Babyproofing the House Before the Hurricane: Where We are Missing the Mark

Authors

  • Anokhy Desai

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5195/tlp.2021.241

Abstract

Americans have felt the impacts of data breaches annually for over a decade. In the past few years, the impact and number of those breaches have increased, compromising millions of Americans’ informational privacy. This Article examines the privacy protections available to Americans and the issues arising from the lack of regulations that specifically protect data privacy. Section I of this Article offers an overview of privacy in American legal history and case law, global regulatory models, and some notable privacy regulations. Section II explores where those regulatory models and the consumer experience are lacking. Section III takes lessons learned from existing privacy regulations and proposes a suggested mitigation for the national data privacy problem. Finally, Section IV provides concluding thoughts.

Author Biography

Anokhy Desai

Anokhy Desai is a J.D. Candidate for the Class of 2022 at the University of Pittsburgh School of Law, and M.S. Candidate for the Class of 2022 at Carnegie Mellon University's Heinz College of Information Systems and Public Policy. She is the Executive Editor of the Pittsburgh Journal of Technology Law and Policy, and worked in cybersecurity and privacy prior to law school. Special thanks to Professor Jacqueline Lipton, Professor Aleecia McDonald, Erin McCarthy Holliday, Sima Lotfi, and Chris Grijalva, for all the feedback and support.

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Published

2021-01-28

How to Cite

Desai, A. (2021). Babyproofing the House Before the Hurricane: Where We are Missing the Mark. Pittsburgh Journal of Technology Law & Policy, 21(1). https://doi.org/10.5195/tlp.2021.241

Issue

Section

Staff Article Series