Kashmir Hill
I am a writer, reporter, editor and blogger. I'm an editor at Above The Law, where I blog about lawyers, judges, law firms and the legal industry. At True/Slant, I write about our changing notions of privacy.
If you have story ideas or tips, e-mail me at kashhill@trueslant.com. I've hung out in quite a few newsrooms over the last few years. Currently, I can be found in Breaking Media's Nolita office. In the past, I've been found in midtown Manhattan at The Week Magazine, in Hong Kong at the International Herald Tribune, and in D.C. at the National Press Foundation and the Washington Examiner.
I have few illusions about privacy -- feel free to follow me on Twitter: kashhill. Or friend me on Facebook... though I might put you on limited profile.
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If you have story ideas or tips, e-mail me at kashhill@trueslant.com. I've hung out in quite a few newsrooms over the last few years. Currently, I can be found in Breaking Media's Nolita office. In the past, I've been found in midtown Manhattan at The Week Magazine, in Hong Kong at the International Herald Tribune, and in D.C. at the National Press Foundation and the Washington Examiner.
I have few illusions about privacy -- feel free to follow me on Twitter: kashhill. Or friend me on Facebook... though I might put you on limited profile.
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- 3/18/2010
Displaying Results 1 - 8 (of 8) for All Content
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An Airport Worker (With a Small Penis) Gets Upset Over Revealing Full-Body ScannersThere's more proof this week that the images produced by full-body scanners are uncomfortably revealing (if you care about people seeing your goods). -
Privacy Advocates Should Be Reassured by the Times Square Terror Surveillance VideoAs soon as I heard about the terror scare in Times Square this weekend, I thought about all the surveillance cameras there. -
What Do Facebookers Think of the Senate Getting Involved in Site's Privacy Issues?Four U.S. Senators sent Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg a letter on official U.S. Senate stationery about the site's off-and-on relationship with privacy. -
The Supreme Court Talks About an Employee's Right to Private SextingToday, the Supreme Court heard the case of the California SWAT officer who sued the city of Ontario for violation of his privacy after his employer reviewed the messages he sent on his work-issued pager. -
Ohio Judge Sues Cleveland Plain Dealer for $50 Million After Being Outed as an Anonymous CommenterPlenty of anonymous online commenters have filed lawsuits after being outed, but this is the first instance I'm aware of where the plaintiff is a state judge. -
Duke Wins, but Jon Scheyer Has an Epic Twitter FAILSince I'm an avid Duke fan, I was thrilled with last night's title win over Butler. (Though I spent the last two minutes of the game in near-agony, yelling about stupid stalling.) -
Internet Giants and Civil Liberties Groups Unite in Opposition to Warrantless Police SearchesRecent revelations about the CIA monitoring Twitter and the F.B.I. mining Facebook have people thinking more seriously about how law enforcement goes about collecting information online. -
An Argument Against Keeping Health Information PrivateHarvard Law Professor Jonathan Zittrain, a specialist in electronic privacy, who wrote the book The Future of the Internet and How To Stop It, taught a very interesting life lesson in the past week about the benefits of sharing health information online



