Daphne Keller

Daphne Keller headshot

Daphne Keller

  • Director of Platform Regulation, Stanford Program in Law, Science & Technology (LST)
  • Social Science Research Scholar

Biography

Daphne Keller is the Director of Platform Regulation at the Stanford Program in Law, Science, & Technology. Her academic, policy, and popular press writing focuses on platform regulation and Internet users'; rights in the U.S., EU, and around the world. Her recent work has focused on platform transparency, data collection for artificial intelligence, interoperability models, and “must-carry” obligations. She has testified before legislatures, courts, and regulatory bodies around the world on topics ranging from the practical realities of content moderation to copyright and data protection. She was previously Associate General Counsel for Google, where she had responsibility for the company’s web search products. She is a graduate of Yale Law School, Brown University, and Head Start.

SHORT PIECES

 

ACADEMIC PUBLICATIONS

 

POLICY PUBLICATIONS

 

FILINGS

  • U.S. Supreme Court amicus brief on behalf of Francis Fukuyama, NetChoice v. Moody (2024)
  • U.S. Supreme Court amicus brief with ACLU, Gonzalez v. Google (2023)
  • Comment to European Commission on data access under EU Digital Services Act
  • U.S. Senate testimony on platform transparency

 

PUBLICATIONS LIST

publications

Journal Articles
November 2024

This is Hard

Author(s)
This is Hard
Journal Articles
July 2022

Lawful but Awful? Control over Legal Speech by Platforms, Governments, and Internet Users

Author(s)
Lawful but Awful? Control over Legal Speech by Platforms, Governments, and Internet Users
Journal Articles
July 2021

The Future of Platform Power: Making Middleware Work

Author(s)
The Future of Platform Power: Making Middleware Work

In The News

illustration
Q&As

Censorship, Civilizational Allies, and Codes of Practice: How European Tech Regulation Became a Geopolitical Flashpoint

Daphne Keller and Joan Barata of Stanford’s PPR discuss the European Union’s Disinformation Code of Practice and its transition, on July 1, from voluntary framework co-authored by Big Tech, to legally binding obligation under the Digital Services Act (DSA) on the Lawfare Daily Podcast.
Censorship, Civilizational Allies, and Codes of Practice: How European Tech Regulation Became a Geopolitical Flashpoint