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Use our global calendar of privacy events to locate an event near you.

 

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Jan
27
Wed
CPDP Computers, Privacy, and Data Protection 2016
Jan 27 – Jan 29 all-day

For more information, click here.

Feb
15
Mon
Are You Protecting Your Company with Comprehensive Security & Trust? @ Messe Berlin
Feb 15 all-day
Feb
19
Fri
2nd International Conference on Information Systems Security and Privacy
Feb 19 – Feb 21 all-day

The International Conference on Information Systems Security and Privacy aims at creating a meeting point for researchers and practitioners that address security and privacy challenges that concern information systems, especially in organizations, including not only technological issues but also social issues. The conference welcomes papers of either practical or theoretical nature, presenting research or applications addressing all aspects of security and privacy, that concerns to organizations and individuals, thus creating new research opportunities.

Feb
22
Mon
GDPR Comprehensive 2016 @ SQUARE- Brussels Meeting Centre
Feb 22 – Feb 23 all-day

Preparing for and Implementing the EU General Data Protection Regulation

Feb
25
Thu
Privacy and Data Security Committee Brown Bag Lunch @ Harris, Wiltshire & Grannis LLP
Feb 25 @ 12:15 pm – 1:30 pm

FTC’s PrivacyCon: Lessons Learned. In January, the Federal Trade Commission brought together researchers and policy makers to explore cutting edge research on consumer privacy—research that is likely to shape privacy regulators’ policies and priorities for years to come. Join us for a discussion of the research that communications providers should know about when deciding how to use and protect consumer information, and the regulatory trends that this research may fuel.

Mar
3
Thu
The 11th Annual Privacy & Data Security Symposium “Beyond the Headlines: The Backstory from a Privacy & Data Security Perspective” @ Squire Patton Boggs, LLP
Mar 3 @ 2:00 pm – 6:00 pm

The FCBA Privacy and Data Security Committee and the ABA Forum on Communications Law will hold the 11th Annual Privacy & Data Security Symposium on Thursday, March 3 from 2:00 – 6:00 p.m. This CLE will be held at Squire Patton Boggs LLP, 2550 M Street, NW, Washington, DC.

Mar
4
Fri
TECHNOLOGY, PRIVACY, AND THE FUTURE OF EDUCATION
Mar 4 @ 2:00 pm – 6:00 pm

The Technology, Privacy, and the Future of Education symposium brings together educational specialists, journalists and academics to open a dialogue around the pedagogical, legal and ethical repercussions of the use of new technologies in educational environments.

Mar
8
Tue
Nymity Planner™ Webinar
Mar 8 @ 10:00 am – 11:00 am

Take control of privacy management with Nymity Planner™, the ideal solution for the privacy office to build, enhance, and structure privacy management throughout the organization. Using a structured approach based on privacy management activities, Nymity Planner™ helps the privacy office to manage status, keep records, plan, and report on privacy management throughout the organization. The solution enables privacy offices to ensure privacy management is embedded in all business and operational units. Privacy officers can also use Nymity Planner™ to generate a wide variety of reports, including progress, status, compliance, ownership, and maintenance reports.

Mar
17
Thu
Databite No. 73: Ilana Gershon
Mar 17 @ 12:00 pm – 1:00 pm

We all have moments in which someone’s use of new media baffles us, and we have to ask a friend how to respond. It often isn’t just the content of the message, it is also using that particular medium in that way which leaves us scratching our heads. In this talk, I discuss what anthropological concepts can help us understand our confusion. I will turn to LinkedIn as my case study and analyze the dilemmas people face when using LinkedIn as they look for a job. This will be my starting point to discuss how the newness of new media generates social dilemmas, especially for the people these days who are looking for a job.

Mar
21
Mon
Mar 21 – Mar 22 all-day

Advances in information and communications technology and the “datafication” of broadening fields of human endeavor are generating unparalleled quantities and kinds of data about individual and group behavior, much of which is now being deployed to assess risk by governments worldwide. For example, law enforcement personnel are expected to prevent terrorism through data-informed policing aimed at curbing extremism before it expresses itself as violence. And police are deployed to predicted “hot spots” based on data related to past crime. Judges are turning to data-driven metrics to help them assess the risk that an individual will act violently and should be detained before trial. Where some analysts celebrate these developments as advancing “evidence-based” policing and objective decision-making, others decry the discriminatory impact of reliance on data sets tainted by disproportionate policing in communities of color. Still others insist on a bright line between policing for community safety in countries with democratic traditions and credible institutions, and policing for social control in authoritarian settings. The 2016 annual conference will leverage the interdisciplinary strengths of the Robert L. Bernstein Institute to consider the human rights implications of the varied uses of predictive analytics by state actors. As a core part of this endeavor, the conference will examine—and seek to advance—the capacity of human rights practitioners to access, evaluate, and challenge risk assessments made through predictive analytics by governments worldwide.

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