Ido Kilovaty

Ido Kilovaty was a fellow in New America’s Cybersecurity Initiative. Kilovaty is the Frederic Dorwart Endowed Assistant Professor of Law at the University of Tulsa College of Law. Before coming to Tulsa, Kilovaty spent two years as a research scholar in Law at Yale Law School. At Yale, he was a cyber fellow at the Center for Global Legal Challenges, and a resident fellow at the Information Society Project, where he was running and developing a cross-disciplinary project on cyber conflict, which brought together lawyers, policymakers, and technology experts to engage in a constructive discourse on the current in cybersecurity law. His research is at the intersection of technology, law, and society, with a focus on cybersecurity—both domestic and international. His specific areas of research include cybersecurity law, new technology regulation, and international cyberspace law. Kilovaty’s recently authored “Freedom to Hack” which proposes a solution of ethical hacking for the improvement of smart-device security is forthcoming in the Ohio State Law Journal. He has also written on election interference through cyberspace, “Doxfare: – Politically Motivated Leaks and the Future of the Norm on Non-Intervention in the Era of Weaponized Information” appearing in the Harvard National Security Journal (2018). Kilovaty’s op-eds and essays appeared at Harvard Law Review Blog, Lawfare, Just Security, WIRED, and TechCrunch.