Re-reading @melanieddr's excellent 2015 paper 'Peer-to-Peer as a Design Principle for Law: Distribute the Law’ in the Journal of Peer Production. Deep food for thought on digital group rights that I think is not being built upon by many authors today.
This article is solid on stalkerware, but I don’t see many US law profs pointing out that the tracking giants Google & Meta, who hold & facilitate the capture of web browsing/app usage history, are also subject to legal requests—just as Snowden revealed for foreign intelligence.
This is a superb and must-read critique of @shoshanazuboff’s claim of ‘lawlessness’ of tech firms. The interplay of tech and law does much more, as Cohen notes: tech giants are legal entrepreneurs trying to shape future regimes, something we miss if we see them as fugitives.