Monthly Archives: January 2008

Drumroll Please

Today I'll turn in the grades for Administrative Law.

Posted in Law School | 1 Comment

The Tyranny of Systems Think

It's a risky thing to do on the day of the NH primary, when in all likelihood the results — whatever they are — will bring forth a flood of bloggy eloquence, but here goes: I nominate the following blog post at Calculated Risk, a post which has nothing to do with politics, only a little to do with the mortgage crisis, and everything to do with the tyranny of corporate (or, really, any) systems and mental blinders, as the best blog post of the day.

Turns Out Judges Don't Like “Efficient” Servicers

Posted in Econ & Money: Mortgage Mess | 4 Comments

Dean Search

Our Dean search starts in earnest in January. Meanwhile, if you know (or are!) someone who'd be a great Dean for our law school, email me and I'll forward the info to the committee (which, thank goodness, I'm not a part of!).

Irreverent, no doubt irrelevant, video.

Posted in Law School | Comments Off on Dean Search

When I’m a BigTime Columnist…

Dear Major Media,

Regarding that gig as a bigtime columnist I was saying you should give me? I have a few pledges to make. Unlike this character, I pledge that in my first column, I won't do any of the following:

  • Quote an author with a well-demonstrated track record of inaccuracy in the service of an agenda designed to justify an American horror such as the Japanese internment.
  • Mis-quote that author
  • Use lots and lots of tired cliches (I don't promise to use none you understand, just to pace myself)
  • Be boring.
Posted in The Media | 5 Comments

NYT Does Encryption and the 5th Amendment

Adam Liptak, who has been on a roll lately, has another great “Sidebar” in today's NYT entitled, If Your Hard Drive Could Testify …. The article quotes me and Orin Kerr as if we were opposed; oddly, although I think Orin and I do have disagreements about what the law on encryption should be, I suspect Orin and I agree with each other on the points for which we're actually quoted.

Although the article does a great job of describing some recent cases and issues, the academic in me wishes that every time anyone writes about this stuff they'd have the space and time to provide what I see as some critical context for the debate as to when a person can be forced to hand over the key to a cryptosystem.

There are plenty of technical issues here (what happens if you really have forgotten your password? or if someone has put random gunk on your hard drive, making it look like there's crypto there?), but even more important fundamental ones. In particular, the current debate over the extent to which the 5th Amendment protects encrypted messages matters so much because our understanding of the 4th Amendment has changed. A hundred years ago, the Supreme Court thought it was obvious that asking a person to turn over his private papers was a constitutional violation. Even 30 years ago the Court thought that the 4th Amendment protected some zone of private papers such as a diary from demands that they be turned over. (Note that there can be an important difference between finding something in a search and demanding that the subject of the search find it for you.) Today, although the Supreme Court has never actually decided the diary issue, it's pretty clear that no other writing — and probably not the diary either — is protected from such demands.

It's the evisceration of the 4th that puts such pressure on the 5th. It may be that as a society we really don't want to allow any zone of privacy beyond what you can keep in your head. But as devices record more of our lives, and as we rely increasingly on what some of us only half-jokingly call our prosthetic memories, I think that it is increasingly unrealistic to exclude at least some bits from the intimate zone of privacy if we wish to remain true to the purposes of the 5th (and 4th) Amendments.

Posted in Cryptography, Law: Constitutional Law | 2 Comments

Leader/Manager/Worker: An Analysis of Democratic Candidates’ Speaking Styles

Here's an interesting analysis of the three leading Democrats' speaking styles: Group News Blog: Declaration – Request – Promise::Lead – Lobby – Legislate. It's a long post, but here's a taste of the key part:

Executive = Declarations: bring forth, generate something new, lead.
Manager = Requests: please do x by time y with condition of satisfaction.
Worker = Promises: deliver competent performance in a domain, over and over.

And never the twain shall meet.

Let's walk it back to our Presidential candidates.

One speaks in declarations, inspires, leads.
The second requests you elect him to fix problems, lobbies for a change so he can fix the system.
The third talks of her competence and experience, promises she will do what she's always done, and has the policy plans and papers to prove it.

Leader. Manager. Worker.

Obama is breaking out now because he speaks the language of a leader.

Obama's vision is true right now.

Watch him at the 100 Club Dinner in New Hampshire.

He's not making promises, even when the words coming out of his mouth are a promise. ALL of everything he's saying is a declaration, a future which is true now because he speaks it.

Edwards, he argues, uses the language of a manager: I can fix things, but only if you elect me. So it’s a request, rather than a declaration. Clinton users the language of a worker, promising competence and skill. But these are promises while Obama says it it and makes it so.

I’m not sure if I’m convinced, but it’s interesting.

Posted in Politics: US: 2008 Elections | 1 Comment