4: Fred von Lohmann, Senior Intellectual Property Attorney for the Electronic Frontier Foundation.

Show #42, June 27: Jim Fruchterman, Founder and CEO of Benetech.

Show #41, June 6: Adjunct Prof. Henry Chesbrough of U.C. Berkeley Haas School of Business, discussing his book “Open Business Models.”

Show #40, May 30: Prof. Michael Shanks of Stanford, and Director of the Metamedia Lab.

Show #39, May 23: Brad Stone of The New York Times and return guest Jennifer Granick of CIS on the state of tech.

Show #38, May 16: Tony Falzone, Director of the Fair Use Project (FUP) at Stanford Law School.

Show #37, May 9: Balasz Bodo, Fulbright Visiting Researcher at Stanford’s Center for Internet and Society, discussing the sociocultural impacts of technology and online communities.

Show #36, May 2: John Thackara, discussing his book “In the Bubble.”

Show #35, April 4: Prof. Cass Sunstein of the University of Chicago Law School, discussing his book “Infotopia.”

Show #34, April 2: Prof. Terry Fisher of Harvard Law School, discussing his book “Promises to Keep.”

Show #33, March 28: Prof. Josh Lerner of Harvard Business School, discussing his co-authored book “Innovation and Its Discontents.”

Show #32, March 14: Asst. Prof. Eric Goldman of Santa Clara Law School (SCLS), and Academic Director of the High Tech Law Institute at SCLS.

Show #31, March 7: Prof. Richard Epstein of the University of Chicago Law School and Hoover Institution.

Show #30, February 28: David Brin, discussing his book “The Transparent Society.”

Show #29, February 21: Prof. Mark Lemley of Stanford Law School.

Show #28, February 14, 2007: Julian Dibbell, discussing his book “Play Money, Or, How I Quit My Job and Struck It Rich In Virtual Loot Farming.”

Show #27, February 7, 2007: Prof. Emeritus Richard A. Lanham of UCLA, discussing his book “The Economics of Attention.”

Show #26, January 31, 2007: Steven Aftergood of the Federation of American Scientists (FAS) on government secrecy and the efforts of the FAS to access government information.

Show #25, January 24, 2007: Assoc. Prof. Frank Pasquale of Seton Hall Law School on “Limiting Exclusion and Inclusion Harms in Search,” an examination of web search engines and the impact of web search engine results.

Show #24, January 17, 2007: Harry Surden, Resident Fellow at the Stanford Center for Computers and the Law (CodeX), on the background and activities of Codex and current research.

Show #23, January 3, 2007: Adjunct Prof. Henry Chesbrough of U.C. Berkeley Haas School of Business, discussing his book “Open Innovation.”

Show #22, December 13, 2006: Adjunct Prof. Paul Duguid of U.C. Berkeley’s School of Information, discussing his book “The Social Life of Information.”

Show #21, December 6, 2006: Visiting Associate Prof. Ann Finkbeiner of Johns Hopkins University, discussing her book “The Jasons: The Secret History of Science’s Postwar Elite.”

Show #20, November 22, 2006: Erik Davis, author of the book “Techgnosis.”

Show #19, November 8, 2006: Elissa Hecker, Esq., Immediate Past Chair of the Entertainment, Arts and Sports Law (EASL) Section of the New York State Bar Association on copyright and the music industry.

Show #18, November 1, 2006: Steven Levy, discussing his book “The Perfect Thing: How the iPod Shuffles Commerce, Culture, and Coolness.”

Show #17, October 25, 2006: Prof. Alasdair Roberts of Syracuse University, discussing his book “Blacked Out: Government Secrecy in the Information Age.”

Show #16, October 18, 2006: Prof. Elizabeth Townsend Gard, Seattle University School of Law, discussing unpublished works in the public domain, and other topics.

Show #15, October 4, 2006: Asst. Prof. Chris Sprigman of the University of Virginia School of Law, on copyright in fashion design.

Show #14, September 27, 2006: Jack Lerner, Samuelson Clinic Fellow at U.C. Berkeley, on music sampling.

Show #13, September 20, 2006: Lauren Gelman, Associate Director of CIS regarding privacy and the First Amendment.

Show #12, September 13, 2006: Chris Hoofnagle of the Samuelson Law Clinic at Boalt Hall on privacy. Note that this recording starts a few minutes into the show.

Show #11, August 30, 2006: Prof. Tim Wu of Columbia Law School, co-author of “Who Controls The Internet?”

Show #10, August 23, 2006: Carrie McLaren and Charles Star regarding Stay Free! Magazine and the Illegal Art Exhibit.

Show #9, August 16, 2006: Stanford Law Professor Lawrence Lessig.

Show #8, July 12, 2006: eBay’s Director of Online Dispute Resolution (ODR) and CIS Fellow Colin Rule about dispute resolution at eBay and the broader world of ODR.

Show #7, July 5, 2006: Concord Coalition’s Legislative Affairs Director Corey Davison about the Federal debt and deficit, as well as technology’s impact on politics and policymaking in the United States.

Show #6, June 28, 2006: CIS Resident Fellow David Olson about the active world of patents.

Show #5, June 21, 2006: USC Music Prof. Joanna Demers about her book “Steal This Music”.

Show #4, June 13, 2006: CIS Fellow Christoph Engemann about the advent of the national identification card.

Show #3, June 6, 2006: CIS Fellow Colette Vogele about podcasting and some of its legal issues.

Show #2, May 17, 2006: CIS Executive Director Jennifer Granick about defending hackers and other people changed with computer crimes and/or violations of the law.

Show #1, May 3, 2006: “Dave,” a professional on-line poker player.


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