In this episode of Denise Howell’s Uneven Distribution, Denise welcomes longtime friend and technology lawyer Evan Brown for a wide-ranging conversation about how familiar internet law questions—from the famous “monkey selfie” copyright case to cryptocurrency, TikTok, biometrics, and AI-generated content—have evolved in the age of generative AI. Together, they explore what it means for machines to participate in creativity, how copyright and privacy law are adapting, why blockchain may still have untapped potential, and how lawyers and creators are navigating an increasingly AI-assisted world. As the conversation unfolds, topics that once seemed speculative—from AI-generated works to platform governance and digital identity—begin to look less like future challenges and more like present-day realities. Although recorded in mid-2024, the conversation is arguably even more relevant today, as AI has rapidly become embedded in everyday work, creativity, and online life, bringing many of these once-theoretical questions squarely into the mainstream.
“We’re going to find ways of doing these things that free up our time so we can focus more on ideas — things that are naturally more interesting to the human intellect.” — Evan Brown
“This is the whole point of technology. It creates an appetite for immortality on the one hand. It threatens universal extinction on the other. Technology is lust removed from nature. — Don DeLillo
Photo by Sumaid pal Singh Bakshi on Unsplash








