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9 J. on Telecomm. & High Tech. L. 357 (2011)
The Limits of Tort Privacy

handle is hein.journals/jtelhtel9 and id is 363 raw text is: THE LIMITS OF TORT PRIVACY
NEIL M. RICHARDS*
The conception of tort privacy developed by Warren, Brandeis, and
Prosser sits at the heart of American understandings of privacy law.
Rooted in protection of private information against unwanted collection,
use, and disclosure, tort privacy protects against emotional injury and was
directed by design against disclosures of true, embarrassing facts by the
media. In this essay, I argue that as conceived by Samuel Warren and
Louis Brandeis and interpreted by William Prosser, tort privacy is a poor
vehicle for grappling with problems of privacy and reputation in the
digital age. Tort privacy, especially the disclosure tort, has from its
inception been in conflict with First Amendment values. And when First
Amendment values and tort privacy conflict, First Amendment values
should prevail virtually all of the time. The disclosure tort will retain
limited utility in the electronic environment, but privacy in the age of
information and social media requires new strategies and new legal tools.
Some of these strategies might include tort privacy as presently
understood, but others require new approaches. These approaches can
take either a broader look at tort privacy, including new torts and new
theories of injury beyond emotional harm, or they can include new
conceptions of privacy altogether, such as confidentiality law.
INTRODUCTION              ...................................  ...... 358
I.     THE ORIGINS AND THEORY OF TORT PRIVACY................... 361
II.    DISCLOSURE AND THE FIRST AMENDMENT CRITIQUE ...... 365
III.   THE LIMITS OF DISCLOSURE           ....................   .....374
CONCLUSION: RETHINKING INVASION OF PRIVACY ......                 ..... 382
* Professor of Law, Washington University School of Law. An early draft of this essay
was presented at the Silicon Flatirons Conference on Privacy and the Press at the University of
Colorado on December 4, 2010. For helpful comments and conversations about the ideas in
this paper, thanks to Danielle Citron, Rick Garnett, Mark McKenna, Paul Ohm, Paul
Schwartz, Dan Solove, and my Silicon Flatirons co-panelists Sandra Barron, David Lat, Helen
Norton, and Steven Zansberg. Thanks also to participants in workshops at Notre Dame Law
School and Berkeley Law School. Special thanks to Eric Schmidt and to Jim Stanley for
outstanding research assistance.

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