Peter P. Swire is a Senior Fellow at the Center for American Progress on a part-time basis. He is the C. William O’Neill Professor at the Moritz College of Law of the Ohio State University. From 1999 to early 2001 he served as the Clinton Administration's Chief Counselor for Privacy, in the U.S. Office of Management and Budget. In that position, he coordinated administration policy on the use of personal information in the public and private sectors, and served as point of contact with privacy and data protection officials in other countries.

He was White House coordinator for the proposed and final HIPAA medical privacy rules, and chaired a White House Working Group on how to update electronic surveillance laws for the Internet age. He played a leading role on topics including financial privacy, Internet privacy, encryption, public records and privacy, ecommerce policy, and computer security and privacy. With Lawrence Lessig, he is Editor of the Cyberspace Law Abstracts of the Social Science Research Network. Many of his writings appear at www.peterswire.net.

Blog Entries by Peter Swire

Privacy Key to Yahoo Merger; Microsoft Bid Must Ensure Safeguards

Posted February 1, 2008 | 08:51 PM (EST)


Privacy issues will be central to the forthcoming antitrust merger review of today's $44.6 billion bid by Microsoft Corp. for Yahoo Inc. U.S. antitrust authorities have already studied these privacy issues in connection with the proposed merger of Google Inc. and DoubleClick, which is still under review in Europe. U.S....
Read Post