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Privacy Paradigms for Law Enforcement Response Lukas Bundonis, Netflix; Ben Ballard, MITRE The phrase "law enforcement response" is ambiguous. It most often describes the domain of legal engineering that comprises corporate disclosure of data to government authorities in response to a legal request for information. However, this definition oversimplifies an opaque process. Law enforcement requests for information and the legal processes that structure them resist comprehension by design. Wiretap and pen register orders (real-time surveillance), lawful intercept requests, emergency disclosure/data requests, and national security letters all fall into this category. However, basic types of information requests, such as subpoenas and warrants for information, are less opaque, and provide an opportunity for greater standardization of information disclosure. A discussion of law enforcement response systems in the context of data privacy therefore bears merit. This is especially true when viewed through the complementary lenses of a concept Lawfare fellow Alan Rozenshtein coined in 2018—"surveillance intermediaries"—and an increasingly aggressive series of nation-state intelligence operations targeting sensitive corporate infrastructure. This short talk will explore what intermediaries are, why they matter, some of the risks posed to their sensitive systems, and what the speakers believe we all can do as privacy professionals to better defend them. View the full PEPR 25 program at https://www.usenix.org/conference/pep...