Fellows
Cory Doctorow
EFF Fellow
doctorow@craphound.com
A former EFF staff member and recipient of EFF's 2007 Pioneer Award, Cory Doctorow is now an EFF fellow. In addition to being an award-winning author of both science fiction and nonfiction works, he is co-editor of the popular weblog Boing Boing. His novels include Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom; Little Brother; and Eastern Standard Tribe. He enjoys googling for interesting facts about long walks on the beach.
Jason Schultz
EFF Fellow
+1 415 436 9333 x112jason@eff.org
Jason Schultz is an EFF Fellow specializing in intellectual property and Associate Director of the Samuelson Law, Technology & Public Policy Clinic at U.C. Berkeley Law School. Previously, he served as a Senior Staff Attorney at EFF, where he lead its Patent Busting Project and represented creators, innovators, and consumers in a variety of matters involving fair use, free speech, and reverse engineering. He received his J.D. from Berkeley and his undergrad degrees in Public Policy Studies and Women's Studies from Duke University. He maintains a personal blog at lawgeek.net.
James S. Tyre
Policy Fellow
+1 310 839 4114jstyre@eff.org
Jim Tyre has been a practicing attorney since 1978, focusing primarily on speech issues. Jim has worked closely with EFF on a wide variety of matters, including Universal City Studios v. Reimerdes, Felten v. RIAA, Auerbach v. ICANN and Hepting v. AT&T, EFF's case against AT&T on account of AT&T's participation is the NSA's unlawful domestic spying program. Jim is a co-founder of The Censorware Project, which has been studying and criticizing censorware since 1997. In 2003, he testified before the Copyright Office, Library of Congress in support of the censorware exemption to the circumvention prohibition of Section 1201(a)(1) of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act. That exemption was one of four granted in the triennial rulemaking proceedings. Jim received his A.B. from Dartmouth College and his J.D. from Loyola Law School Los Angeles.
Richard Wiebe
Fellow
Richard Wiebe is a San Francisco lawyer with his own public interest practice focusing on free speech and other civil liberties, intellectual property, privacy, and environmental protection. Rick works regularly with EFF on lawsuits protecting civil liberties and individual rights in the digital world, including litigation attacking the government’s massive warrantless surveillance of the electronic communications of millions of Americans, defending Andrew Bunner’s right to publish DVD decryption software on his website, defending the rights of online journalists to protect their confidential sources, and defending the copyright fair use rights of digital video recorder owners. He has also worked with EFF to expose the weaknesses of electronic voting technology and advocate for a voter-verified paper trail. Rick also practices in the areas of antitrust and securities law.
