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    Curriculum Vitae

    (download PDF version here)

    Michael Zimmer

    email: e-mail

    EDUCATION

    New York University
    Ph.D., Media, Culture and Communication, 2007
    M.A., Media Ecology, 2002

    University of Notre Dame
    B.B.A., Marketing, cum laude, 1994
    Specialization: Gender Studies

    ACADEMIC APPOINTMENTS

    Microsoft Fellow at the Information Society Project
    Yale Law School
    July 2007-July 2008

    RESEARCH INTERESTS

    Social, political, and ethical dimensions of information and communication technologies
    New media & Internet technologies
    Information policy & ethics
    Internet studies & new media theory
    Privacy & surveillance theory
    Science & technology studies

    DISSERTATION

    Title: The Quest for the Perfect Search Engine: Values, Technical Design, and the Flow of Personal Information in Spheres of Mobility
    Committee: Helen Nissenbaum (chair), Alex Galloway, Siva Vaidhyanathan

    RESEARCH GRANTS

    Co-Principle Investigator, National Science Foundation. Dissertation Improvement Grant: SES-0620772: Privacy on the Roads: Values, Technical Design and the Flow of Personal Information on the Transportation and Information Superhighways. September 2007: $12,000.

    RESEARCH EXPERIENCE

    Graduate Student Researcher, “Sensitive Information in a Wired World,” PORTIA: Privacy, Obligations, and Rights in Technologies of Information Assessment, Co-Principal Investigator: Helen Nissenbaum, New York University. Large-ITR Grant funded by The National Science Foundation, 2004-present

    Research Assistant, “Ownership and Concentration in the US Communications Industry,” Principal Investigator: Eli Noam, Columbia Institute for Tele-Information, Columbia University, Summer 2002

    Research Assistant, “The Expansion of Diversity: A Longitudinal Study of Local Media Outlets in Five American Communities,” report of research commissioned by Clear Channel Communications, Infinity Broadcasting Corp, submitted to the Federal Communications Commission (Comments of Viacom, Inc., Appendix A, MM Docket Nos. 01-317 and 00-244), Principal Investigator: Dave Pritchard, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Winter 2002

    Research Assistant, “WEPCO Media Analysis Report,” report of research commissioned by Wisconsin Electric Power Company, Principal Investigator: Dave Pritchard, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Spring 2001

    TEACHING EXPERIENCE

    Seminar Leader, Reading Group in Technology, Law, Society, Values, and Design, Yale Law School, Spring 2008

    Teaching Assistant, Impacts of Technology (with Prof. Helen Nissenbaum). Department of Culture & Communication, New York University, Fall 2005

    Adjunct Professor, Languages of Communication: Film, Television, Radio. Department of Culture & Communication, New York University, Summer 2004

    Teaching Aide, Privacy and Information and Communication Technology (with Prof. Helen Nissenbaum). Department of Culture & Communication, New York University, Spring 2004

    Teaching Aide, Introduction to Mass Persuasion and Propaganda (with Prof. Terry Moran). Department of Culture & Communication, New York University, Spring 2002

    OTHER ACADEMIC EXPERIENCE

    Graduate Assistant, Fales Library and Special Collections, Bobst Library, New York University, 2003 - 2004

    Academic Advisor, College of Arts & Sciences Undergraduate Advising Center, New York University, 2001- 2002

    PUBLICATIONS

    Peer-Reviewed Journal Articles:

    Zimmer, M. (forthcoming) Search 2.0: Web 2.0, personal information flows, and the drive for the perfect search engine, First Monday.

    Zimmer, M. (2005). Surveillance, privacy and the ethics of vehicle safety communication technologies. Ethics and Information Technology, 7(4), 201-210.

    Zimmer, M. (2004). The tensions of securing cyberspace: The Internet, state power & The National Strategy to Secure Cyberspace. First Monday, 9(3).

    Other Journal Articles:

    Zimmer, M. (2008) Privacy on Planet Google: Using the Theory of “Contextual Integrity” to Expose the Privacy Threats of Google’s Quest for the Perfect Search Engine, Journal of Business & Technology Law, 3(2).

