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![February Privacy Lab - Cyber Futures: What Will Cybersecurity Look Like in 2020 and Beyond? @ UC Berkeley | Berkeley | California | United States](https://privacycalendar.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/privacy-lab-300x152.png)
CLTC will present on Cybersecurity Futures 2020, a report that poses five scenarios for what cybersecurity may look like in 2020, extrapolating from technological, social, and political forces that are already shaping our world today. CLTC grantees will also present findings from their research. Livestream and recording will be available for remote attendees. |
![Policies that Promote Growth: Best Practices for Privacy and Cross-Border Data Flow @ U.S. Chamber of Commerce | Washington | District of Columbia | United States](https://privacycalendar.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/U..S.-Chamber-logo-500-300x204.jpg)
you to attend
Best Practices for Privacy and
Cross-Border Data Flows
Registration opens at 8:45 am
former Director of Digital Economy, U.S. Department of Commerce
Innovation Foundation (ITIF)
Privacy regulations continue to pop up around the world. As no two regulations are the same, the business community is faced with interpreting and complying with different laws across multiple jurisdictions. Our discussion will describe some best practices and strategies for how the business community and privacy regulators can better engage to ensure compliance.
If you have any questions about the event or encounter an issue with the registration link, please contact Kara Sutton at [email protected].
![Big Data and Artificial Intelligence: The Human Rights Dimension for Business @ Berkeley | Berkeley | California | United States](https://privacycalendar.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/big-data-and-ai-300x150.jpg)
Please join the UC Berkeley Haas School of Business and the Microsoft Technology and Human Rights Center for their first Annual Conference on Business, Technology, and Human Rights. The 2017 conference will be a full- day event of engaging dialogue. Through panel discussions and breakout sessions, corporate practitioners as well as human rights and AI experts from academia, civil society, and government will explore questions such as:
- What are the human rights implications of big data, algorithmic decision-making and artificial intelligence?
- How can big data and AI help create practical solutions to human rights challenges?
- How should companies develop and use big data and AI responsibly?
The conference includes lunch and will be followed by a closing reception.
Draft Agenda
8:15am Light Breakfast & Registration
8:30am Welcome and Opening: Big Data and Artificial Intelligence – The Human Rights Dimension for Business
9:00am Session: The Human Rights Risks of AI and Big Data
10:15am Networking Break
10:45am Session: The Corporate Scope of Responsibility in Light of AI and Big Data
12:00pm Networking Lunch
12:30pm Lunchtime Interview: How the IT Sector is Partnerning to Develop Responsible AI
1:30pm Session: Good Jobs in the Age of Automation | How can companies responsibly deploy robotics and AI and what is the responsibility of business to address risks?
2:45pm Networking Break
3:15pm Session: Preventing Discrimination | Are algorithms part of the problem or the solution?
4:15pm Session: Looking to the Future | What does the future of AI hold?
5:30pm Networking Reception
![](https://privacycalendar.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/truste-logo2-300x300.jpg)
- Cover latest Privacy Shield regulatory updates
- Examine relationship between Privacy Shield, GDPR & other frameworks
- Share how they have leveraged Privacy Shield for other projects
Spots are limited — make sure to register for this webinar to increase the return on privacy shield investment!
*Can’t make the webinar? Register anyway! We’ll send you a followup email with the slides and recording after the webinar!*
TRUSTe Webinar FAQs
Click here for answers to the most commonly asked webinar related questions!
![](https://info.truste.com/rs/846-LLZ-652/images/david-fowler.jpg)
DAVID FOWLER
![](https://info.truste.com/rs/846-LLZ-652/images/amanda-gratchner.png)
AMANDA GRATCHNER
Global Privacy Counsel, NAVEX Global
![](https://info.truste.com/rs/846-LLZ-652/images/kroyal.jpg)
K ROYAL – JD, CIPP/E/US
Senior Privacy Consultant, TRUSTe
![2017 Networked Privacy Workshop at CSCW @ Portland | Portland | Oregon | United States](https://privacycalendar.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/cscw1-300x284.jpg)
Over the past eight years, we have run a number of workshops at HCI conferences that bring together diverse researchers to work through some of the biggest challenges facing privacy research, policy, and design. This year’s workshop, being held at CSCW in Portland, is titled, “In Whose Best Interest? Exploring the Real, Potential, and Imagined Ethical Concerns in Privacy-Focused Agendas.”
Information about this year’s CSCW workshops can be found here: https://cscw.acm.org/2017/submit/workshops.php
Position papers should be submitted by 11:59pm PT on December 14, 2016 to [email protected]. Questions about the workshop should also be directed to this email address. More information about this workshop’s call can be found on the Call for Participation page.
