Adam Tanner is writer in residence at Harvard University’s Institute for Quantitative Social Science and the author of What Stays in Vegas: The World of Personal Data—Lifeblood of Big Business—and the End of Privacy as We Know It, which the Washington Post named one of fifty notable works of nonfiction in 2014.
Tanner served as a Reuters correspondent from 1995 to 2011, including as bureau chief for the Balkans (2008–2011) and San Francisco (2003–2008). He was also posted in Berlin, Moscow, and Washington, DC. He has appeared on CNN, Bloomberg TV, MSNBC, CNBC, NPR, the BBC, and VOA; has written for magazines including Scientific American, Forbes, Fortune, MIT Technology Review, and Slate; and has lectured across the United States and internationally. For the 2016–17 academic year he is the Snedden Chair in Journalism at the University of Alaska Fairbanks.