Mark Grabowski
  • About
  • Writing
  • Teaching
  • Research
  • Blockchain
  • Speaking
  • Press
  • Contact

Grabowski discusses cryptocurrency with Iranian news outlet

11/17/2021

 
Picture
Mark Grabowski was interviewed by Iran's Tahlil Bazaar news agency on cryptocurrency, Bitcoin and blockchain. He discussed economic benefits and regulations.

Grabowski has extensive experience in the crypto space, having authored a popular cryptocurrency book, taught a class on Bitcoin & Blockchain and founded his own cryptocurrency. In addition, he was awarded a 2020 Fulbright Fellowship to research cryptocurrency regulations in Asia.

Read the full interview by clicking here.

Grabowski's book named best blockchain book

10/15/2021

 
Mark Grabowski's book, Cryptocurrencies: A Primer on Digital Money, is ranked as the #1 blockchain book by BookAuthority.

The 112-page book, published by Routledge in 2019, provides an introduction to Bitcoin and blockchain. Although the book focuses on investment strategies, it also examines cryptocurrency’s history and philosophy along with its promise and dangers. 

With Bitcoin's price soaring in 2021, cryptocurrency has become a hot topic and sales of Grabowski's book are taking off. The book briefly cracked Amazon’s Top 50 bestseller list for books on money and currently ranks in the Top 30 for banking books and Top 25 for accounting books.

In addition to teaching a course on Bitcoin & Blockchain, Grabowski founded his own cryptocurrency and won a Fulbright Fellowship in 2020 to study cryptocurrency regulations in Asia.
Picture

Grabowski publishes new book on cyber law

8/1/2021

 
Picture
Mark Grabowski co-authored a textbook, Cyber Law and Ethics: Regulation of the Connected World, which was published by London-based academic publisher Routledge in July.

The book, which Grabowski uses in the Cyber Law & Ethics course he teaches, provides an overview of legal, policy and ethical issues raised by our use of cyberspace and information technology. Some of the topics addressed include social media, online privacy, artificial intelligence, cybercrime, intellectual property, online gaming and internet governance. The book also covers trending issues such as deplatforming, catfishing, doxing, ransomware, revenge porn, data mining, drones, cybernetics and disinformation.  

“With a growing list of varied colleges now offering undergraduate courses devoted to this topic, we believe this book fills an important void in the field of study,” Grabowski told tech blog InnovateLI. “Legal issues relating to cyberspace and technology are becoming more and more important to everyday people as the world becomes more connected.”

The book has received rave reviews so far. It's listed among the "Best New Technology Books" by BookAuthority.

Kyu Ho Youm, Jonathan Marshall First Amendment Chair at University of Oregon, also gave a positive review of the book: “Searching for a timely and comprehensive book on cyber law? If so, Cyber Law & Ethics should be for you. For this book is for anyone interested in all the major legal and ethical cyber issues, including freedom of online speech, privacy, IP and gaming. Also covered are a number of evolving and emerging topics such as AI, cyborgs and drones. Although it centers on U.S. law, the book is refreshingly global. Mark Grabowski and Eric Robinson pay discerning attention to international and comparative law. What a remarkable contribution to understanding cyber law.”



Q&A with Prof. Grabowski on issues affecting Internet

6/24/2021

 
Picture
Social media censorship, ransomeware and online privacy.

These are among the issues Prof. Mark Grabowski addressed when he sat down for an interview with a writer from Adelphi University's newsletter. Grabowski teaches a course on "Cyber Law & Ethics" and his new textbook, Cyber Law and Ethics: Regulation of the Connected World, comes out next month.

Read the full interview by clicking here.

Grabowski discusses possible Bitcoin regulations

1/24/2021

 
Picture
Mark Grabowski addressed how new regulations by the Biden Administration might impact Bitcoin's price, which has skyrocketed to all-time highs in recent weeks.

“Government regulations may actually help cryptocurrency in the long run, but they invariably hurt the market in the short term,” Grabowski explained, adding that “perhaps the one thing that most Republicans and Democrats in Congress seem to agree on is that more cryptocurrency regulations are needed.”

Grabowski's remarks appear in a news story by financial news site Finance Magnates.

On Jan. 20, Yellen suggested that lawmakers should ‘curtail’ the use of cryptocurrencies because of the belief that they are ‘mainly’ used for illegal activity. Soon after, Bitcoin's price and the cryptocurrency market began dropping.

“Treasury Secretary-to-be Janet Yellen’s negative comments on cryptocurrency” may have spooked Bitcoin markets, said Grabowski, who teaches a course and wrote a book on cryptocurrencies.



Grabowski comments on YouTube censorship of election videos

12/10/2020

 
Picture
Mark Grabowski, who teaches cyber law and ethics, weighed in on YouTube's decision this week to remove videos pertaining to alleged “widespread fraud or errors” that took place in this year’s presidential election.

