Inside The Markup
The Markup is Joining Forces with CalMatters
California will be an incredible testbed to ground our work
Challenging technology to serve the public good.
Nabiha Syed was the chief executive officer of The Markup, an award-winning journalism non-profit that challenges technology to serve the public good. She left The Markup in June 2024.
Under her leadership, The Markup’s unique approach has been referenced by Congress 21 times, inspired dozens of class action lawsuits, won a national Murrow Award and a Loeb Award, and been recognized as “Most Innovative” by FastCompany in 2022.
Before launching The Markup in 2020, Nabiha spent a decade as an acclaimed media lawyer focused on the intersection of frontier technology and newsgathering, including advising on publication issues with the Snowden revelations and the Steele Dossier, access litigation around police disciplinary records, as well as privacy and free speech issues globally. Described by Forbes as “one of the best emerging free speech lawyers”, she has briefed two presidents on free speech in the digital age, delivered the Salant Lecture at Harvard, headlined SXSW to discuss data privacy after Roe v. Wade, and was awarded the NAACP/Archewell Digital Civil Rights award in 2023 for her work.
A California native and daughter of Pakistani immigrants, Nabiha holds a J.D. from Yale Law School, where she co-founded one of the nation’s first media law clinics, a B.A. from Johns Hopkins University, and a law degree from Oxford, which she attended as a Marshall Scholar. She serves on the boards of the New York Civil Liberties Union, The New Press, and the Scott Trust, among others.
Inside The Markup
California will be an incredible testbed to ground our work
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Welcome to the era of news mirages
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A conversation with Dr. Joy Buolamwini
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Author and cybersecurity researcher Scott Shapiro talks about how to get by in a world where cyber exploitation is everywhere
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A conversation with Shaolei Ren
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Balancing enthusiasm and fear in the age of AI
The Breakdown
The U.S. Supreme Court opted not to throw the internet as we know it into utter chaos—for now
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A conversation with Katherine Forrest
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A conversation with Shaolei Ren
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A conversation with James Grimmelmann and Kate Klonick
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