Cato’s research on technology policy advances a vision of free minds and free markets within the information policy, information technology, and telecommunications sectors of the American economy. Cato scholars work to address the many contentious public policy concerns and debates surrounding these important sectors, including privacy, identification, data security, and the information economy; regulation of traditional telecommunications, internet network management, and electromagnetic spectrum; and intellectual property issues such as copyrights and patents.
Technology and Privacy
12 results found
Defending the Indispensable: Allegations of AntiConservative Bias, Deep Fakes, and Extremist Content Don’t Justify Section 230 Reform
Rethinking the Length of Patent Terms
Julian Assange and the Real War on the Free Press
Don’t Panic: Making Progress on the “Going Dark” Debate
Transcript: Five Train Wrecks of Information Disclosure Policy
The Cyberskeptics
Should Government Restrict Online Data Collection to Protect Voters’ Privacy?
Federal Spending Transparency: Unlocking the Power of Abstraction
Freedom and Its Digital Discontents: A Comment
Surveillance in Perspective
A Modest Proposal on ‘Must-Carry,’ the 1992 Cable Act, and Regulation Generally: Go Back to the Basics