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

 

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Jun
30
Tue
The Hong Kong Accountability Benchmarking Micro-Study Webinar
Jun 30 @ 8:00 am – 8:45 am

The Hong Kong Accountability Benchmarking Micro-Study shows that organizations in Hong Kong have made significant strides in proactively embracing privacy and data protection as part of their corporate governance responsibilities, shifting from compliance to accountability.

Join Nymity on June 30th for the live presentation and commentary on the results of the Study, a collaboration between the Office of The Privacy Commissioner of Personal Data, Hong Kong and Nymity.

Jul
2
Thu
The Policy Series featuring Travis LeBlanc, Chief of the Bureau of Enforcement, FCC @ Runway Incubator
Jul 2 @ 6:30 pm – 9:00 pm

It’s an exciting time to talk to the FCC. Innovation and regulators are running into each other everywhere: Net Neutrality, mobile payments, and massive changes in the telecom industry. Join us as DC comes to San Francisco to talk policy, technology, and innovation.

Join us for an exclusive fireside chat and Q&A with Travis LeBlanc, Chief of the Bureau of Enforcement, Federal Communications Commission (FCC).

 

Jul
9
Thu
Practical De-Identification @ EY
Jul 9 @ 1:00 pm – 6:00 pm

De-identification is a critical element in many privacy programs, and is an important part in every privacy practitioner’s toolbox. However, the complex technical, legal, and policy landscape around de-identification can be difficult to navigate. Policy debates over the definition of personally identifying information continue, even as new technologies arise to alternately challenge and strengthen de-identification efforts. Meanwhile, privacy professionals need to take reasonable steps to ensure the data sets they oversee can be both useful and protected.

The Future of Privacy Forum and Ernst & Young invite you to join us for a deep dive withleading de-identification experts into the technologies, laws, and controls that shape today’s de-identification best practices.

Our expert panelists will discuss:

  • The State of the Regulatory Framework
  • Understanding Identifiers and the Role of Pseudonymous Data
  • The Essential Role of Controls
  • Sector-specific Applications of De-Identification

The workshop will run from 1:00-6:00 pm on July 9, 2015, and will be followed by a cocktail reception sponsored by Anonos.

This program is free and open to the public, but please register above as space is limited.

Jul
15
Wed
The Crypto Summit @ The FHI 360
Jul 15 @ 8:00 am – 6:00 pm

Top government officials, including the head of the National Security Agency, have called for policy and technology experts to start a conversation on the viability of different proposals to allow government access to otherwise private conversations. Such calls ignore the more than two decades of discussions over back doors, key escrow, encryption mandates that have been ongoing since the so-called “crypto wars” in the 1990s. However, for much of the last two years the two sides have talked passed one another, or engaged in only perfunctory public discussions, too short and too formulaic to move past talking points and dig into the hard questions.

The Crypto Summit, brought to you by Access, will focus on digging beneath the surface of the debate to identify the areas of disagreement around the adoption and use of encryption and framing the questions that underlie these disagreements.

Jul
21
Tue
Backdoors and Crypto Wars Privacy Lab @ The Mozilla San Francisco Offices
Jul 21 @ 4:00 pm – 6:00 pm

For July’s Privacy Lab, guest speaker Gautam Hans from CDT will be joined by one or more technologists from EFF to talk about the current federal proposals for backdoors and how and why the crypto wars are unfolding (again) in Washington, as well as what we can affirmatively do to stop any weakening of security measures.

Privacy Lab is a meeting for people who are interested in digital privacy in the Bay Area, and is a follow-up to previous events held at Mozilla and other spaces over the last six months. The aim of this event is to bring together privacy professionals and privacy community members at non-profits, for-profits, and NGOs alike to foster communication and collaboration.

For more information and to register for the event, please click here.

Google DC Talks Presents Digital Gold @ Google DC
Jul 21 @ 5:00 pm

On Tuesday, July 21st, please join Google DC and Coin Center for a conversation about one of the most talked about technological innovations in recent years. New York Times reporter Nathaniel Popper’s new book Digital Gold: Bitcoin and the Inside Story of the Misfits and Millionaires Trying to Reinvent Money takes a look at the history of Bitcoin and the eccentric characters behind the the technology. He will be joined by Carter Dougherty, Bloomberg News reporter, as they discuss the history of Bitcoin.

Jul
23
Thu
Data Privacy: EU & U.S. Directives to Strengthen Security & Civil Liberties @ The Rayburn House Office Building, Rm. 2237
Jul 23 @ 8:00 am – 9:30 am

On Thursday, July 23, The European Institute will hold a special discussion with The Honorable Claude Moraes, Chairman of the European Parliament’s Committee on Civil Liberties, Justice and Home Affairs (LIBE) and The Honorable Jim Sensenbrenner, Chairman, Subcommittee on Crime, Terrorism, Homeland Security, and Investigations, Committee on the Judiciary, U.S. House of Representatives. This event is being organized in cooperation with the European Parliament Liaison Office and the Transatlantic Policy Network (TPN) as part of the 2015 Transatlantic Week, which includes discussion fora on a wide range of issues in US-EU relations.

RSVP to [email protected].

Re-Thinking Privacy in the Connected World @ The Capitol Visitor's Center
Jul 23 @ 12:00 pm – 1:00 pm

In this era of ubiquitous smart phones and billions of internet-enabled devices, the reality of data privacy and security is too often over-simplified — more data equals less privacy, which demands more regulation. This narrow view not only ignores reality, it may be putting innovation at risk.

With this lunch event, SIIA will lead a discussion that reconsiders the meaning of privacy, and examines the benefits — and costs — of restricting data collection and use. Speakers will look at how Big Data and the Internet of Things have spurred both increasing privacy concerns and a healthy debate about the public policy response. In exploring the intersection of innovation and privacy, the event will address technology’s individual and social benefits, and the ways in which it can enhance our ability to be both more public and more private. Speakers will also explore the ways in which misguided regulation could inhibit innovation and economic progress. Click here to RSVP.

Jul
24
Fri
How Much is Too Much? : US Government Secrecy and the New Half-Life of Secrets @ New America
Jul 24 @ 9:30 am – 11:00 am

Governments are finding it harder and harder to keep secrets. In a new paper, New America Cybersecurity Fellow and ex-OMB privacy chief, Peter Swire argues that the “half-life of secrets” is declining and that government agencies, especially those engaged in intelligence and national security, need to do a better job of adapting. But how best to do that? And what should Wikileaks and the Snowden revelations tell us about how the US Government is doing as it grapples with this in the real world? A government, like any organization, needs some secrets to operate. But where should they draw the line and how should that line by drawn?

Professor Swire will be joined by Stewart Baker and Siobhan Gorman for a conversation moderated by the Co-Director of New America’s Cybersecurity Initiative, Ian Wallace.

Data Across Borders: Treaties, Law Enforcement, and Digital Privacy in the Aftermath of Snowden @ The Rayburn House Office Building Room 2226
Jul 24 @ 12:00 pm – 1:00 pm

Do warrants allow law enforcement to reach into data centers across borders? Can 19th-century international legal processes keep up with 21st-century speed and innovation? Join the Congressional Internet Caucus Advisory Committee for a briefing on the law and policy that determines the reach of law enforcement into data stored outside of the United States and the important questions and issues the debate has raised.

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