chairman leibowitz is no stranger to privacy issues.ember the first conversation i had with him, we were talking about the privacy implications of public databases, and we had a really spirited discussion. so with that, let me introduce chairman jon leibowitz. [applause] >> thank you so much for that kind and entirely undeserved introduction. and as i, as i look around the room, i see so many privacy luminaries here and people who have really worked on these issues, lee peeler, susan grant, marc rotenberg, jeff chester was around here, dave morgan. and so really i think this is going to be sort of a terrific workshop. we're going to learn an enormous amount, and you're going to help us do that as we try to think through these complex issues. now, i recently spoke about, i was on a panel about louis brandeis, one of the intellectual fathers of the federal trade commission, of course, who was also a turn of the last century reformer, supreme court justice, and in 1890 brandeis and his partner, samuel warren, authored a seminal law review