Bryan H. Choi
- Associate Professor of Law

Bryan H. Choi's scholarship brings an interdisciplinary focus to software and AI safety. He is especially well-known for his work on software liability, which has been influential in policymaking discussions on national cybersecurity strategy.
The central theme that runs throughout Choi's teaching and research is a commitment to building and sustaining the Law and Computer Science movement. His scholarship has appeared in leading academic journals such as Harvard Journal of Law and Technology, Washington Law Review, Cardozo Law Review, Hastings Law Journal, Maryland Law Review, and Texas Law Review Online. In 2021, Professor Choi was awarded a National Science Foundation grant for interdisciplinary research to develop novel technical-legal approaches to assuring accountability of safety-critical software systems. He is serving as an Adviser for the ALI Principles Project on Civil Liability for Artificial Intelligence.
Choi brings a distinguished record of service to the Law and Computer Science community. Recent roles include Finance Co-Chair of the ACM Symposium on Computer Science and Law; Organizing Committee member of the Cybersecurity Law and Policy Scholars Conference; Steering Committee member of the Roundtable on Computer Science and Law (UPenn); Steering Committee member of the CS+Law Workshop series; and co-organizer of the AAAI Bridge Program on AI and Law.
Prior to joining CU, Choi was jointly appointed at the Ohio State University Moritz College of Law and Department of Computer Science and Engineering. Before that, he was a Faculty Fellow at the Center for Technology, Innovation and Competition (CTIC) at the University of Pennsylvania Law School, and the Director of Law and Media at the Information Society Project (ISP) at Yale Law School. In addition, he has been affiliated with the Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society at Harvard Law School and the Privacy Research Group (PRG) and Information Law Institute (ILI) at NYU School of Law.
Choi received his JD and AB in Computer Science from Harvard University. He clerked for the Honorable Leonard I. Garth of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit and the Honorable William C. Bryson of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit.