Bio
Chris Conley is the technology and civil Liberties policy attorney at the ACLU of Northern California, where his work focuses on the intersection of privacy, free speech, and emerging technology. As a lawyer and technologist, he has worked extensively on the connection between consumer products and individual rights, particularly concerns about third party "apps" that have access to social network or mobile device data without adequate controls or transparency. He has presented on technology and civil liberties issues before the Federal Trade Commission and at various conferences including SXSW Interactive and DEF CON, and has developed his own Facebook and mobile apps giving users greater transparency into the types and amount of personal data these apps can access.
Prior to joining the ACLU of Northern California, Chris was a Fellow with the Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard University, where his research explored international Internet surveillance. He has previously worked as a software engineer and data architect for various corporations and non-profits. Chris holds a B.S.E. in Electrical Engineering from The University of Michigan, a S.M. in Computer Science from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and a J.D. from Harvard Law School.
Featured work
Oct 14, 2011
D.C. Judge: Government Doesn't Need a Warrant to Demand Cell Phone Location Information
Aug 25, 2011
ACLU Guide to New Facebook Privacy Controls
Aug 23, 2011
You've Been Tagged on Facebook—But Now You’re In Control
Aug 12, 2011
Gibberbot Wins Inaugural Develop for Privacy Challenge
Aug 11, 2011
LinkedIn Links You to Brands and Products Without Your Consent
Apr 28, 2011
Sony Learns the Hard Way that Protecting User Privacy Is Not a Game
Feb 28, 2011
Is Simpler Better for Facebook's Privacy Policy?
Jan 5, 2011
Don't Hide Your Gun in Your iPhone(?!)
May 26, 2010
Facebook Addresses Several Privacy Problems
Apr 21, 2010
Is Facebook Having Another Privacy Disconnect?