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Jul
24
Tue
Machine Learning in Engineering: Panacea or Deep Trouble? | Seminar @ Bahen Centre for Information Technology
Jul 24 @ 2:00 pm – 3:00 pm
Machine Learning in Engineering: Panacea or Deep Trouble? | Seminar @ Bahen Centre for Information Technology | Toronto | Ontario | Canada

Konstantinos N. (Kostas) Plataniotis

Abstract: The recent rise of artificial intelligence (AI) can be attributed to the success of deep neural networks (DNN) in tasks, such as image classification and natural language processing.  The availability of curated, large scale and diverse data sets, access to powerful computing infrastructure, and theoretical advances are the main driving factors behind the resurgence. Machine learning (ML), deep neural nets, smart analytics are all trending tools promising disruptive contributions capable of solving real-world problems. Thus, it is not surprising to see a sustained push from industry, policy makers, and government bodies towards accelerating developments in machine learning. The purpose of this presentation is to provide an environmental scan of the research landscape, introduce, in a tutorial style, aspects of the research machinery, and discuss intuition, utility and expectations.

Bio: Konstantinos N. (Kostas) Plataniotis is a Professor and the Bell Canada Chair in Multimedia with the Electrical and Computer Engineering Department, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada. He is the co-founder and inaugural Director-Research for the Identity, Privacy and Security Institute (IPSI), University of Toronto, and he served as the Director of the Knowledge Media Design Institute (KMDI), University of Toronto, from January 2010 to July 2012. His research interests are knowledge and digital media design, multimedia systems, biometrics, image and signal processing, communications systems, and machine learning. Dr. Plataniotis is a Registered Professional Engineer in the Province of Ontario, a Fellow of IEEE, a Fellow of the Engineering Institute of Canada. He was the IEEE Signal Processing Society Vice President for Membership (2014–2016) and he has served as the Editor-in-Chief of IEEE SIGNAL PROCESSING LETTERS, as Technical Co-Chair of the IEEE 2013 International Conference in Acoustics, Speech and Signal Processing, and as General Co-Chair for the 2017 IEEE GlobalSIP Conference. Dr. Plataniotis is the General Co-Chair for the 2018 International Conference on Image Processing (ICIP-18) and the General Co-Chair for the 2021 IEEE International Conference on Acoustics, Speech and Signal Processing (ICASSP 2021).

Internet Law & Policy Trivia Night @ Buffalo Billiards
Jul 24 @ 6:00 pm – 10:00 pm
Jul
25
Wed
Getting to Know the New European Data Protection Board (EDPB) @ Online
Jul 25 @ 9:00 am – 10:00 am
Getting to Know the New European Data Protection Board (EDPB) @ Online

May 25th didn’t just mark the start of the GDPR Enforcement Era, it also saw the arrival of the European Data Protection Board (EDPB). Replacing the Article 29 Working Party, this new body is at the centre of the new data protection landscape in the EU with a remit to ensure that the data protection law is applied consistently across the EU and to ensure effective cooperation amongst Data Protection Authorities. The Board will not only issue guidelines on the interpretation of core concepts of the GDPR, but also be called to rule by binding decisions on disputes regarding cross-border processing.

This webinar will introduce the new GDPR enforcer and provide insights and best practices to help you understand the latest regulatory priorities including GDPR certification and ePrivacy Regulation.

Can’t make it? Register anyway – we’ll automatically send you an email with both the slides and recording after the webinar!

TrustArcWebinar FAQs: Click here for answers to the most commonly asked webinar related questions.

#trustarcGDPRevents
Jul
26
Thu
The future of online privacy: To legislate or not @ Brookings Institution Saul/Zilkha room
Jul 26 @ 2:00 pm – 3:00 pm
The future of online privacy: To legislate or not @ Brookings Institution Saul/Zilkha room  | Washington | District of Columbia | United States

Following a series of data breaches and privacy scandals, most notably the controversy surrounding Facebook’s engagement with political firm Cambridge Analytica, there has been increasing discussion over whether Congress should establish comprehensive legislation to protect American consumers’ online privacy. Achieving broad privacy legislation will be a challenge for legislators, given the rapid pace of innovation, but in the coming months, Congress may feel compelled to act. With the recent implications of the EU’s adoption of the General Data Protection Regulations (GDPR), public pressure may also encourage congressional action.

