
PHIL CORWIN
Partner, Butera & Andrews /
Chief Lobbyist, Sharman Networks (owner of Kazaa)
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Philip S. Corwin is a Partner at Butera & Andrews, a
Washington, DC law and lobbying firm. He is also President of Virtualaw
LLC, an E-Commerce consulting firm. He has more than twenty years of
federal legislative experience, with his expertise focused on the emerging
law of electronic commerce, as well as financial services and bankruptcy
maters. Mr. Corwin is helping Butera & Andrews continue its record of
outstanding legislative representation of the financial services industry
while expanding its ability to address E-Commerce and intellectual
property issues, including the many legal and policy questions affecting
the future of digital media.
Mr. Corwin is an active member of several American Bar Association
Committees. He is currently the Washington Liaison for the Science and
Technology Section; Legislative Reporter for the Business Law Section's
Cyberspace Law Committee; and Vice-Chair of the Financial Services
Integration Committee of the Torts and Insurance Practice Section (TIPS).
He formerly served as Co-Chair of TIPS' Investment, Financial Services and
Taxation Committee; and is an active member of the Banking Law, Consumer
Financial Services, Consumer Bankruptcy, and Commercial Bankruptcy
Committees. He received his B.A. in Government from Cornell University's
College of Arts and Sciences, his JD from Boston College Law School, and
is a member of the Bar in the District of Columbia and Massachusetts.
Mr. Corwin has been a guest on the MacNeil/Lehrer Newshour, CNN Newsmaker,
CBS This Morning, CBS Nightwatch, CNBC Capitol Gains, CNBC Business
Insiders, C-Span Washington Journal, Court TV Washington Watch, The Wall
Street Journal Report, and other television and radio news and business
programs. Additionally, he has testified before Congress; is a frequent
speaker before legal, banking, technology, digital entertainment and
financial services industry audiences; and served as an adviser to the
National Association of Insurance Commissioners. He spoke in regard to
copyright and other legal issues affecting digital media delivery at such
venues as Tulane Law School’s Digital Music Forum, Webnoize 99, Streaming
Media 2000, Digital Coast 2000, and the Coalition for the Future of
Music’s January 2001 Summit. He has addressed technology-related
legislative and regulatory initiatives at such forums as Glasser
Legalworks’ E-commerce Law School and the Practicing Law Institute’s
Internet Law Institute. His articles discussing such topics as encryption,
and electronic authentication and Internet commerce, have appeared in
Future Banker and Jurimetrics. Additional writings on financial services
and bankruptcy matters appeared in Legal Times, American Banker, Banking
Expansion Reporter, Banking Policy Report, Best's Review, Southern Banker,
ABA Banking Journal, National Underwriter, Banks in Insurance Report,
Butterworths Journal of International Banking and Financial Law, American
Bankruptcy Institute Newsletter, Norton Bankruptcy Law Adviser, and
Independent Banker.
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