    Edited Volumes and Special Issues:

    Zimmer, M. (forthcoming). Critical Perspectives of Web 2.0, Special issue of First Monday.

    Spink, A and Zimmer, M. (Eds.) (2008). Web Searching: Interdisciplinary Perspectives. Dordrecht, The Netherlands: Springer.

    Schneider, T. and Zimmer, M. (Eds.) (2006). Identity & Identification in a Networked World. Special issue of First Monday, 11(12).

    Book Chapters:

    Zimmer, M. (forthcoming) The panoptic gaze of web search engines. In A. Spink and M. Zimmer (Eds.), Web Searching: Interdisciplinary Perspectives. Dordrecht, The Netherlands: Springer.

    Zimmer, M. (forthcoming) Web Search Studies: Multidisciplinary Perspectives on Web Search Engines, In J. Hunsinger, M. Allen, and L. Klastrup (Eds.), International Handbook of Internet Research. Dordrecht, The Netherlands: Springer.

    Zimmer, M. (forthcoming) Privacy on the Roads: Mobility, Vehicle Safety Communication Technologies, and the Contextual Integrity of Personal Information Flows. In D. Matheson (Ed.), Contours of Privacy. Newcastle, UK: Cambridge Scholars Publishing.

    Book Reviews:

    Zimmer, M. Review of Theorizing Surveillance: The Panopticon and Beyond, by David Lyon (Ed.). In Surveillance & Society.

    Zimmer, M. (2008). “Privacy Protection in the Network Society: ‘Trading Up’ or a ‘Race to the Bottom’?” Review essay of C. Bennett & C. Raab, The Governance of Privacy: Policy Instruments in Global Perspective, and D. Heisenberg, Negotiating Privacy: The European Union, the United States, and Personal Data Protection. In The Information Society 24(1).

    Zimmer, M. (2004). Review of D. Solove, The digital person: Technology and privacy in the information age. In Ethics and Information Technology, 6(4), 301-302.

    Zimmer, M. (2004). Review of D. Crowley & P. Heyer (Eds.), Communication in history: Technology, culture, society (4th ed.). In Explorations in Media Ecology, 3(2), 143-146.

    Refereed Conference Proceedings:

    Manders-Huits, N. & Zimmer, M. (2007). Values and pragmatic action: The challenges of engagement with technical design communities. In L. Hinman, P. Brey, L. Floridi, F. Grodzinsky and L. Introna (Eds.). Proceedings of the Seventh International Conference of Computer Ethics: Philosophical Enquiry. Enschede: Center for Telematics and Information Technology, 238-248.

    Zimmer, M. (2005). Media Ecology and Value Sensitive Design: A Combined Approach to Understanding the Biases of Media Technology. In A. Kelso (Ed.), Proceedings of the Media Ecology Association Sixth Annual Convention.

    Zimmer, M. (2005). Surveillance, privacy and the ethics of vehicle safety communication technologies. In P. Brey, F. Grodzinsky and L. Introna (Eds.). Ethics of New Information Technology: Proceedings of the Sixth International Conference of Computer Ethics: Philosophical Enquiry. Enschede: Center for Telematics and Information Technology, 435-448.

    Other Publications:

    Zimmer, M. (2007, May 28). Privacy and Surveillance in Web 2.0: Unintended Consequences and the Rise of “Netaveillance” [guest blog post]. On the Identity Trail.

    Zimmer, M. (2006, March 21). Surveillance in spheres of mobility: Privacy, technical design and the flow of personal information on the transportation and information superhighways [guest blog post]. On the Identity Trail.

    Zimmer, M. (2006). The value implications of the practice of paid search. Bulletin of the American Society for Information Science and Technology.

    WORKS IN PROGRESS

    “Values & pragmatic action: The challenges of engagement with technical design communities.” (With Noëmi Manders-Huits). Journal article under review at Science, Technology and Human Values.

