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Use our global calendar of privacy events to locate an event near you.
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What is the Policymaker Roundtable?
At the Policymaker Roundtable, leading privacy professionals meet with key domestic and international policymakers to engage in a candid and constructive dialogue about recent developments in privacy law, regulation and enforcement. Who Attends? Participation is by invitation only, and includes only the most seasoned privacy professionals. In past events, we have also had 20+ current and former policymakers representing the FTC, FCC, PCLOB, States, EU, and other governing bodies. |
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Joseph Calandrino, Research Director – Office of Technology Research and Investigation, FTC
Molly Crawford, Chief of Staff – Division of Privacy and Identity Protection, FTC
Michael Epshteyn, Assistant Chief –Telecommunications Consumers Division, FCC
Cora Tung Han, Senior Attorney – Division of Privacy and Identity Protection, FTC
Michael B. Hawes, Director of Student Privacy Policy – Office of the Chief Privacy Officer, U.S. Department of Education
Maneesha Mithal, Associate Director – Division of Privacy and Identity Protection, FTC
Rebecca Richards, Director – Civil Liberties and Privacy Office, NSA
Guilherme Roschke, Counsel for International Consumer Protection – Office of International Affairs, FTC
Hugh Stevenson, Deputy Director – International Consumer Protection, FTC
For a list of past policymakers from 2013 – 2017, click here
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What is the Data Summit?
Data Summit Dublin is a one-day event which provides a unique opportunity to hear leading international, European and Irish speakers debate the social, technical, ethical and cultural issues that arise in the context of our world of total connectivity. The event will explore some of the key issues around the role of data in an increasingly connected and digitised world such as the implications for regulation and privacy.
What themes are covered?
- Innovation and Regulation Online – Striking the Right Balance
- More Data, Better Government
- Law Enforcement & Access to Data
- Reshaping Industry through Data
- The future of Artificial Intelligence
- Cyber-Security – Opportunities and Risks to Nation-States
- Skills for a Digital World
- Using Data for Better Health Outcomes
- GDPR as the new international standard
This webinar will review the preventative steps you can take, guidance on building an incident response plan and comprehensive tools to automate and document these processes ensuring you can meet the potential 72 hour reporting window.
TrustArcWebinar FAQs: Click here for answers to the most commonly asked webinar related questions.
DESCRIPTION
Join VA Privacy Service and leading privacy experts on September 19th for an interactive virtual panel discussion about addressing privacy concerns in the age of telehealth.
Experts will discuss opportunities and challenges surrounding telehealth innovations, managing electronic health records and privacy and security risk-related considerations.
CONTINUING EDUCATION CREDIT
Attendees are eligible to receive Continuing Privacy Education credits. VA employees are eligible to receive Talent Management System credits for attending.
TO JOIN VIRTUALLY
Skype:
https://meet.RTC.VA.GOV/margaret.welsh1/HN942DJY
VANTS Line:
Dial-in:
VANTS line: 1-800-767-1750
Participant Code: 17632#
For further inquiries, contact [email protected]
Speakers:
Jay Brudz, Partner, Drinker Biddle & Reath
Charlyn Ho, Associate, Perkins Coie
Topic:
Privacy Considerations in Mergers and Acquisitions
Time:
4:30 – 7 p.m.
Registration will begin at 4:30 p.m. with the one hour presentation to start at 5 p.m. followed by a networking reception.
Thank you to our meeting host, Perkins Coie, for providing food and beverages.
Eligible CPE Credits:
CIPP/A, CIPP/C, CIPP/E, CIPP/G, CIPP/US, CIPM, and CIPT.
1.0 CPE
If you have certification questions, please read our cpe policy or e-mail [email protected]. Credit will be awarded two weeks after date of event.
An intentionally flexible city is accessible for every body, everywhere, and every day. People should be able to use things the way that makes the most sense for them, and we should build that flexibility and hackability into our spaces. That could mean adaptable furniture that can be repositioned, regardless of your strength or size, doors that can easily open, without requiring any particular dexterity, or technology that lets you access traffic signal devices with greater ease.
We don’t think one size fits most. One size fits one, and with technology, we can allow for dynamic flexibility in the city environment. Throughout history, the accessibility community has meaningfully pushed the fields of digital technology and computer science forward, and we want to formalize and encourage this throughout Quayside and beyond.
For us, it’s important that we address and begin this conversation now, which is why our third Open Sidewalk will focus on the theme of “The Accessible City”.
We welcome you to come and be part of co-creating a neighbourhood that can work for everyone.
Join the Future of Privacy Forum and PwC for a roundtable: “Data and Privacy for Autonomous Vehicles”
Autonomous vehicles are positioned to transform the future of mobility—a change enabled by new on-board sensors that collect and transmit growing types and quantities of data. While the existence of data in vehicles is not entirely new, autonomous vehicles promise an explosion in the variety, connectivity, volume of such data—raising new and unique considerations around what happens with it. As the automotive industry becomes more data-driven, getting consumer privacy right will become increasingly important.
Monday, September 24, 2018 from 1:30 PM to 4:30 PM in Detroit, Michigan
Industry leaders will discuss:
- Mapping, Geolocation, and Video Data: What unique considerations may need to be applied to these compilations of high resolution and potentially sensitive data—of both the inside and outside of vehicles?
- Monitoring of Vehicles, Drivers, and Passengers: What are best practices for fleet monitoring to ensure safety and cleanliness of vehicles while preserving passenger privacy?
- Data Sharing: Given that many consider data sharing crucial to AV development, what considerations should be taken into account around how to do so while protecting privacy – both among industry, with municipalities, and with researchers?
- Law Enforcement Access: How do we balance access during exigent circumstances and through legal process with enhanced sensitivities around mobility data?
- Changing Expectations of Privacy: Do consumers’ expectations of privacy diminish in the post-ownership, shared vehicle model? How should we think about privacy considerations for members of the public whose movements may be tracked with the externally-facing videos or mapping that may be common with AVs?
These are all early-stage questions, so we are convening industry leaders for an off-the-record discussion on how to tackle these issues moving forward.
Please contact Lauren Smith at [email protected] to request an invitation.
The European Union’s new privacy law, the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), went into effect on May 25, 2018. Since then, a number of privacy advocates have called for the United States to follow suit and pass its own comprehensive data protection legislation that meets or exceeds the standards in the GDPR. Yet critics of the GDPR maintain that these regulations would impose significant costs on the economy and degrade the consumer experience online. Pressure is mounting for lawmakers to take a position, and the Trump administration is considering its own set of privacy principles that it may send to Congress.
Join ITIF for a no-holds-barred debate about what the future of U.S. privacy law should look like. The debate will be moderated by Axios Managing Editor Kim Hart.
This event will be live streamed.
Follow the discussion on Twitter with the hashtag #ITIFprivacy.