Marc Rotenberg
Marc Rotenberg | |
|---|---|
| Born | April 20, 1960 (age 66) Boston, Massachusetts, U.S. |
| Education | Harvard College Stanford Law School Georgetown University Law Center |
| Occupations | Executive Director, Center for AI and Digital Policy; former president and executive director, Electronic Privacy Information Center; adjunct professor of law, Georgetown Law, Georgetown University |
| Relatives | Jonathan Rotenberg (brother) |
Marc Rotenberg (born April 20, 1960) is executive director and founder of the Center for AI and Digital Policy, an independent non-profit organization[1] incorporated in Washington, D.C.[2] He previously served as president and executive director of the Electronic Privacy Information Center, which he co-founded in 1994, until his departure in 2020.[3][4][5]
Rotenberg is the co-editor of The AI Policy Sourcebook,[6] a member of the OECD Expert Group on AI[7], and helped draft the Universal Guidelines for AI.[8] He teaches the GDPR and privacy law at Georgetown Law and Intro to AI at Georgetown University. He is a founding board member and former chair of the Public Interest Registry, which manages the .ORG domain.
EPIC
[edit]Marc Rotenberg was president and executive director of the Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC), an independent, public interest research center in Washington, D.C.[12], which he co-founded in 1994. EPIC was involved with a wide range of civil liberties, consumer protection, and human rights issues.[3][13][14][15][16]
Advisory panels
[edit]Marc Rotenberg has served on many national and international advisory panels, including the expert panels on Cryptography Policy and Computer Security for the OECD, the Legal Experts on Cyberspace Law for UNESCO, and the Countering Spam program of the ITU. He is a former chair of the ABA Committee on Privacy and Information Protection. He is a member of the International Working Group on Data Protection in Telecommunications, the FREE Group (European Area of Freedom Security & Justice), and other organizations dedicated to the protection of fundamental rights.
In 2021, Rotenberg was named to the Reference Panel of the Global Privacy Assembly (the global network of privacy officials and experts) and the CAHAI (the AI expert panel of the Council of Europe). In May, he was shortlisted (#2) for the post of UN Special Rapporteur for the Right to Privacy. In June, he received the ACM Policy Award for “long-standing high impact leadership on privacy and technology policy.”[17] In December, Rotenberg was named as an expert for the Global Partnership on AI for a three-year term and also a Fulbright Specialist for a four-year term. Marc was recently named to expert panels for the Center for European Policy Studies (EU-US data flows), the OECD (AI, privacy, and data protection), and the Carnegie Council for Ethics in International Affairs.
Support for Civil Society
[edit]Marc Rotenberg has helped establish several organizations that promote public understanding of computer technology and encourage civil society participation in decisions concerning the future of the Internet. These include the Public Interest Computer Association (1983),[18] Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility (1985), the conference on Computers, Freedom, and Privacy (1991),[19] the Public Voice Coalition (1996), the Public Interest Registry (2003), the Civil Society Information Society Advisory Council to the OECD (CSISAC) (2009),[20] and the EPIC Public Voice Fund (2018).
Publications
[edit]Marc Rotenberg is co-editor of Privacy in the Modern Age: The Search for Solutions (The New Press 2015), a collection of articles on the future of privacy.[21] Other books include The Privacy Law Sourcebook: United States Law, International Law, and Recent Developments (EPIC 2020),[22] Privacy and Human Rights: An International Survey of Privacy Laws and Developments (EPIC 2006), Litigation Under the Federal Open Government Laws (EPIC 2010), Information Privacy Law (Aspen Publishing 2007) and "Privacy and Technology: The New Frontier" (MIT Press 1999). Rotenberg has also published articles and commentaries in legal, technical, and popular journals, including the ACS Supreme Court Review, Communications of the ACM, Computers & Society, CNN, Costco Connect, the Duke Law Journal, the Economist, the European Data Protection Review, The Financial Times, Fortune, the Indiana Law Review, the Harvard Business Review, the Harvard Journal of Law and Public Policy, the Harvard International Review, Issues in Science and Technology, the Japan Economic Forum, the Minnesota Law Review, Newsweek, Scientific American, the Stanford Technology Law Review, Techonomy, and USA Today, among others.