    “Privacy and surveillance in Web 2.0: A study in contextual integrity, and the emergence of netaveillance.” Journal article manuscript.

    Renvois of the past and future: The structuring of knowledge from encyclopedias to the World Wide Web, and beyond.” In progress for journal submission.

    PRESENTATIONS

    Conference Presentations:

    “Surveillance 2.0: Peer-to-Peer Surveillance, Amateur Data Mining, and the (Unintended?) Consequences of Web 2.0” Society for Social Studies of Science Annual Conference, Montreal, Canada, October 2007 (forthcoming)

    “The Externalities of Search 2.0: The Flow of Personal Information and the Drive for the Perfect Search Engine” American Society for Information Science and Technology Annual Meeting, Milwaukee, WI, October 2007 (forthcoming)

    “Search 2.0: Web 2.0, personal information flows, and the drive for the perfect search engine” Association of Internet Researchers Conference, Vancouver, B.C., Canada, October 2007 (forthcoming)

    “Values & Pragmatic Action: The Challenges of Engagement with Technical Design Communities” International Conference of Computer Ethics: Philosophical Enquiry, San Diego, CA, July 2007

    “The Panoptic Gaze of Web Search Engines” National Communication Association Annual Conference, San Antonio, TX, November 2006

    “Values & Pragmatic Action: The Challenges of Engagement with Technical Design Communities” Society for Social Studies of Science Annual Conference, Vancouver, B.C, Canada, November 2006

    “The Value & Ethical Implications of the Google Information Interface” Department of Culture & Communication Graduate Conference, Brooklyn, NY, November 2005

    “Privacy on the Roads: How the Design of New Vehicle Safety Communication Technologies Impact Drivers’ Privacy in Public” Contours of Privacy: Social, Psychological and Normative Perspectives, Carleton University, Ottawa, Canada, November 2005

    “The Value Implications of the ‘Google Paradigm’ for Organizing, Distributing and Accessing Information” Association of Internet Researchers Conference, Chicago, IL, October 2005

    “Privacy and the Design of Vehicle Safety Communication Technologies” Society for Philosophy and Technology Conference, Delft, The Netherlands, July 2005

    “Surveillance, Privacy and the Ethics of Vehicle Safety Communication Technologies” International Conference of Computer Ethics: Philosophical Enquiry, Enschede, The Netherlands, July 2005

    “Media Ecology and Value Sensitive Design: A Combined Approach to Understanding the Biases of Media Technology” Media Ecology Association Conference, New York, NY, June 2005.

    “Privacy and the Design of Vehicle Safety Communication Technologies” Science and Technology in Context: An Interdisciplinary Graduate Student Conference, Washington, DC, April 2005

    “The Tensions of Securing Cyberspace” National Communication Association Annual Conference, Human Communication & Technology Division, Chicago, IL, November 2004

    “Privacy and the Design of Vehicle Safety Communication Technologies” Department of Culture & Communication Graduate Conference, Brooklyn, NY, October 2004

    “The Ideology of Control in Interface Technologies” MIT-RPI¬-Cornell STS Graduate Student Conference, Troy, NY, February 2004

    “Current Directions in Media Ecological Research: Meeting Challenges and Exploring Boundaries” (Chair) Media Ecology Conference, Rosendale, NY, October 2003

    Invited Talks:

    “Privacy and Quaero’s Quest for the Perfect Search Engine: Threats and Opportunities,” Forum on Quaero: A Public Think Tank on the Politics of the Search Engine, Jan van Eyck Academie, Maastricht, The Netherlands, September.

    “Privacy, Contextual Integrity, and the Quest for the Perfect Search Engine,” Institute for Information Law, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands, September.

