Does the rise of artificially intelligent corporations threaten the integrity and legitimacy of democracy? This question looms large as the 2024 presidential election approaches. A growing number of academics, business leaders, and politicians warn that unchecked development and dissemination of artificial intelligence (AI)could irreparably damage vital institutions of civil society.[1] Despite these warnings, the
Law School Blogs
SEC Chair Testifies Before Senate Subcommittee on Financial Services
Good morning, Chair Van Hollen, Ranking Member Hagerty, and members of the Subcommittee. Thank you for inviting me to testify today on the Securities and Exchange Commission’s Fiscal Year (FY) 2025 budget request. As is customary, I’d like to note that my views are my own as Chair of the SEC, and I am not…
Skadden Discusses the UK ICO Strategy on AI Governance
Rather than specifically regulating artificial intelligence (AI), the UK government has opted to rely on the existing web of laws and regulations applying to technology across a spectrum of sectors in its jurisdiction. But with this pro-innovation, principles-based approach comes questions that have remained unanswered. Many relate to the application of UK data privacy laws…
The Elephant in Tesla’s Boardroom
Next week, Tesla investors will cast an unprecedented vote on what a court called the “largest chief-executive pay package in the history of public markets.” While the vote has been closely watched, little attention has been paid to the elephant in the (board)room: Musk’s threat not to develop Tesla into an artificial-intelligence leader if he…
SEC Enforcement Chief Discusses Five Principles of Effective Cooperation in Investigations
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A New Parlor Is Open: Legal Writing Faculty Must Develop Scholarship on Generative AI And Legal Writing
Here is an important new article on AI and legal scholarship by Professor Kirsten Davis: A New Parlor Is Open: Legal Writing Faculty Must Develop Scholarship on Generative AI And Legal Writing “As legal communication experts, legal writing faculty are…
Skadden Discusses Court’s Broad View of Copyright Preemption in Data Scraping Case
The recent California district court decision dismissing the complaint in X Corp. v. Bright Data Ltd. could have significant implications for companies that rely on their terms of use to prohibit unauthorized “data scraping” — that is, using automated tools to extract data from a website or online services.
While data scraping was the subject of significant…
Can Decentralized Finance Promote Democracy?
In a recent paper, I draw a rough map of the vast field of decentralized finance (DeFi). DeFi serves as an umbrella term for financial platform transactions that operate through automated protocols on blockchain and have prompted hard discussions regarding the public and private nature of money. With a focus on the competing understandings…
The Law Bytes Podcast, Episode 203: Andrew Clement on Calls to Separate Privacy Reform and Artificial Intelligence Regulation in Bill C-27

Bill C-27, Canada’s proposed privacy reform and AI regulation bill, continues to slowly work its way through the committee process at the House of Commons with the clause-by-clause review of the AI portion of the bill still weeks or even months away. Recently a group of nearly 60 leading civil society organizations, corporations, experts and…
Stakeholder Governance and the Eclipse of Shareholder Primacy
For decades, advocates of “shareholder primacy” as the North Star of corporate governance have steered our leading corporations and our Nation’s economic engine perilously off-course. Since the 1970s, when the work of Milton Friedman, Michael Jensen, and Frank Easterbrook took hold in business schools, activists and raiders in high-profile proxy fights and hostile…