On July 26, the Center for Technology Innovation at Brookings will host a panel discussion to explore a comprehensive framework for U.S. privacy legislation. The discussion will address both the opportunities and challenges associated with such legislation during a period where big data analytics are fueling the new economy and online consumer data is being manipulated and mined for undemocratic purposes. What should be included in federal privacy legislation? Is either the GDPR or the California Consumer Privacy Act a good model?  What types of companies and business models should be covered by legislation? Should different types of companies in the internet ecosystem be regulated the same under a federal system? Which government entity should be responsible for enforcing online privacy guardrails?

After the session, panelists will take audience questions.

Jul
31
Tue
July 2018 Privacy Lab – Privacy by Design panel @ Uber, San Francisco
Jul 31 @ 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm
July 2018 Privacy Lab - Privacy by Design panel @ Uber, San Francisco  | San Francisco | California | United States
Please join us on Tuesday, July 31, 2018 from 6-8pm at Uber (555 Market Street, San Francisco) for a Privacy by Design panel.
Moderator: Zach Singleton, Privacy Product Manager, Uber
Panelists:
  • Hannah Poteat, Privacy Counsel & DPO, GitHub
  • Noah Johnson, Co-founder & Chief Privacy Officer, Oasis Labs
  • Debra Farber, Sr Dir, Privacy Strategy, BigID

Doors will open at 6 & we’ll start the program at 6:30pm.

Aug
1
Wed
Digital Media, Technology & Privacy Seminar “The Value of First-Party Data in the Ever Changing Marketing Landscape” @ Davis & Gilbert LLP, New York
Aug 1 @ 5:30 pm – 8:30 pm
Digital Media, Technology & Privacy Seminar "The Value of First-Party Data in the Ever Changing Marketing Landscape" @ Davis & Gilbert LLP, New York | New York | New York | United States

RSVP: July 27, 2018 to Cheyenne Blount / mailto:[email protected]/ 646.673.8338

With an increased focus on consumer privacy issues both in the United States and Europe, first-party data, such as a company’s customer database, is becoming a safer and easier asset to exploit. That said, there are still privacy issues to consider whenever consumer data is leveraged for marketing purposes. As regulations continue to evolve, streamlining processes for compliance that minimizes impact on customers has become more complicated, yet more important than ever.

For this program, our panel of speakers – comprised of data privacy legal experts and industry leaders who are already dealing with these rapidly changing developments – will address the following topics and issues:

  • Privacy-compliant methods for leveraging first party data.
  • Opportunities and challenges associated with various data sources and technology practices.
  • Best practices for staying on top of regulatory, self-regulatory and legislative developments.
  • What to do if/when a company receives an enforcement notice.

Speakers:
Gary Kibel, Digital Media, Technology & Privacy Partner, Davis & Gilbert LLP
Andy Dale, Esq., General Counsel, VP Global Privacy, SessionM
David Hale, Chief Privacy Officer, TD Ameritrade
Noga Rosenthal, Esq., Chief Privacy Officer, Epsilon

Registration and Networking: 5:30 – 6:15 p.m.
Seminar: 6:15 – 7:30 p.m.
Cocktail and Network Reception: 7:30 – 8:30 p.m.

Location:
Davis & Gilbert LLP
1740 Broadway, 19th Floor
(between 55th and 56th Streets)
New York City

Aug
3
Fri
Partnership on AI Open House @ Partnership on AI, San Francisco
Aug 3 @ 4:30 pm – 7:00 pm
Partnership on AI Open House @ Partnership on AI, San Francisco | San Francisco | California | United States

We’re excited to announce the opening of the Partnership on AI’s new headquarters! Come visit our San Francisco office to meet our staff, our members, and to learn more about our current work and community. You can expect casual mingling with brief remarks from our leadership and board.

Drinks and small bites will be served. PAI Partners and friends welcome; RSVP required to attend.

Aug
9
Thu
Three Pillars of Privacy Awareness @ U.S. Dept. of Veterans Affairs
Aug 9 @ 8:30 am – 12:30 pm
Three Pillars of Privacy Awareness @ U.S. Dept. of Veterans Affairs | Washington | District of Columbia | United States

Join VA Privacy Service and leading privacy experts on August 9, 2018 in the G.V. “Sonny” Montgomery Veterans Auditorium, Room 230, at 810 Vermont Ave in Washington, D.C. for exciting sessions on fostering privacy awareness across the individual, the agency and the broader community.

