AI Lawyer
AI Is Eroding the Right to Privacy
Guest: Prof. Daniel Solove, George Washington University Law School.
Artificial intelligence is radically shifting how our personal information is collected, shared and analyzed — and our traditional privacy laws are scrambling to keep up. In this episode we sit down with privacy scholar Prof. Solove, a leading expert on privacy law, to explore how AI is exposing the limits of the American right to privacy. From the third‑party doctrine to the landmark decision in Carpenter v. United States, Solove traces how government reliance on privately‑gathered data enables surveillance to expand without constitutional oversight. He argues that the privacy framework built for discrete searches is ill‑suited to a world of continuous, AI‑driven streams of personal data. Tune in to understand where we are, how we got here, and what might come next for privacy in the AI era.
Daniel Solove is a professor of law at George Washington University Law School and a leading scholar on privacy and data protection.
For attorneys, a CLE version of this interview can be found at www.talksonlaw.com or by following this link.





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