Details of this schedule are subject to change.
8:30 AM – 9 AM: Welcome and Introductions
9 AM – 9:45 AM: Participant Introductions and Lightning Talk Presentations
9:45 AM – 10:30 AM: (Theme 1: Ethics and Privacy in Research)
10:30 AM – 11 AM: Coffee Break
11 AM – 12:30 PM: Panel Discussion: Privacy, social computing, and ethics experts from both academia and industry
12:30 PM – 2 PM Lunch
2 PM – 2:45 PM: (Theme 2: Ethics of Networked Privacy Research) Large-group Discussion
2:45 PM – 3:30 PM: Break-out Activities: Balancing privacy, ethics, and research with other values
3:30 PM – 4:00 PM: Coffee Break
4 PM – 4:30 PM: Report/Synthesize: Summarizing break out session outcomes
4:30 PM – 5:30 PM: Next Steps: Drafting a future roadmap on balancing ethics and privacy values in research and design
![Key Federal and State Regulatory Trends in Privacy to Watch in 2017 and Beyond – Direct from the Regulators @ Washington, DC](https://privacycalendar.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/iapp-logo-300x153.png)
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![Modern Surveillance Under the Trump Administration @ Washington, DC | Washington | District of Columbia | United States](https://privacycalendar.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/just-security-300x49.jpg)
Thursday, March 2nd, 5:30-7:00 pm (cocktails and light refreshments to follow)
Abramson Auditorium, NYU Washington Center
1307 L Street, NW, Washington, DC 20036
Join Just Security for a fireside chat on the current state of U.S. surveillance and a celebration of Jennifer Granick‘s new book, “American Spies: Modern Surveillance, Why You Should Care, And What to Do About It.” Opening remarks by Senator Ron Wyden.
Speakers:
Senator Ron Wyden, (senior United States Senator for Oregon)
Jennifer Granick, (Director of Civil Liberties, Stanford Center for Internet and Society)
Charlie Savage, (Washington Correspondent, The New York Times)
This event is approved for 1 CLE credit in the Areas of Professional Practice category. The event will be appropriate for both newly admitted and experienced attorneys and is also open to the public.
![The Societal Impact of Robotics Forum @ New York | New York | New York | United States](https://privacycalendar.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/robot-lab.jpg)
Three Leading Minds Talk on the Impact of Robotics:
• David Rose of of Singularity University: “What Jobs Will Exist In 50 Years…”
• Jules Polonetsky of the Future of Privacy Forum: “Protecting Your Privacy and Legal Rights In the Age of Alexa”
• Nuzha Yakoob of Festo Robotics: What Can Nature Teach Us About Robotics & The Future of Manufacturing
![IAPP Web Conference: Introduction to U.S. Privacy Law @ Online](https://privacycalendar.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/iapp-logo-300x153.png)
IAPP Web Conference:
Introduction to U.S. Privacy Law
Broadcast Date: March 3, 2017
Time: 10:00 – 11:00 am PT, 1:00 – 2:00 pm ET, 6:00 – 7:00 pm GMT
Free for IAPP members and nonmembers
As information privacy attorneys, we frequently hear certain questions from law students and lawyers with an interest in joining our field: What are the sources of privacy law? What does a privacy lawyer do? How do I start? Should I study administrative law? What about international law? And, most importantly, how do I get a job in privacy?
Lawyers who specialize in information privacy enjoy a surprisingly diverse set of career paths. Though many work in law firms, others deploy their expertise within companies, nonprofits, consulting agencies, advocacy groups, and all levels of government. Privacy lawyers ensure compliance with laws and regulations while also enforcing best practices based on broad cultural norms. They tackle policy questions that affect the day-to-day lives of anyone who uses an internet-connected device. And, increasingly, their work has a direct impact on an enormous swathe of the global economy.
Designed for those just starting out in the field of privacy law, this web conference will provide a crash course in the legal foundations of privacy in the U.S. along with practical examples from the daily lives of privacy attorneys. This hour-long webinar will include time for questions and answers and a useful handout with resources for getting started in the privacy profession.
Moderator:
Cobun Keegan, CIPP/US, CIPM, Westin Fellow, IAPP
Panelists:
Ariel Brio, CIPP/US, Privacy and Data Counsel, Sony PlayStation
Arielle Brown, CIPP/US, Associate, Hogan Lovells
Kelsey Finch, CIPP/US, Policy Counsel, Future of Privacy Forum
As an additional, related reference, “Privacy Law Fundamentals 2017″—the classic privacy law desk reference—is now available for pre-order. Get your copy here:
Privacy Law Fundamentals 2017, The Fourth Edition
Eligible CPE credit: CIPP/US and CIPP/G
1.0 CPE credit