Eldar is a Ph.D. candidate at the Zvi Meitar Center for Advanced Legal Studies at Tel Aviv University (Dissertation submitted). Eldar received his LL.B and LL.M (cum laude) in the field of law, specializing in Law & Technology, and his B.A in the field of psychology from the University of Haifa. Eldar is a member of the Israeli bar association since 2009.
In addition, Eldar served as the Haifa Center for Law and Technology Coordinator at Haifa University faculty of Law and as a teaching assistant. His paper on "Online Advertising via the Right to Privacy" won second place of the 2008 Aladdin award for outstanding student papers in the field of IP, and was published in the Haifa Center for Law & Technology booklet. During his Ph.D., Eldar published three papers in American law journals: The first, The French Revolution 2.0: Copyright and the Three Strikes Policy, was published in Harvard Journal of Sports and Entertainment Law (2011), and cited, inter alia, in Mick Haig Productions, e.K., v. Does 1-670 (Case No. 3:10-cv-1900-N) in the United States District Court, Northern District of Texas; the second, Copyrights in the Stream: The Battle on Webcasting, was published in Santa Clara Computer and High Technology Law Journal (2012), and was awarded the Cegla Prize for outstanding student papers in Tel-Aviv University (2013). The third, Copyrighted Crimes: The Copyrightability of Illegal Works, is forthcoming in Yale Journal of Law and Technology (2014), and was awarded the Cegla Prize for outstanding student papers in Tel-Aviv University (2014). Currently, Eldar serves a Post-doctoral Fellow at the Haifa Center for Law and Technology (HCLT) and the Academic coordinator of the Cyber Forum at Haifa University faculty of Law.