October 15, 2025 11:00 AM - 1:00 PM

The Institute for Technology, Law & Policy is hosting a special off-site visit to the Wende Museum's exhibition, Counter/Surveillance: Control, Privacy, Agency. The event features a guided tour with Chief Curator, Joes Segal, and a group discussion on surveillance and research. Priority access for members of the ITLP Research Group.

About IRG:

The ITLP Research Group (IRG) is a fortnightly meeting of tech law and engineering faculty and students, visiting scholars, and tech and society researchers from across the UCLA community. The IRG provides a forum to present and discuss new scholarship and works-in-progress at the intersection of technology, law, and policy.

UCLA students and faculty interested in joining IRG for Fall 2025 can request invitation by submitting this form: bit.ly/IRG_Fall2025

About the Counter/Surveillance Exhibition:

In recent decades, technological advances have supercharged surveillance. Online, personal data are automatically collected and analyzed on a mass scale. Algorithms watch, listen, track, and identify people, complementing and sometimes replacing human eyes and ears. Powerful combinations of surveillance software and hardware, such as surveillance cameras outfitted with real-time facial recognition, are conquering public spaces. These technologies are often misleadingly presented as though they were pure innovation and have no history.

The exhibition Counter/Surveillance traces the historical roots of such surveillance devices and methods, and the Cold War dynamics that shaped and spread them. It explores the precursors of current biometric surveillance in Cold War manuals for police, border guards and spies; in forensic portraiture; and in the little-known early history of computer facial recognition, revealing links between forensics, science, art, and popular culture. It also traces similarities between Cold War surveillance devices and methods used in East and West, from miniature cameras and listening devices to forensic composite kits. These not only point to a shared technical history, but are also indicative of exchange, inspiration, and imitation across the Iron Curtain. Technical exchanges with allies in the Global South ensured further international dissemination.

The exhibition includes artwork from Sadie Barnette, Paolo Cirio, Asya Dodina & Slava Polishchuk, Graham Fink, Ken Gonzales-Day, Damara Inglês, Yazan Khalili, Verena Kyselka, Gerhard Lang, Francisco Masó, Decebal Scriba, Liat Segal, Nedko Solakov, Xu Bing, Yang Jian, and Mail Art from the Mail Art Archive of Ruth Wolf-Rehfeldt and Robert Rehfeldt, Berlin.

About the Wende Museum:

The Wende is an art museum, cultural center, and archive that preserves history and brings it to life through exhibitions, scholarship, education, and community engagement. Wende is a German word meaning “turning point” or “change” that has come to describe the transformative period around the fall of the Berlin Wall. Founded in 2002, the Wende Museum holds an unparalleled collection of art and artifacts from the Cold War era, which serves as a foundation for programs that illuminate the political and cultural changes of the past, offer opportunities to make sense of a changing present, and inspire active participation in the personal and social changes that will shape the future.

October 9, 2025 12:00 PM - 1:30 PM

The Institute for Technology, Law & Policy is pleased to extend an invitation to all interested students to attend the Technology Law Specialization Information Session. Please join us for an introduction to the field, the faculty, and what it means to specialize in technology law at UCLA.

Learn about UCLA's world-class offerings in information law, intellectual property, privacy, surveillance, artificial intelligence, antitrust, media, tech supply chains, tech finance, and more. Featuring a faculty line-up including Professors Mark McKenna, Laura Pedraza-Fariña, Julia Powles, Andrew Selbst, Xiyin Tang, Jennifer Dixton, and Sanford Williams. 

September 25, 2025 3:30 PM - 4:30 PM

The Institute for Technology, Law & Policy (ITLP) Research Group is happy to announce a new mini-series: The Anatomy of a Tech Antitrust Case. This series will be spearheaded by ITLP-affiliated faculty member and leading antitrust lawyer, Jennifer Dixton, and is a collaboration between ITLP and the Center for Critical Internet Inquiry (C2i2).

Hear from the experts about what goes into investigating, litigating, and crafting remedies in today's biggest tech monopolization and merger cases.

The first installment will be on Thursday, September 25, from 3.30 to 4.30PM at the Law School (Room 2477), and will feature Dr. Yair Taylor.

Dr. Taylor is a senior economist at Cornerstone Research who consults on antitrust litigation, merger investigations, and complex commercial litigation. Before joining Cornerstone Research, Dr. Taylor served for over a decade as an economist in the Antitrust Division of the Department of Justice (DOJ), working on such high-profile matters as Halliburton/Baker Hughes, Aetna/Humana, AT&T/Time Warner, and UnitedHealth Group/Change Healthcare.

Part 1 of the series will explore the role of the economic expert and how it has changed as antitrust focus shifts away from industrial products to tech.

The ITLP Research Group (IRG) is a fortnightly meeting of tech law and engineering faculty and students, visiting scholars, and tech and society researchers from across the UCLA community. The IRG provides a forum to present and discuss new scholarship and works-in-progress at the intersection of technology, law, and policy.

UCLA students and faculty interested in joining IRG for Fall 2025 can request invitation by submitting this form: bit.ly/IRG_Fall2025

September 17, 2025 12:15 PM - 1:30 PM

ICLP AI Event Flyer 

The presentation by Ricardo Lillo will analyze some of the standards that have been developed in these areas from a comparative perspective. It will also describe best practices from different jurisdictions, provide evidence from empirical research to measure the impact of technology in the Chilean judicial system, and detail some of the specific interventions developed in the People-Centered Justice Lab. The lab brings together researchers and students from various disciplines to design and test different technological tools to bridge the gap between the law and the public. This conversation will be moderated by Professor Máximo Langer, UCLA School of Law.


RSVP HERE

September 24, 2025 5:30 PM - 7:00 PM

On behalf of the UCLA School of Law and Samueli School of Engineering, the Institute for Technology, Law & Policy is thrilled to welcome renowned author Ted Chiang to UCLA.

Ted Chiang is an award-winning science fiction writer, well known for short story collections from Stories of Your Life and Others (2002) to Exhalation: Stories (2019). Chiang's "Story of Your Life" was the basis of the film Arrival (2016). Chiang is also a frequent non-fiction contributor to the New Yorker, with essential essays on the topic of artificial intelligence, including “ChatGPT is a Blurry JPEG of the Web” and “Why A.I. Isn’t Going to Make Art."

Join us for "The Incompatibilities Between Generative AI and Art,” a special evening lecture with Ted Chiang, moderated by ITLP Faculty Co-Director, Professor Mark McKenna.

September 15, 2025 4:00 PM - 5:00 PM

The ITLP Research Group (IRG) is a fortnightly meeting of tech law and engineering faculty and students, visiting scholars, and tech and society researchers from across the UCLA community. The IRG provides a forum to present and discuss new scholarship and works-in-progress at the intersection of technology, law, and policy.

UCLA students and faculty interested in joining IRG for Fall 2025 can request invitation by submitting this form: bit.ly/IRG_Fall2025

September 3, 2025 10:00 AM - 11:00 AM

The ITLP Research Group (IRG) is a fortnightly meeting of tech law and engineering faculty and students, visiting scholars, and tech and society researchers from across the UCLA community. The IRG provides a forum to present and discuss new scholarship and works-in-progress at the intersection of technology, law, and policy.

UCLA students and faculty interested in joining IRG for Fall 2025 can request invitation by submitting this form: bit.ly/IRG_Fall2025

ITLP 9/3/2025 program flyer


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