Karlin Lillington

Karlin J. Lillington is an Irish technology and business journalist, notable for her work with The Irish Times, The Guardian, Wired, Salon.com and other newspapers, magazines and online publishers. Born in Canada and growing up in California, she holds a PhD in Anglo-Irish Literature from Trinity College Dublin. Her work also formed a basis for a judicial appeal which voided the European Union's Data Retention Directive.[1] She has been a member of the board of Ireland's public service broadcaster, Raidió Teilifís Éireann, and is a long-serving member of the advisory board of Dublin's Science Gallery.

Karlin Lillington
Lillington in 2015
Lillington in 2015
Born1959 (age 64–65)
Canada
OccupationJournalist, academic
LanguageEnglish
CitizenshipIreland, US, Canada
Alma materUniversity College Dublin, Trinity College Dublin, UC Santa Barbara
GenreNon-fiction
SubjectTechnology and its interaction with business, society and culture; privacy; the poetry of Seamus Heaney
Years active1980–present
Notable awardsOutstanding Achievement at University College Dublin Smurfit School Business Journalist Awards
SpouseChris Horn
Website
indigo.ie/~karlin/kjhome.htm

Early life and education

Lillington was born in Canada, and moved to California at an early age.[2] Her father, Dr Glen Lillington, a half-Icelandic Canadian, from Winnipeg, was a professor of respiratory medicine at Stanford University and UC Davis. Her mother, Ellen (née Place), married Glen in 1957, and they settled in California in 1960, living in the college town of Davis, and moving to Menlo Park on his retirement. Karlin is the eldest of three children, the others being boys.[3][4]

Lillington studied at the University of California from the mid-1970s, at UC Santa Barbara.[5] She took a degree in literature, and later worked, for about a decade, towards a PhD in Anglo-Irish literature, with a focus on the poetry of Seamus Heaney.[6]

She visited Ireland to pursue postgraduate studies in Anglo-Irish Literature at University College Dublin, reading for an M.Phil. After this, she transferred to Trinity College Dublin where she read for a second M.Phil. in Anglo-Irish Literature, her 1987 dissertation being, Borrow the longship's swimming tongue: Scandinavian imagery in Wintering Out and North.[7] She hosted Heaney on a visit he made to California in the early 1990s.[6] She published her PhD thesis, Gender and metaphor in the poetry of Seamus Heaney, at TCD in 1995.[8]

Career

Early stages

Lillington taught at San Jose State University in the early 1990s, while pursuing her PhD, and it was at this stage that she secured her first e-mail account and pre-World Wide Web Internet access, and her interest in matters of technology developed from this.[6] She had worked in student journalism at UC Santa Barbara, including holding the post of editor of The Daily Nexus paper,[5] and of the biweekly magazine, Portal.[9] She began to work in professional journalism while waiting to defend her PhD thesis in Ireland.[6]

The Irish Times

Her work for The Irish Times, comprising hundreds of pieces, dates back to at least 1996. The first article in the paper's archives was on the arts, specifically the launch of the Oxford Companion to Irish Literature,[10] while the majority were on the interface of technology with society and business.[11] She has, however, also written in other areas, and sometimes followed up on such pieces, writing, for example, on the need for greater animal welfare control of puppy and horse breeding in 2004, and, frustrated that her article was still widely quoted because the problems had not changed, returning to the topic in 2017.[12]

Lillington achieved prominence as the paper's technology correspondent,[13] and in Prof. Terence Brown's detailed history and review of the Irish Times and its influence as Ireland's newspaper of record, he credited Lillington with a broad public impact: "information technology in the 2000s became a major news story ... reported on expertly in the Irish Times by Karlin Lillington, a young Californian who had come to Ireland to study its literature, who had carved out a career for herself explaining the communications revolution to the Irish public. Middle-aged readers were familiarized in her lively columns with the argot of a new field: 'spam', 'identity fraud', 'downloads', 'search engine', ..."[14] Brown further highlighted a selection of her articles, including "Our Past Is Not So Far Behind Us", which mused on Ireland's past emigration situation, and the new technology multinationals, on the potential conflict between blogging and journalism, and on the conflict between Ireland's need for immigrants to power "new economy"-based growth and fears of the potential impact of such migration.[14]

The Guardian and others

Lillington wrote regularly for The Guardian from at least 1997. She has also produced articles for Wired,[15] New Scientist, Salon.com, Red Herring, the Sunday Business Post, the Sunday Times and many other outlets.[2][16] She wrote an extensive essay, Ireland, Technology and the Language of the Future for journal The Irish Review.[17]

Technology and the arts

Lillington has written one-off pieces which bring together her literary studies and technology, such as a discussion around James Joyce and the concept of hypertext,[18] and on the digital arts, including an interview with the founding director of the Arthouse Multimedia Centre, Aileen MacKeogh,[19] and a later article on the demise of Arthouse.[20] She has been a speaker at many conferences and summer schools, including the Government of Ireland's invitation-only Digital Summit[21] and the MacGill Summer School.[22]

Social media and privacy

Lillington has raised a number of privacy concerns, especially around social media, and also online platform nuisance issues, and cancelled her account on LinkedIn over the latter.[23] Her work also grounded the Digital Rights Ireland appeal to the European Court of Justice which resulted in the voiding of the EU Data Retention Directive.[24][1] In 2018 she was one of the expert witnesses called before the Grand International Committee on Disinformation, and the Oireachtas Joint Committee on Communications, Climate Action and Environment, speaking about security and privacy risks.[25]

Media appearances and podcasts

Lillington has also appeared on BBC and RTÉ radio, and on television with RTÉ and TV3.[2] In 2009 she produced her own series of podcasts, technoculture, including interviews with Chris Horn of IONA Technologies and leading designer Professor Anthony Dunne of Dunne & Raby,[26] and has participated in other podcasts, such as a memorial for Mary Mulvihill with Róisín Ingle,[27] and two concerning pets.[28]

Voluntary and public service roles

Lillington has served as a member of the Leonardo Group, the advisory board of Dublin's Science Gallery, from its foundation year, 2008.[13] She has also served a term as a ministerial appointee on the board of Ireland's national public service broadcaster, Raidió Teilifís Éireann (RTÉ),[21] and on the board of the Dublin International Piano Competition.[25] She has also been a judge for the Mary Mulvihill Award.[29] She is, as of 2021, a member of the board of the contemporary music festival, New Music Dublin.[30] She has also spoken, with Chris Horn, for the Front Line Defenders human rights charity.[31]

Recognition

Lillington was awarded the Outstanding Achievement Award at the University College Dublin Smurfit School Business Journalist Awards in 2019.[1]

Personal life

As of the 2000s, Lillington lived in Dublin, and in 2018, after over 30 years of full or partial residence, became an Irish citizen, writing an account of her citizenship ceremony for the Irish Times.[32] Jointly with Chris Horn, her husband as of 2021, she has been a senior sponsor of the Irish National Opera since its launch year.[33] She has written and managed a specialist site for Cavalier King Charles Spaniels;[34] and founded a Cavalier King Charles Spaniel rescue charity;[28][35] she did a podcast on this in 2017.[28]

References

External links