Jessica Fjeld is a Lecturer on Law and the Assistant Director of the Cyberlaw Clinic at the Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society. Her legal practice is focused on supporting the work of creatives, archivists, and advocates, especially as it intersects with emerging technology. Her interests include intellectual property; freedom of expression, privacy, and related human rights issues; contract law; and equity and inclusion. She is a member of the board of the Global Network Initiative, a multistakeholder organization that protects and advances user freedom of expression and privacy around the world.
Before joining the Clinic, Jessica worked in Business & Legal Affairs for WGBH Educational Foundation, where she advised the American Archive of Public Broadcasting along with numerous WGBH productions. She began her legal career as an associate at Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP focused in corporate transactions. Jessica is also a poet, the author of Redwork (BOAAT Press, 2018), and the recipient of awards from the Poetry Society of America and the 92nd Street Y/Boston Review Discovery Prize. She holds a JD from Columbia Law School, where she was a Hamilton Fellow, James Kent Scholar and Managing Editor of the Journal of Law and the Arts; an MFA in Poetry from the University of Massachusetts; and a BA from Columbia University.

Generative AI is a minefield for copyright law
Jun 16, 2023 05:59 am UTC| Technology Law
In 2022, an AI-generated work of art won the Colorado State Fairs art competition. The artist, Jason Allen, had used Midjourney a generative AI system trained on art scraped from the internet to create the piece. The...