
The AI Threat to Privacy
2025-10-17 | 1h 13 mins.
Artificial intelligence is transforming how data is collected, shared, and analyzedâoften in ways that outpace existing privacy law. In this insightful conversation, George Washington Law Professor Daniel Solove, one of the nationâs leading experts on privacy, examines how AI exposes the limits of the American right to privacy. From the third-party doctrine to landmark cases such as Carpenter v. United States, Solove explains how government reliance on privately gathered data allows surveillance to expand without constitutional scrutiny. He argues that our privacy frameworkâbuilt for a world of discrete searchesâcannot withstand the continuous, AI-driven flow of personal information that now defines modern life.How to Earn CLE CreditListen to the full program, note the verification code announced during the recording, then log in to your TalksOnLaw account to record attendance and download your certificate.At the time of publication, this podcast is approved for 1 hour of General MCLE credit in California. Check your jurisdiction for reciprocal credit. MCLE certificates are issued only to TalksOnLaw âPremiumâ or âPodcastâ members. Visit www.talksonlaw.com to learn more.

Defending Words
2025-8-07 | 1h 34 mins.
Free speech has long been a constitutional cornerstone in the United Statesâbut in recent years, calls for censorship have surged. Whether in response to hate speech, misinformation, or online harm, efforts to restrict expression are on the rise. In this provocative conversation, former ACLU president and NYU Law Professor Nadine Strossen mounts a powerful defense of the First Amendment. Drawing from her latest book, War on Words: 10 Arguments Against Free SpeechâAnd Why They Fail, Strossen explores the legal doctrines that protect speech, explains why censorship often backfires, and warns of the dangers in allowing government or platforms to decide which ideas are acceptable. A must-listen for anyone concerned about the future of civil liberties.How to Earn CLE CreditListen to the full program, note the verification code announced during the recording, then log in to your TalksOnLaw account to record attendance and download your certificate.At the time of publication, this podcast is approved for 1.5 hours of General MCLE credit in California. Check your jurisdiction for reciprocal credit. MCLE certificates are issued only to TalksOnLaw âPremiumâ or âPodcastâ members. Visit www.talksonlaw.com to learn more.

Trump Orders: Law Firms on the Line
2025-5-28 | 1h 18 mins.
When a string of 2025 executive orders barred select law firms from federal buildings, revoked security clearances, and threatened to cancel their clientsâ government contracts, Big Law took notice. Yale Law professor John Morleyâauthor of Why Law Firms Collapseâjoins Talks On Law host Joel Cohen to explain:how the orders leverage client pressure to destabilize even thriving partnerships;the âbank-runâ dynamic of partner exits and collapsing profits-per-partner;bankruptcy claw-back rules and unfinished-business liability that haunt partners who stay;ethics constraints under Model Rules 5.4 and 5.6 that limit outside capital, speed lawyer mobility, and allow for this unique risk;why transactional giants settled while litigation shops foughtâand the reputational trade-offs for both.How to Earn CLE CreditListen to the full program, note the verification code announced during the recording, then log in to your TalksOnLaw account to record attendance and download your certificate.This podcast is approved for 1.25 hours of MCLE credit in Legal Ethics. Check your jurisdiction for reciprocal credit. MCLE available to TalksOnLaw âPremiumâ or âPodcastâ members. Visit www.talksonlaw.com to learn more.)

Scroll Control â Regulating Social Media for Kids
2025-5-07 | 1h 31 mins.
Growing evidence links heavy socialâmedia use to rising anxiety, bullying, and sextortion among kids, and state lawmakers are racing to respond. In this interview, Harvard Law Schoolâs LeahâŻPlunkettâreporter for the Uniform Law Commissionâs childâinfluencer actâand UniversityâŻofâŻVirginia familyâlaw scholar NaomiâŻCahn examine how new statutes seek to verify age, require parental consent, and redesign feeds to curb addictive features.Plunkett and Cahn compare Floridaâs and Utahâs sweeping underâ14 account bans with NewâŻYorkâs pending âSAFE for Kids Act,â explore design mandates such as lateânight notification curfews, and explain why longâstanding COPPA rules leave teens largely unprotected. They unpack FirstâŻAmendment and privacy challenges already moving through the courts, highlight emerging âdigital Cooganâ laws that safeguard childâcreator earnings, and note international movesâfrom Australiaâs proposed underâ16 ban to the U.K.âs AgeâAppropriate Design Code.(Credits: GeneralâŻ1.5 hrsâŻ|âŻMCLE available to TalksOnLaw âPremiumâ or âPodcastâ members. Visit www.talksonlaw.com to learn more.)

Confronting the Disinformation Engine
2025-4-14 | 1h 5 mins.
Digital platforms now enable the near-instantaneous distribution of information, including misinformation and disinformation, to vast audiences. Disinformation refers to false or manipulated information deliberately created to deceive, whereas misinformation is inaccurate or misleading information that is sometimes shared without harmful intent. Professor Barbara McQuadeâa former U.S. attorney and current professor of National Security Law at the University of Michigan Law Schoolâexplores these challenges and the legal weapons to combat them, noting that disinformation currently poses one of the biggest threats to national security.(Credits: General 1hr | MCLE available to TalksOnLaw âPremiumâ or âPodcastâ members. Visit www.talksonlaw.com to learn more.)



California MCLE Podcast