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Richard Warner

Chicago-Kent College of Law


Professor Warner is the faculty director of Chicago-Kent's Center for Law and Computers. He was named a Norman and Edna Freehling Scholar in 2002. From 1994 to 1996, he was president of InterActive Computer Tutorials, a software company, and from 1998 to 2000, he was director of Building Businesses on the Web, an Illinois Institute of Technology executive education program concerning e-commerce.

He is the director of the School of American Law, a Chicago-Kent–affiliated international program with branches in several European countries. He is a visiting foreign professor at University of Gdańsk, Poland, in the Intellectual Property Institute. He is of counsel at the SWC law firm in Warsaw, Poland.

Professor Warner's research concerns the regulation of online privacy, security, and competition. He has lectured on Internet security at the second United Nations Economic Commission for Europe workshop "E-Regulations: E-Security and Knowledge Economy" in Geneva, Switzerland, and, at the invitation of the FBI, on global cybercrime before the Chicago Crime Commission. He was the principal investigator for "Using Education to Combat White Collar Crime," a U.S. State Department grant devoted to combating money laundering in Ukraine from 2000 to 2006. He is currently a member of the U.S. Secret Service's Electronic and Financial Crimes Taskforce, and he is a privacy ambassador for the CAPrice Consortium.

Professor Warner earned his J.D. from the University of Southern California, where he served on the Southern California Law Review and was elected to the Order of the Coif. He received his Ph.D. in philosophy from the University of California, Berkeley, and he received his B.A. (with distinction and Phi Beta Kappa) in English from Stanford University.

Professor Warner joined the Chicago-Kent faculty in 1990. Prior to that, he was an assistant professor of philosophy at the University of Southern California and at the University of Pennsylvania. He teaches Contracts, Remedies, Jurisprudence, Internet Law, and E-Commerce Law and has published several articles and books on philosophical and legal topics. His most recent book is Unauthorized Access: The Crisis in Online Privacy and Security (co-authored with Robert Sloan).

Education

  • J.D., University of Southern California Gould School of Law
  • Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley
  • B.A., Stanford University