Historical society this is almost an hour. Good afternoon ladies and gentlemen, on behalf of the trustees of the historical society, welcome to our 42nd annual lecture. Before we do anything else, i will ask everyone to take out their phones and turn them off. Even on silent mode, they will interfere with the sound system here in the court. I am greg joseph, president of the society. Welcome. We are delighted to have you here today. We are honored to have resident emeritus of nyu john sexton, whose topic tonight is Warren Burger, the founder of our society and of immense importance to us. There is no one more qualified than president sexton to deliver this lecture. He was a Warren Burger clerk, but he had a long history before that. President sexton earned his ba in history and in a and phd and religion, and taught religion in brooklyn before he went to harvard law school. He went to harvard law school, graduating 1979 magna cum laude, and was the Supreme Court editor of the harvard la
i do not know how many actually read them. can you learn about how users learn about-board and how you inform them and what work you have done and about dash- board. we developed a pithy saying, and this is to say that show is better than tell. my perspective on this is that privacy policies are necessary, but they are only the beginning of the efforts we should be making to try to explain consistently the same things, the same important things that users need to understand about privacy in many different ways. this is why we have a google if you click the privacy link, you go not just to a policy but to the center, which contains the policy but also contains a frequently asked questions. it contains when we launched chrome, we commissioned a comic book to explain some of the things about the way it worked and the controls we built into it. it contains youtube and videos of me and others explaining aspects of how we use data, what controls are there, how-board works