he Berkman Center’s Internet Law (iLaw) program has been one of our flagship teaching efforts, initiated in 2000 as a means to offer the public a way to learn about the essential legal, economic, and public interest debates surrounding the Internet and new technologies. Since its inception, and across gatherings in Cambridge, Palo Alto, Mexico City, Tallinn, Turin, and Rio, the iLaw program has enabled participants to consider the legal and policy environment that governs online activity, to examine the Net’s changing technological character, to explore the implications of Internet policy and legal reforms, and to identify how these reforms affect the public interest. The last iLaw was held in 2006. [Website for iLaw 2000-2006.]