Stacey Tovino (Law) placed her latest article, “Going Rogue: Mobile Research Applications and the Right to Privacy,” in the Notre Dame Law Review. Building on her past works examining patient privacy and health information confidentiality, “Going Rogue” examines the privacy and security implications of mobile application-mediated health research conducted by independent scientists, citizen scientists, and patient researchers, as well as state law protections therefore. Finding that all 51 jurisdictions have at least one potentially applicable breach notification law, 36 jurisdictions have at least one potentially applicable data security law, and 14 jurisdictions have at least one potentially applicable data privacy law, “Going Rogue” proposes textual amendments to these laws that, if adopted, would create cross-industry privacy and security protections designed to keep pace with health-related big data, including mobile research data. Tovino’s article is an outgrowth of her service as a research author on a grant funded by the National Institutes of Health (“Addressing the Ethical, Legal, and Social Issues in Unregulated Health Research Using Mobile Devices,” led by principal investigators Mark Rothstein (University of Louisville School of Medicine) and John Wilbanks (Sage Therapeutics). She serves as the Judge Jack and Lulu Lehman Professor of Law at the Boyd School of Law.