Home
Use our global calendar of privacy events to locate an event near you.
FILTER BY
The premier global event for the identity industry, the KNOW Identity Conference is the nexus for identity innovation, offering a uniquely differentiated, powerful, and immersive event that convenes the world’s most influential organizations and smartest minds across industries to shape the future of identity.
The 2018 KNOW Identity Conference will be held March 26-28, 2018 at the Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Center in Washington, D.C.
The Annual FPF Tech Lab Open House is an opportunity for us to welcome our members, friends, and colleagues in town for the IAPP Global Privacy Summit. Hosted at our home office in Washington, DC, this event provides a rare occasion for policymakers, regulators, and thought leaders to interact with the latest in privacy-impacting gadgets and new technologies.
Join us on Monday, March 26th, from 5:30 -7:30pm at the FPF Office and check out the latest in tech:
– Play with Smart Toys: CognitToys Dino, ChiP Robot, and more
– Outsmart our Smart Home gadgets
– Learn how Wi-Fi and Proximity Sensors can be used to track smartphones in our space
– Come face to face with facial recognition
– Experience virtual reality
– Share fun moments with Snap Spectacles
– And more!
Plus, network with locals and out-of-towners, engage in lively discussions about privacy, all while enjoying drinks and hors d’oeuvres.
Doors open at 5:30 pm; a short program begins at 6:00 pm with remarks from special visiting guests.
By invitation only. Please contact [email protected] for more information.
Although the EU is investing heavily in research in artificial intelligence (AI), the EU’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), which will go into effect in May, includes numerous provisions that will impede the development and use of AI in Europe. For example, the GDPR establishes a right to have a human review and explain algorithmic decisions, a requirement that will make it more difficult for companies to automate certain processes using AI. Similarly, the GDPR creates a right for consumers to demand that companies erase all copies of their personal data, a requirement that may undermine the integrity of algorithmic models. Furthermore, the huge fines associated with failing to comply with the GDPR, along with uncertainty about how to comply, poses risks even for companies doing their best to comply.
Join the Center for Data Innovation for an overview of a new report outlining how the GDPR will impact the development and use of AI, and a panel discussion about what Europe should do to support increased AI development and adoption.
Follow the conversation on Twitter using #datainnovation.
Although the EU is investing heavily in research in artificial intelligence (AI), the EU’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), which will go into effect in May, includes numerous provisions that will impede the development and use of AI in Europe. For example, the GDPR establishes a right to have a human review and explain algorithmic decisions, a requirement that will make it more difficult for companies to automate certain processes using AI. Similarly, the GDPR creates a right for consumers to demand that companies erase all copies of their personal data, a requirement that may undermine the integrity of algorithmic models. Furthermore, the huge fines associated with failing to comply with the GDPR, along with uncertainty about how to comply, poses risks even for companies doing their best to comply.
Join the Center for Data Innovation for an overview of a new report outlining how the GDPR will impact the development and use of AI, and a panel discussion about what Europe should do to support increased AI development and adoption.
Date and Time:
- Tuesday, March 27, 2018, from 9.00 to 10.30 AM
Location:
- Press Club Brussels, Rue Froissart 95, 1000 Brussels, Belgium
Confirmed Speakers:
- Professor Hugues Bersini, AI Researcher, Université Libre de Bruxelles
- Richard Middleton, Managing Director and Co-Head of Policy Division, Association for Financial Markets in Europe
- Victoria de Posson, Public Policy Consultant, FTI Consulting
- Corinna Schulze, Director of EU Government Relations, SAP
- Nick Wallace, Senior Policy Analyst, Center for Data Innovation
Follow the conversation on Twitter using #datainnovation.
This series of 3 one day roundtables for peer group exchange will focus on managing the EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) compliance process. Regulators and policy makers will not be invited to these roundtables.
Whatever happens with Brexit, your organisation will continue to trade with some of the 30 countries in the European Economic Area and you need to ensure that your organisation is complying with the GDPR. The emphasis will be on sharing experience to help you organise and manage the process rather than giving legal advice on the impact of the GDPR. Hosts will report on progress in their organisations. In addition, you should expect to discuss your plans with the group. Everyone learns and benefits from this participatory process. Each Roundtable will be limited to 25 people to facilitate discussion in a relaxed atmosphere. Lunch is included at each Roundtable, ideal for networking. GDPR HELP! ROUNDTABLES – Session 3: On The Starting Blocks Date: 28 March 2018, 09.00h.-17.30h. Programme: Registration: Each session qualifies for 6 CPD hours. Every Privacy Laws & Business event qualifies for accredited CPD hours for the purposes of the England and Wales Solicitors Regulation Authority’s requirements. Please quote AQJ/PLBU when applying for the points with the SRA. |
featuring author, Jennifer E. Rothman, Professor of Law and Joseph Scott Fellow, Loyola Law School
Tuesday, April 3, 2018 at 12:00 pm
Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard University
Harvard Law School campus
Wasserstein Hall, Milstein East A (Room 2036, second floor)
RSVP required to attend in person
Watch Live Starting at 12pm
(video and audio will be archived on this page following the event)
There are many benefits to making health data
available for secondary purposes, such as academic
research and drug development. One legal basis for
doing so is to obtain patient consent, however, this
has a number of practical challenges. The main
alternative legal basis is to de-identify the data. This
presentation will describe risk-based de-identification
techniques that have been in use for more than a
decade globally to de-identify health data. The basic
principle is to balance the risk of identity disclosure
with data utility that would facilitate beneficial uses of
the data. Methodological as well as practical
considerations will be discussed.