    “Google as an Infrastructure of Dataveillance: Privacy and Legal Implications” Lunch Speaker Series, The Information Society Project, Yale Law School, New Haven, CT, December 2006

    “Values & Pragmatic Action: The Challenges of Engagement with Technical Design Communities” (with Noëmi Manders-Huits) Colloquium, Philosophy Section, Delft University of Technology, Delft, The Netherlands, October 2006

    “Values & Pragmatic Action: The Challenges of Engagement with Technical Design Communities” Colloquium, Philosophy Department, University of Twente, Enschede, The Netherlands, October 2006

    “Surveillance in Spheres of Mobility: Ethics, Values, and the Design of Networked Vehicle Information Systems” Seminar, Department of Philosophy and the History of Technology, Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm, Sweden, October, 2006

    “The Panoptic Gaze of Web 2.0: How Web 2.0 Platforms act as Infrastructures of Dataveillance” Seminar, Social Software and Web 2.0: Critical Perspectives and Challenges for Research and Business, Aalborg University, Aalborg, Denmark, October 2006

    “Melting Watches: The Cultural Impact of the Standardization of Time” Graduate Student Research Colloquium, Department of Culture & Communication, New York University, New York, NY, February 2004

    Poster Sessions:

    “Personal Information & the Design of Vehicle Safety Communication Technologies: An Application of Privacy as Contextual Integrity” PORTIA – NSF Site Visit, Stanford University, Palo Alto, CA, May 2005

    Panels Organized:

    “Ways Knowing Everything About Each Other: Critical Perspectives on Web 2.0 and Social Networking” Society for Social Studies of Science Annual Conference, Montreal, Canada, October 2007 (forthcoming)

    “Critical Perspectives on Web 2.0: Surveillance, Discipline, Labor” Association of Internet Researchers Conference, Vancouver, B.C., Canada, October 2007 (forthcoming)

    “Current Directions in Media Ecological Research: Meeting Challenges and Exploring Boundaries” Media Ecology Conference, Rosendale, NY, October 2003

    AWARDS AND FELLOWSHIPS

    Student Fellow, Information Law Institute, New York University School of Law, 2004-present

    Linda Elson Scholar Award for Top Student Paper, Media Ecology Association Conference, June 200

    Phyllis and Gerald LeBoff Doctoral Fellowship in Media Ecology, Steinhardt School of Education, New York University, 2002-2005

    INVITED WORKSHOPS AND SEMINARS

    Data Confidentiality Workshop, National Science Foundation, Arlington, VA, September

    Summer Doctoral Programme, Oxford Internet Institute, Harvard Law School, July 2007

    Surveillance Summer Seminar, The Surveillance Project, Queens University, June 2007

    Graduate Student Workshop Values in Computer Design and Information System Design, Funded by The National Science Foundation, Center for Science, Technology & Society, Santa Clara University, August 2005

    Graduate WebShop Conference on the Impact of the Internet on Society, Funded by The National Science Foundation, Department of Sociology, University of Maryland, June 2003

    SERVICE

    Profession:

    Reviewer, International Journal of Information Ethics, Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication, NYU Press

    Yale Law School:

    Organizer, Information Society Project Lunch Speaker Series

    Co-Organizer, Symposium on Reputation Economies in Cyberspace, December, 2007

    New York University:

    Co-Organizer (with Tim Schneider), “Identity and Identification in a Networked World,” Multidisciplinary Graduate Student Symposium, New York University, September, 2006

    Faculty Breakout Session on “Values in Technology Design,” Undergraduate Colloquium, Department of Culture & Communication, New York University, November, 2005

    Workshop Panelist, “Writing the MA Thesis,” Department of Culture & Communication, New York University, April, 2005

    Doctoral Student Cohort Representative, PhD Program Committee, Department of Culture & Communication, New York University, 2003-2004

    MEDIA COVERAGE

    Scott, M. (2007, March 3). All eyes on you. Montreal Gazette, pp. H1,H3.

    Welch, M. (2006, May 8 ). Online plagiarism strikes blog world. The Boston Globe, p. E1.

    Arabski, J. and Sricharatchanya, H. (2006). Camera phones blur separation between private and public. NYC24.

    ACADEMIC AFFILIATIONS

    Association of Internet Researchers
    International Communication Association
    Media Ecology Association
    National Communication Association
    Society for Philosophy and Technology
    Society for the Social Studies of Science

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