This kind of censorship will likely “continue unabated,” Grabowski told The Epoch Times. “In fact, it’s probably going to get worse.”

Although YouTube's new policy does not violate any laws, including the First Amendment, Grabowski said the censoring of such videos “violates the spirit of Section 230 for platforms like YouTube,” noting that the company shouldn’t “be taking on editorial roles and deciding which viewpoints are objectionable.”

“This is not — to use the law’s own words — an ‘action voluntarily taken in good faith.’ And I doubt YouTube will apply this policy to videos claiming election fraud in other countries,” he said.

Online censorship and Section 230 are among the topics Grabowski covers in his forthcoming textbook on Cyber Law & Ethics, which will be published by Routledge in 2021.

Grabowski discusses social media censorship

10/26/2020

 
Picture
Social media censorship of a controversial news story may have drawn more attention to it,  Mark Grabowski told the Deseret News.

When the New York Post recently published an article involving allegations related to Joe Biden's son, Hunter, Twitter and Facebook stepped in to control the story’s spread.

While fewer people may have seen the story on the social media platforms, more were driven to look up the article on the New York Post website, said Mark Grabowski, an associate professor specializing in cyber law and digital ethics at Adelphi University.

“When you try to cover up information, it usually backfires. That’s what happened here,” said Grabowski, who speculates that without social media censorship, the New York Post article would have been a relative nonissue with legacy media sources downplaying or ignoring it. “They ended up making it a bigger story.”

While the censorship does not violate the First Amendment, Grabowski said it goes against the spirit of free speech.

“Do we really want Facebook and Twitter serving as an editor for American media and journalism, deciding what information is suitable for the public?” asked Grabowski, who does not know whether the claims in the New York Post article are true.

Grabowski warns of foreign election interference

10/8/2020

 
Picture
In response to a Department of Homeland Security report that China was meddling in the upcoming U.S. election, Mark Grabowski told the Epoch Times that “shouldn’t be surprising.”

China has much riding on the election's outcome. China’s currency trading this week surged to a 17-month high after new data showed Biden leading the polls, he noted, citing media reports.

China’s election interference has been largely underreported and goes beyond what the DHS report has detailed, he added. Furthermore, Beijing’s cyber tactics have become “much more nuanced and sophisticated in recent years than even many experts realize,” said Grabowski, a professor of cyber law and ethics.

Grabowski said he was aware of at least two politics-oriented online forums that have been “slammed with traffic from China in recent months.”

Grabowski publishes new law journal article on mugshot sites

10/5/2020

 
Picture
Mark Grabowski has a new article in the latest edition of the University of Baltimore's peer-reviewed Journal of Media Law & Ethics.

The piece examines the  so-called “mugshot” websites through the lens of the Society of Professional Journalists’ Code of Ethics.

"As the national conversation on criminal justice shifts following the police killing of George Floyd, newsrooms are beginning to reevaluate their mugshot galleries and several have decided to discontinue them," he writes. "With the law providing little, if any, help, according to First Amendment scholars, the issue is primarily an ethical one."

Grabowski — a former journalist who teaches "Cyber Law & Ethics" at Adelphi University — concludes that, while mugshot sites are not an inherently unethical journalism practice, many news outlets present mugshots utilizing ethically dubious methods that urgently need to be reformed. 

Grabowski discusses Sec. 230 with CQ Researcher

10/3/2020

 
Picture
Mark Grabowski was quoted in a report from CQ Researcher on the future of the controversial internet moderation law known as Section 230.

Section 230, part of the Communications Decency Act, has come under fire from both Republican and Democratic lawmakers because it allows websites and apps to moderate content however they like without liability. 

“Section 230's future is precarious, even if Trump is not re-elected,” said Grabowski, who wrote a textbook on cyber law and teaches a course on the subject. “Both Democrats and Republicans on Capitol Hill agree Section 230 has got to change, but they can't agree on why or how.”


<<Previous
Forward>>

    Archives

    September 2023
    May 2023
    January 2023
    May 2022
    February 2022
    January 2022
    December 2021
    November 2021
    October 2021
    August 2021
    June 2021
    January 2021
    December 2020
    October 2020
    September 2020
    August 2020
    June 2020
    May 2020
    April 2020
    February 2020
    December 2019
    September 2019
    August 2019
    July 2019
    May 2019
    April 2019
    March 2019
    January 2019
    October 2018
    August 2018
    July 2018
    June 2018
    August 2017
    July 2017
    June 2017
    April 2017
    March 2017
    February 2017
    January 2017
    December 2016
    November 2016
    October 2016
    September 2016
    June 2016
    April 2016
    March 2016
    January 2016
    June 2015
    April 2015
    February 2015
    January 2015
    November 2014
    October 2014
    August 2014
    February 2014
    December 2013
    October 2013
    March 2013
    December 2012
    November 2012

    RSS Feed

© 2024