This monthly newsletter was founded in 1974, before there was an Internet, before there was email, before there was automated telemarketing, before there was Facebook, and before there were drones. Thus, it's the oldest publication on privacy in the world.
This acclaimed monthly newsletter is always full of news on new technology and its impact on privacy, useful tips for protecting your privacy, and the latest on court decisions, legislation, professional conferences, and corporate practices.
Robert Ellis Smith (left), who is recognized as the leading expert on the right to privacy in the U.S., is the publisher. He is an experienced journalist, a lawyer, an author of several essential books on privacy. Twice he has been asked to write the definition of privacy for the World Book Encyclopedia.
Smith digs through reams of government documents and interviews all the important people who affect privacy policies; he's an enterprising journalist who insists on originality and accuracy in his stories. He makes this guarantee: Privacy Journal will keep you weeks ahead of the mainstream press in informing you of news that affects personal privacy. If not, we will refund your money.
Smith covers privacy in all of its aspects: the Internet, credit reporting, medical records, computer security, unwanted telephone calls, electronic surveillance, access to an individual's own records, uses of ID documents, uses and abuses of Social Security numbers, the impact of European and Canadian practices on the U.S., biometric identification systems, social media, the common law of privacy, the constitutional right to privacy, and much more. No other expert is poised to provide such a well-rounded, assertive approach to the essential news on this essential subject.
Smith is the author of Ben Franklin's Web Site: Privacy and Curiosity From Plymouth Rock to the Internet, the acclaimed 407-page account of privacy throughout American history. We also publish a book describing all the state and privacy laws on the books, including those enacted this year.
His first book, Privacy: How to Protect What's Left of It, was nominated for the National Book Award in 1980.
A graduate of Harvard College and Georgetown University Law Center, Smith was a daily news reporter, weekly newspaper editor, and then assistant director of civil rights in the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services before starting Privacy Journal in 1974.
He has taught at Harvard, Brown University, Emerson College, Roger Williams University Law School, and the University of Maryland.
A one-year subscription to Privacy Journal is $125. Send us a credit card number and, in a separate message, send us the card expiration date. (Special discounted rates for individuals. Ask us.)
Call or write us. orders@privacyjournal.net, 401/274-7861. Fax 401/274-4747.
Need an expert witness or consultant? Hire the best, Publisher Robert Ellis Smith. Scroll below.
Indexes are available. For ordering information, click "Newsletter" above and scroll down the left column.
Privacy Journal, which has a world-wide subscriber audience, is based in Providence RI. Our address is P.O. Box 28577, Providence RI 02908.
Call us at 401/274-7861. Fax 401/274-4747.
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You will notice that we offer five alternatives for persons to order products. Some choose to use credit cards. Sending a credit card number by email is no more risky than providing a credit card to a waitress or waiter or using the number to order a product by telephone. Interception of credit-card numbers transmitted by email is rare indeed; we cannot recall a single case, and we report on these matters all the time.
Credit card numbers received by us are stored off-line in a secure container.
As experienced analysts in this field, we think that people fret needlessly about sending credit card numbers by email. Nonetheless we urge our customers to send the expiration date by a separate email later in the day (NOT labeled "expiration date") and we urge them to delete their numbers from previous correspondence when they write to us a second time.
The first privacy newsletter in the world.
Privacy Journal ISSN 0145-7659
Entire contents of this Web site:
Copyright © 2016 Robert Ellis Smith
Copying of short excerpts ("fair use") is welcomed.
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Smith has expanded his vision of privacy in contemporary life with the publishing of a new eBook, The Magnetism of Islands. This non-fiction tale explores the special aspects of islands that intrigue us, mystify us, and draw us to them. Regardless of where they are located or whether they are urban or rural, islands have more in common with each other than with the nearest mainland. Find out how by reading Smith's new book, available in electronic text at www.kindle.com or directly from Privacy Journal.
Site updated February 2016
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privacy magazine, privacy publication, privacy news
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privacy newsletter, privacy speaker, privacy expert witness
privacy newsletter, privacy speaker, privacy expert witness