Experts will discuss individual responsibility in creating a culture of privacy, how Federal agencies are addressing privacy concerns, and opportunities for collaboration with external partners to ensure privacy and security on all fronts.

Attendees are eligible to receive Continuing Privacy Education credits. VA employees are also eligible to receive Talent Management System credits for attending.

Agenda:

8:15 a.m.– 8:30 a.m.

Arrive

___________________________________

8:30 a.m.– 9:05 a.m.

Welcome, Opening Remarks, and Keynote Address

___________________________________

9:05 a.m.–9:55 a.m.

Pillar I: The Individual

___________________________________

9:55 a.m.–10:10 a.m.

Networking I

___________________________________

10:10 a.m.–11:00 a.m.

Pillar II: The Agency

___________________________________

11:00 a.m.–11:15 a.m.

Networking II

___________________________________

11:15 a.m.–12:05 p.m.

Pillar III: The Broader Community

___________________________________

12:05 p.m.–12:15 p.m.

Closing Session

___________________________________

12:15 a.m.–12:30 a.m.

Networking III

Continuing Education credit:

Attendees are eligible to receive Continuing Privacy Education credits.

VA employees are also eligible to receive Talent Management System credits for attending.

Aug
11
Sat
Workshop at University of Houston on Privacy and Security @ University of Houston
Aug 11 @ 10:00 am – 3:30 pm
Workshop at University of Houston on Privacy and Security @ University of Houston | Houston | Texas | United States

The workshop will discuss security and privacy issues of broader significance as well as technical challengesThis workshop is not limited to CS people. We invite applications from Social Science, Mathematics, Economics and Engineering Departments also.

Aug
17
Fri
W3C Workshop on Permissions and User Consent Call for Participation
Aug 17 all-day
W3C Workshop on Permissions and User Consent Call for Participation

Sensors, devices, and rich Web APIs bring novel and complex threats to user privacy along with their heightened capabilities. Users may have trouble understanding the nature of the information they disclose and the threats presented by those disclosures. Deciding when and how to seek a user’s consent (“permission”) or when that consent can be inferred or bypassed has been challenging, with different APIs, operating systems, and browsers handling things in different ways.

This workshop brings together security and privacy experts, UI/UX researchers, browser vendors, mobile OS developers, API authors, Web publishers and users to address the privacy, security and usability challenges presented by the complex and overlapping variety of permissions and consent systems that are currently presented for hardware sensors, device capabilities and applications on the Web.

The scope includes:

  • user consent;
  • bundling of permissions;
  • lifetime/duration of permissions;
  • permission inheritance to iframes and other embedded elements;
  • relation to same origin policy;
  • UIs and controls;
  • interaction with private browsing modes;
  • implicit permission grants;
  • progressive permission grants;
  • cross-stack permissions: how OS, browser, and web app permissions interact;
  • permission transparency;
  • relation to regulatory requirements;
  • special considerations for systems that use the browser as a pass-through (e.g. EME and Web Authentication); and
  • permissions/transparency/UI as it relates to display-less devices that connect to the Internet.

We aim to share experiences and user studies, leading to common understanding of when and how to seek user consent for use of various Web platform capabilities. We expect this workshop to lead to concrete and consistent guidance for API authors and implementers and to identify areas for further standardization or research. An important take-away from this workshop should be guidance on how Permissions APIs should be designed, both now and in the future, considering the rapid evolution of the web platform.

This workshop will build on the meeting on trust and permissions for Web applications held in 2014.

How can I participate?

Attendance is free for all invited participants and is open to the public, whether or not W3C members.

If you wish to express interest in attending, please fill out the application form. The application form asks several questions about your background and ideas; please give these questions serious thought. In addition to the application form, you are encouraged to submit a presentation topic in the form of a position statement.

Because the venue has limited space, you must receive an acceptance email in order to attend. You might wish to defer making non-refundable travel arrangements until you receive an invitation. Be sure to keep an eye on these important dates.

Our aim is to get diverse attendance from a variety of industries and communities, including:

  • User and usability researchers;
  • Privacy researchers;
  • Regulators / policymakers;
  • Privacy advocates; and
  • Persons with expertise and/or experience related to accessibility, multilingual requirements, low connectivity environments, and the particular privacy needs of vulnerable individuals or communities

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