
Eran Kahana
AI, Cybersecurity and Intellectual Property Attorney, Fellow & Advisory Board Member, Stanford Law School
Eran Kahana is an AI, cybersecurity, and intellectual property lawyer as well as a Fellow at Stanford Law School, a member of the Advisory Board of Stanford Law School’s Stanford Artificial Intelligence & Law Society, and an Adjunct Professor of Law at the University of Minnesota Law School.
Mr. Kahana counsels clients on a wide variety of matters related to artificial intelligence, cybersecurity, privacy, technology law, trademarks, patents, and copyright issues. He also serves in a variety of cybersecurity thought-leadership roles and work closely with the FBI, Department of Justice, Secret Service, and colleagues from the private and academic sectors to set, promote, and sustain cybersecurity best practices.
At Stanford Law School, Mr. Kahana writes and lectures on the intersect between law and artificial intelligence and is a frequent speaker at Stanford’s annual Digital Economy Best Practices Conference. At the University of Minnesota Law School, he teaches the “AI and the Law” class. Mr. Kahana has been cited in Oxford University Professor Marcus Du Satoy’s book “The Creativity Code: Art and Innovation in the Age of AI” and also interviewed on AI, cybersecurity, privacy, and technology law by Bloomberg Law, BBC, Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) radio, KABC radio, Minnesota Public Radio, Twin Cities Business magazine, The Star Tribune, Minnesota Lawyer, TheStreet.com, Quartz magazine, and Stanford University Radio, KZSU FM.






