Between 1968 and 1971, Peter Marx held the position of staff attorney with the
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. In the early 1980s, Marx assumed the roles vice president and general counsel of Chase Econometrics/
Interactive Data Corporation. During his tenure, Marx chaired numerous legal technology forums that focused on the future of law in technology and intellectual property, including the New England Computer Law Forum. He later became a partner at the Goulston & Storrs law firm in Boston, where he specialized in the emerging field of applying law to technology companies. Throughout the 1980s, Marx advocated for companies and clients to understand their rights better in order to seize potential market opportunities as industry laws evolved, and urged governments to adapt accordingly. Subsequently, he assumed the role of general counsel to the Information Industry Association, a five-hundred member firm group, and served as chairman of the New England Corporate Counsel Association (an industry group for northeastern
in-house counsel that he cofounded). which provided part-time counsel and legal help for technology companies unable to retain full-time in-house legal help. ==Media==