Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2014
Abstract
There is an inherent tension between an individual’s desire to safeguard her personal information and the expressive rights of businesses seeking to communicate that information to others. This tension has multiplied as consumers generate and businesses collect more and more personal data online, forcing efforts to strike an appropriate balance between privacy and commercial speech. No consensus on this balance has been reached. Some privacy scholars bemoan what they see as a slanted playing field in favor of those wishing to profit from the private details of other people’s lives. Others contend that the right in free expression must always trump the diffuse, emotional concerns at the heart of privacy interests. What is missing from the debate is a detailed examination of the ways in which other legal regimes resolve their own tensions with the First Amendment. Intellectual property law offers a particularly valuable example. Rather than adopting a one-size fits all approach, intellectual property law has advanced a variety of approaches to reconciling property rights in intellectual creations with free speech rights. This Article describes those various approaches and maps them on to the different, yet similar terrain of information privacy regulation. This comparison reveals that courts and legislators have a number of potential tools to resolve the privacy/free speech divide.
Publication Title
Nebraska Law Review
First Page
746
Last Page
798
Required Text
Reprinted with permission from the Nebraska Law Review. This article was previously published in the Nebraska Law Review. See Mark Bartholomew, Intellectual Property’s Lessons for Information Privacy, 92 Neb. L. Rev. 746 (2014).
Recommended Citation
Mark Bartholomew,
Intellectual Property’s Lessons for Information Privacy,
92
Neb. L. Rev.
746
(2014).
Available at:
https://digitalcommons.law.buffalo.edu/journal_articles/40
Comments
Reprinted with permission from the Nebraska Law Review. This article was previously published in the Nebraska Law Review. See Mark Bartholomew, Intellectual Property’s Lessons for Information Privacy, 92 Neb. L. Rev. 746 (2014).