==============CALL FOR PAPERS==============************************************** Privacy by Design in PracticeTrack at the 33rd ACM Symposium on Applied Computing************************************** The Symposium
———————
For over thirty years has the ACM Symposium on Applied Computing been a primary gathering forum for applied computer scientists, computer engineers, software engineers, and application developers from around the world. SAC 2018 is sponsored by the ACM Special Interest Group on Applied Computing (SIGAPP www.acm.org/sigapp). Its proceedings are published by ACM; they are also available on the web through the ACM Digital Library www.acm.org/dl. More information about SAC 2018 can be found at www.sigapp.org/sac/sac2018/. The Privacy by Design in Pract
ice track
—————————————————
The aim of this track is to promote research on privacy-preserving technologies to be used in practice. “Privacy by Design” is a requirement in the new EU data protection regulation, which will be applied in the EU countries from May 2018. Thus, privacy needs to be considered by engineers from the beginning and built in to newly developed systems properly.
The track seeks submissions from academia, industry and public authorities (e.g. data protection agencies) presenting novel research on how to implement Privacy by Design in practice. Examples of successful projects where Privacy by Design has been implemented in practice are especially welcome. Legal researchers bringing in their view on Privacy by Design are also very welcome to submit papers to this track to foster multi-disciplinary research. Topics of the track include, but are not limited to:
– Privacy Engineering
– Privacy-enhancing Technologies
– Anonymization and Pseudonymization
– Privacy in the Internet of Things (e.g. Smart Home, Smart City, Connected Cars, Smart TV, Smart Grid, etc.)
– Privacy and Quantified Self
– Privacy Laws and their impacts on technology
– Conflict between Privacy and SecurityImportant Dates
———————-
September 15, 2017: Submission of regular papers and SRC research abstracts
November 10, 2017: Notification of paper and SRC acceptance/rejection
November 25, 2017: Camera-ready copies of accepted papers/SRC
December 10, 2017: Author registration due date
April 9 – 13, 2018: SAC 2018 in Pau, FranceTrack Program Chairs
—————————–
– Ronald Petrlic, Commissioner for Data Protection Baden-Württemberg
– Christoph Sorge, CISPA, Saarland UniversityProgram Committee
—————————-
Christoph Bösch, Ulm University, Germany
Claude Castelluccia, INRIA France
Tooska Dargahi, University of Rome Tor Vergata, Italy
Martin Degeling, CMU USA
Isao Echizen, National Institute of Informatics, Japan
Felix Gomez Marmol, Universidad de Murcia, Spain
Bart Knijnenburg, Clemson University, USA
Sebastian Pape, Goethe University Frankfurt, Germany
Andreas Reiter, TU Graz, Austria
Burkhard Schafer, University of Edinburgh, GB
Francesc Sebe Feixas, University of Lleida, Spain
Dirk Westhoff, University of Applied Sciences Offenburg, Germany
Submission Guidelines
——————————
The submission guidelines must be strictly followed for a paper to be considered.
Original papers from the above mentioned or other related areas will be considered. Only full papers about original and unpublished research are sought. Parallel submission to other conferences or other tracks of SAC 2018 is forbidden. Each paper must be BLIND in the sense that it must only include its title but not mention anything about its authors. Self-citation must be in third person, such as “Smith et al. [citation] showed…”. All submissions must be formatted using the ACM conference-specific LaTeX style, which can be obtained from the symposium web page. All papers must be submitted by the deadline stated above.
Papers must be submitted through the symposium-wide paper management system for SAC 2018 athttps://www.softconf.com/h/sac2018. Review and publication of accepted papers
———————————————————
Each paper will be fully refereed and undergo a blind review process by at least three referees. Accepted papers will be published in the ACM SAC 2018 proceedings. Some papers may only be accepted as poster papers, and will be published as extended abstracts in the proceedings.
Student research abstract competition
—————————————————
Graduate students are invited to submit research abstracts at www.softconf.com/h/sac-src2018 following the instructions published at SAC 2018 website. Submission of the same abstract to multiple tracks is not allowed.
More information can be found at: www.legalinf.de/pbd2018