Carnegie’s Cloud Governance Project offers a holistic, first-of-its-kind framework for understanding and addressing a wide range of interrelated cloud policy issues across a number of strategic areas.
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R. Taj Moore is no longer with the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
R. Taj Moore serves as a fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
Moore recently worked as an associate at Morrison & Foerster LLP, where he advised companies on how to prepare for and respond to cyberattacks executed by cyber criminals and other adversaries; helped entities build data privacy programs; and provided counsel to organizations subject to government investigations.
Moore previously worked at a Y-Combinator-backed cybersecurity startup and served as assistant counsel in the Office of New Jersey Governor Philip D. Murphy, where his legislative portfolio covered homeland security, technology policy, military and veterans' affairs, and banking and insurance.
Moore also served as a contributor to Lawfare and as a Scoville Fellow at the Stimson Center, where his research focused on Iran's nuclear program and U.S. defense strategy. He is co-author of "Balancing Privacy and Public Safety in the Post-Snowden Era," published in the Cambridge Handbook of Surveillance Law (Cambridge University Press, 2017).
Carnegie’s Cloud Governance Project offers a holistic, first-of-its-kind framework for understanding and addressing a wide range of interrelated cloud policy issues across a number of strategic areas.
There are several steps U.S. federal and state officials can take to strengthen coordination and information sharing on cyber incidents.