Education
[edit]This section of a biography of a living person does not include any references or sources. (February 2026) |
Marc is a graduate of Harvard College and Stanford Law School, and received an LL.M. in international and comparative law from Georgetown Law. At Harvard, he was a founding editor of the Harvard International Review and a head teaching fellow in computer science. At Stanford he was an articles editor of the Stanford Law Review and president of the Stanford Public Interest Law Foundation. He was also the research assistant to A. Leon Higginbotham Jr., when the Judge and former FTC Commissioner (the first African American appointed as a commissioner on any regulatory commission) was a visiting professor at Stanford Law School. He served as counsel to Senator Patrick J. Leahy on the Senate Judiciary Committee after graduation from law school. He is a Life Fellow of the American Bar Foundation, a Life Member of the Council on Foreign Relations, a Sustaining Member of the European Law Institute, and the recipient of several awards, including the Norbert Wiener Award for Social and Professional Responsibility, the American Lawyer Top Lawyers Under 45, and the Vicennial Medal (2012) for distinguished service from Georgetown University. He was included in the "Lawdragon 500", a listing of the leading lawyers in America, and received the ABA Cyberspace Law Excellence Award, the World Technology Award for Law, and the Berkeley Center for Law and Technology Award for Outstanding Contribution to Law and Technology.
Personal
[edit]Marc Rotenberg grew up in Boston, Massachusetts. His brother Jonathan Rotenberg founded the Boston Computer Society at age 13. Marc is married to Anna Markopoulos Rotenberg, a former economist and now ESL teacher in the District of Columbia and Alexandria Public Schools. A tournament chess player, Marc is a three-time Washington, D.C., chess Champion (2007, 2008, 2010) and works to promote chess in the DC public schools in cooperation with the US Chess Center, ChessGirlsDC, and the newly established DC Chess Association.[23] Rotenberg is also a licensed US Coast Guard captain.
References
[edit]- ^ "AI, lawyers and the law: interview with Marc Rotenberg". www.ibanet.org.
- ^ "CAIDP". Center for AI and Digital Policy.
- ^ a b "Statement from Anita Allen, Chair of the Board of EPIC Regarding the Executive Director". EPIC.
- ^ Adams, Kimberly. "Why do companies wait so long to tell us we've been hacked?". www.marketplace.org. Retrieved 2026-06-24.
- ^ PYMNTS (2023-03-30). "ChatGPT Threatens 'Privacy and Public Safety,' Nonprofit Says". PYMNTS.com. Retrieved 2026-06-24.
- ^ "CAIDP - AI Policy Sourcebook 2025". caidp.org.
- ^ "Opinion | The Battle Over Artificial Intelligence (Published 2019)". 2019-04-18. Archived from the original on 2025-07-25. Retrieved 2026-06-24.
- ^ "AI Universal Guidelines".
- ^ "Artificial Intelligence and Democratic Values (2020)". Archived from the original on 2021-05-09. Retrieved 2021-05-08.
- ^ "News in Depth". Center for AI and Digital Policy.
- ^ "LinkedIn Login, Sign in | LinkedIn".
- ^ "VIDEO: Will AI govern us? Marc Rotenberg on the race to control our digital future | Institute for Business in Global Society". Harvard Business School. 5 June 2025.
- ^ "Convention 108: from a European reality to a global treaty - Data Protection - www.coe.int". Data Protection. Archived from the original on 2023-04-02. Retrieved 2026-06-24.
- ^ "Opinion | America Needs a Privacy Law". The New York Times. 2018-12-25. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2026-06-24.
- ^ Markoff, John (2013-11-29). "A Night Watchman With Wheels?". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2026-06-24.
- ^ Rotenberg, Christabel Randolph, Marc (2024-09-03). "The AI Red Line Challenge". Tech Policy Press. Retrieved 2026-06-24.
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ ACM Honors Marc Rotenberg with Policy Award (June 9, 2021)
- ^ Burnham, David (26 August 1983). "New Tool for Public Affairs Lobbies". The New York Times.
- ^ "Computers, Freedom, and Privacy". www.cfp.org. Retrieved 2025-02-12.
- ^ "CSISAC | We stand for solidarity in the digital age". www.csisac.org. Retrieved 2025-02-12.
- ^ "EPIC - Privacy In the Modern Age: The Search for Solutions". archive.epic.org.
- ^ "The Privacy Law Sourcebook: United States Law, International Law, and Recent Developments".
- ^ "DC Chess Association".