| Spam Seminar 2003 |
Speakers
Ray Everett-Church (June 22) is Chief Privacy Officer at ePrivacy Group, a privacy consultancy. He also serves as Counsel to the Coalition Against Unsolicited Commercial Email (CAUCE), and is co-author of Internet Privacy for Dummies.
Renard Francois (June 22) is an attorney at the Federal Trade Commission's Division of Marketing Practices in Washington, DC, and has worked on several matters involving spam. He is a graduate of John Marshall's Information Technology Law LLM program.
Eric Goldman (July 12) is a professor at Marquette University Law School, where he teaches courses in intellectual property, cyberlaw, and legal ethics. He previously served as General Counsel of Epinions, Inc., and practiced law at Cooley Godward LLP in Palo Alto, California.
Robert Gurwin (July 12) is an attorney with Rader, Fishman & Grauer PLLC in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, specializing in e-commerce and Internet-related matters. He received his LLM in Information Technology Law at John Marshall and currently serves as an adjunct professor for the LLM and MS programs.
Will Hornsby (July 12) serves as staff counsel in the Division for Legal Services of the American Bar Association. He teaches a course on the professional responsibility of a technological law practice as an adjunct professor in John Marshall's LLM program in Information Technology Law.
Michael McDonough (July 26-27) is Vice President and General Counsel of QuinStreet, Inc. and QuinStreet LLC, an online marketing services and technology company.
Anne P. Mitchell (July 12) is President and CEO of Habeas, Inc., an anti-spam and assured email delivery system, and is a professor at Lincoln Law School in San Jose, California. She previously served as in-house counsel for Mail Abuse Prevention System.
Jon Praed (June 22) is an attorney in Northern Virginia, specializing in complex Internet-related litigation. He has represented large ISPs in dozens of anti-spam lawsuits.
Matthew Prince (June 22, July 12) is an attorney and the CEO and co-founder of unspam, LLC, a company seeking creative solutions to the problem of unsolicited email.
Richard Warner (July 12) is a professor at Chicago-Kent College of Law, and serves as faculty director of Chicago-Kent's Center for Law and Computers.
Steve Wernikoff (July 27) is a staff attorney with the Federal Trade Commission's Midwest Region in Chicago, specializing in Internet issues. He teaches a seminar on Internet Fraud as an adjunct professor in John Marshall's LLM and MS programs in Information Technology Law.