Tim Wu
Timothy Wu (born circa 1972) is a Taiwanese-American legal scholar and policy advisor, serving as the Julius Silver Professor of Law, Science and Technology at Columbia Law School since 2006.[1] He is renowned for coining the term "network neutrality" in his 2003 paper "Network Neutrality, Broadband Discrimination," which argued for regulatory scrutiny of internet service providers to prevent discriminatory practices that could hinder open access.[2] Wu's scholarship focuses on the concentration of private power in technology and media sectors, advocating for aggressive antitrust measures including structural breakups to counter monopolistic tendencies, as detailed in books such as The Master Switch: The Rise and Fall of Information Empires (2010), The Attention Merchants (2016), and The Curse of Bigness: Antitrust in the New Gilded Age (2018).[1] In public service, he advised the Federal Trade Commission, served as senior enforcement counsel in the New York Attorney General's office pursuing actions against broadband providers for misleading speed claims, and ran unsuccessfully as a Democrat for Lieutenant Governor of New York in 2014.[3] From 2021 to 2023, Wu held the role of special assistant to the President for technology and competition policy in the Biden White House, contributing to executive orders promoting competition in digital markets, though his emphasis on reviving early 20th-century antitrust approaches has drawn criticism for potentially undervaluing scale-driven efficiencies in innovation.[1][4]