User:Brianwc/About

Brian Carver (born June 13, 1974) is an American academic. He is an Assistant Professor at the University of California, Berkeley School of Information. His principal areas of study are copyright, internet law, commons-based peer production, and the Free Access to Law Movement. He has written and spoken about the challenges that new information technologies are posing for public policy as well as the factors that enable online communities to create public goods.

Education and career
Originally from a suburb of Birmingham, Alabama, Carver studied philosophy, receiving a B.A. from the University of Alabama and an M.A. from the University of California, Irvine. He then taught philosophy at various community colleges in Southern California before receiving his J.D. from the University of California, Berkeley School of Law (Boalt Hall).

Carver practiced law as a litigation associate with the Silicon Valley-based Fenwick & West before becoming an academic. He is a member of the California State Bar, licensed to practice before all the state and federal courts of California, and the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, and has been pro bono counsel of record on amicus briefs filed on behalf of the Electronic Frontier Foundation, Public Knowledge, the American Library Association, and others. He has been a member of the Berkeley faculty since 2008.

Personal life
He has lived in California since 1996 and is married to Jacqueline "Jac" Asher, a UC Berkeley Lecturer in Gender & Women's Studies and a member of the Emeryville City Council since 2011. The couple live in Emeryville and have a daughter, born in 2005, and a son, born in 2008.

Community service
Carver has been active in his community, serving as chair of the City of Emeryville's Childhood Development Center Advisory Committee from 2010-2012, as chair of the Emery Unified School District's Citizens' Bond Oversight Committee from 2011-2012, and as chair of the City of Emeryville's Parks and Recreation Committee from 2013 to present. He is a member of the board of directors of the California League of Bond Oversight Committees (CaLBOC), a non-partisan non-profit that aims to improve the training and resources available to California's Proposition 39 school bond oversight committees.

Non-Profit work
In 2013, he co-founded a California non-profit, Free Law Project, with former student, Michael Lissner. The organization seeks to provide free access to primary legal materials, develop legal research tools, and support academic research on legal corpora. Free Law Project sponsors the development of the website, CourtListener.com, a searchable, open source, and open access database of over 2.5 million court opinions, and the RECAP browser extensions which save users of the federal PACER system money while enabling them to contribute the documents they purchase to a free online archive of court documents. Carver has spoken at numerous conferences about this work, often describing the organization's chief goal as putting the entirety of U.S. case law online, for the public, for free.

Academic work
Carver has written about copyright law's first sale doctrine and open source and free software licensing. He is a co-editor of the fourth edition of Software and Internet Law, a case book used in internet and technology law courses. In 2010 he taught a graduate seminar entitled Commons-based Peer Production and in 2012 he taught the School of Information's first fully online course, Introduction to Information, as part of a University of California-wide online initiative pilot project. He was a member of the Technical Working Group of the Learning Resource Metadata Initiative, a project led by Creative Commons and the Association of Educational Publishers to establish a common vocabulary for describing learning resources and is a member of the OASIS Legal Citation Markup (LegalCiteM) Technical Committee that is developing an open standard for machine-readable tagging of legal citations based upon a formalized conceptual model, vocabulary, metadata definitions, and prescribed syntax.

Advising
He has advised School of Information Masters students on research projects covering online privacy and the peer production of music metadata, as well as a project that created a website to provide free public access to primary legal materials and legal research tools.

Assigning Wikipedia
Carver has led his university classes in the creation and editing of Wikipedia articles since his Spring 2009 Cyberlaw class. His students have now created or contributed to over 200 Wikipedia articles related to Cyberlaw and Intellectual Property law. His Fall 2010 Intellectual Property Law course was part of the Wikimedia Foundation's Education Program pilot project on United States Public Policy  and his efforts are now part of Wikipedia's United States Education Program. At the 2011 Wikipedia in Higher Education Summit he spoke as part of a panel on the classroom experience and was presented with "The Perfect System Award" from the Wikimedia Foundation. In 2012 he was selected to be a member of the Wikipedia Education Working Group, a group charged with planning the long-term structure of the Education Program in the United States and Canada. Carver has also published academic work about his experiences assigning students to edit Wikipedia.