Law in Contemporary Society

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JenniferDayritSecondEssay 3 - 27 May 2018 - Main.EbenMoglen
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 I want to work on data privacy and surveillance issues. It concerns me that the people who are responsible for making laws about these issues understand so little about them. It also concerns me how little society cares. Next year, I intend to find courses to take at Columbia (outside the law school) so that I can begin to be someone who knows the law and knows technology. As someone who does care, I will also be working on becoming someone who actually “walks the walk” so to speak. I know it does not make sense to be disapproving of other people’s social input into their technologies when I have also allowed convenience to justify my own economic and personal input. I hope to slowly, but surely, break from my dependence on personal data input. By focusing on these specific goals, I hope to become more knowledgeable and effective in my future practice.
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Very good start. You know that there are many students who experience this trajectory during the first year; you have animated from within one person's thoughts and feelings, but you have captured that of others in the process. This is how more than one life is changed at a time.

You have real plans. They could be more detailed, and they will be. But they embrace the essential of all strategy: they define objectives rather than assuming them. As you show in your reflections on the arc of growing up within your family, living life to achieve the objectives we actually have—not the ones we think we always have had—can require boldness and a willingness to accept displacement, with its accompanying loss of supposed certainty. So these plans too may change. But what is important is carrying them as far as you can.

Your last paragraph need some work. It reflects our conversations, and your subsequent serious thinking, all of which is good. But one had to be there to understand, because you let a couple of sentences represent the general drift of your thinking rather than clearly explaining it. You can improve on that with the same clarity and candor you bring to the rest of the draft.

 
You are entitled to restrict access to your paper if you want to. But we all derive immense benefit from reading one another's work, and I hope you won't feel the need unless the subject matter is personal and its disclosure would be harmful or undesirable. To restrict access to your paper simply delete the "#" character on the next two lines:

Revision 3r3 - 27 May 2018 - 15:26:10 - EbenMoglen
Revision 2r2 - 26 Apr 2018 - 01:22:21 - JenniferDayrit
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