Wired 10.10: Lawrence Lessig’s Supreme Showdown

I’ve been less diligent in the past couple of years in my perusal of WIRED when it arrives at my mailbox.  A couple of nights ago,  I noticed the article on Lessig in the back of the issue.  And it’s online , too.  Comments forthcoming (or not).



Once a “right-wing lunatic,” he’s become a fire-breathing defender of Net values.






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Ian White
Lawrence Lessig

In late 1997, after reading a profile of the super-brainy professor in the Harvard Law Bulletin, Judge Jackson had tapped Lessig to sort out the technical aspects of the case. “He was as knowledgeable as they come,” says Jackson, who sits on the US District Court in DC. For the next two months, Lessig and his overqualified clerk, fellow Harvard Law professor Jonathan Zittrain, worked almost nonstop to produce a report. Lessig’s time logs, which document the 278 hours he spent on the case (billed at $250 per hour, a bargain rate for someone with his credentials), reveal only one day off: Christmas.


Some days he clocked 11 hours.


What the logs don’t show is the quiet transformation Lessig had been undergoing, from a respected constitutional theorist into a fire-breathing defender of Net values. With the Microsoft case, he would be able to make his mark. ….



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