Berkman Center for Internet & Society.

 

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PARTICIPANTS 

Spring 2002

Jennie DalBusco, HLS '04

Founding engineer at Ask.com, Jennie was the first employee hired to build a natural language search engine. Jennie received her A.B. with highest honors from UC Berkeley in 1995 and is currently on leave from UC Berkeley's School of Information Management's Ph.D. program. Calling Harvard Law School her "fantasy baseball camp," Jennie seeks a law degree to continue building entrepreneurial visions while working to promote a free internet via the Electronic Freedom Foundation.

Colin McRoberts, HLS '04

To Colin, Harvard is seafood pit-stop in a barbeque life. Born in Texas, he grew up in a small West Texas town and went to college in San Antonio, where he decided to live somewhere a little cooler. He moved to Russia for a while but returned to Texas to finish college. Boston seemed like a nice place for a law school that wasn't as hot as Texas or as cold as Russia and is working out just fine for Colin. His interests include writing autobiographies and naming his interests, which include technology, sculpture, wildlife, pretentious Spanish guitar, and naming his own interests.

Andrew Song, HLS '03

Andrew received his bachelor’s degree from Yale University, where he majored in economics. During college, he served in the Michigan Attorney General’s office and at Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom in New York. He also worked as an economics research assistant at the U.S. Office of Management and Budget. In addition, Andrew has been a summer associate at Cooley Godward (Palo Alto), Fenwick & West (Palo Alto), and Munger, Tolles & Olson (LA), where he has worked on cases involving copy-protection systems, domain name disputes, and peer-to-peer technology. He is also a John M. Olin Fellow in Law & Economics. His research interests include intellectual property, freedom of speech, and privacy law.   

Jarrett Taubman, NYU/KSG '04

Jarrett is pursuing joint degrees in public policy at the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard and in law at New York University.  He was raised on Long Island, and spent his undergraduate years at Cornell University, where he studied Industrial and Labor Relations.  He is Editor-in-Chief Emeritus of the Kennedy School Review, and currently serves as Book Review Editor of the Journal of International Law & Politics at NYU, while simultaneously working to establish a new journal of information and communications law.  This summer, he will be working as a legal and policy intern for FCC Commissioner Michael Copps.  In his leisure time, he enjoys listening to and playing music, debating just about anything, playing Ultimate Frisbee and squash, and rock climbing.c

 
 
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The Berkman Center for Internet & Society