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Six months after the adoption of the GDPR and the UK Data Protection Act 2018, this Roundtable is your opportunity to discuss the practical steps you are taking and how they are working in practice.
Plus: Guest session from the ICO: Helen Moores, Senior Policy Officer on The ICO’s new policies on Certification and code of Conduct |
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FCC Commissioner Brendan Carr
Dr. Gregory Hager, Johns Hopkins U. Professor, Dept. of Computer Science
Nigel Smith, AARP “Hatchery” Innovation Lab Director
…and a host of others. Don’t miss this great opportunity to hear unique perspectives on the impact of AI and the aging community.
Speakers and panelists will address the benefits artificial intelligence can offer aging individuals, with innovative technologies to make their lives safe and secure. AI will also unleash the power of autonomous vehicles, breakthrough innovations in healthcare, and robotics, with great opportunities as we age. At the same time, the challenges of AI will be explored, including privacy, ethics, and security of our data.
Join us to hear about these topics and more!
AGENDA
8:30 – 9:15, Breakfast and Check-In
9:20, Welcome, Debra Berlyn, Project GOAL
9:30 – 10:00, Speaker: Dr. Gregory Hager, Johns Hopkins University (Professor, Department of Computer Science). “AI, Aging, and the Future of Personalized Care”
10:00 – 10:20, Speaker: FCC Commissioner Brendan Carr
10:20 – 10:30, Break
10:30 – 11:20, Fireside Chat — AI Tech: What Does it Offer Older Adults Today and Tomorrow?
Moderator: Nigel Smith, Director, AARP’s Innovation Lab, “The Hatchery”
Panelists:
Mohammed Ansari, LG Electronics, General Manager and Senior Vice President
Jonathan Linkous, CEO, Partnership for Artificial Intelligence and Automation in Healthcare
Justin Erlich, Voyage Auto, Vice President of Strategy, Policy and Legal
Anirudh Koul, Head of AI and Research, Aira
Bill Rogers, CEO, Orbita, Inc.
11:20 – 12:15, Fireside Chat: AI Challenges for the Aging Community
Moderator: Steve LeVine, Editor, Axios Future
Panelists:
Charina Chou, Google, Global Policy Lead for Emerging Technologies,
Brenda Leong, Future Privacy Forum, Senior Counsel and Director of Strategy
Christina FitzPatrick, AARP Policy Development and Integration Director
12:15, Wrap-Up/Concluding Remarks
Debra Berlyn, Project GOAL
Chanelle Hardy, Google
In this webinar we’ll look at the role the CISO plays in managing GDPR compliance, the role of tools such as anonymisation and integrated assessments, and how the privacy team can partner effectively with the security team.
TrustArcWebinar FAQs: Click here for answers to the most commonly asked webinar related questions.
About the Workshop:
Fifteen years ago, the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) Privacy Rule came into effect for covered entities. Over the past 15 years, the only major change to the HIPAA Privacy Rule occurred in 2013 when HHS issued the Omnibus Final Rule, which made the HIPAA Privacy Rule directly applicable to business associates. However, the Omnibus Final Rule did not address what many critics view as barriers to sharing data, which may hinder efforts to encourage providers to adopt electronic health technology, and did not address gaps that are a result of recent technological advances.
Recently, HHS published a request for information (RFI), “HIPAA Privacy: Request for Information on Changes to Support, and Remove Barriers to, Coordinated Care.” The RFI seeks to solicit the public’s views on how the HIPAA Rules should be updated to mitigate potential barriers that limit or discourage coordinated care and case management among hospitals, physicians, payors, and patients, or otherwise impose regulatory burdens that may impede the transformation to value-based health care without providing commensurate privacy or security protections for PHI. Under HIPAA, HHS has the authority to modify the privacy standards as the Secretary deems appropriate.
In light of these gaps and the RFI, FPF, Duke in DC, and Intel are bringing together relevant stakeholders to discuss what changes to the HIPAA Privacy Rule could and should look like.
- Maya Bernstein, Privacy Advocate & Senior Advisor, HHS
- Stan Crosley, Senior Strategist, Information Accountability Foundation
- Kim Gray, Chief Privacy Officer, IQVIA
- David Hoffman, Associate General Counsel & Global Privacy Officer, Intel
- Kirk Nahra, Partner, Wiley Rein
- Jules Polonetsky, CEO, Future of Privacy Forum
- Arti Rai, Elvin R. Latty Professor of Law, Duke Law School
- Morgan Reed, President, ACT – The App Association
- Mario Romao, Global Director of Health and Data Policy, Intel
- Paul Westfall, Washington Counsel, American Medical Association
- Marcy Wilder, Partner, Hogan Lovells
The FPF Privacy Book Club provides members with the opportunity to read a wide range of books — privacy, data, ethics, academic works, and other important data relevant issues — and have an open discussion of the selected literature.
We are excited to share The Known Citizen: A History of Privacy in Modern America by Professor Sarah E. Igo was chosen as the popular favorite by our readers. We are thrilled Professor Igo will be joining us for the December book club to introduce her book and answer questions.
Please join us on Wednesday, December 5, at 2:00 pm (EST) for the next FPF Privacy Book Club. If you are an existing member of the Book Club, you will receive the virtual conference dial-in information near the discussion date. You can join the Book Club here. Please feel free to forward this sign up link to friends who also may be interested.
This Privacy, Interoperability, and Security Convening is co-hosted by Project Unicorn, InnovateEDU, and the Future of Privacy Forum. It will bring together experts from different organizations and communities to explore how privacy and interoperability in education can work together and mutually support each other while acknowledging the tensions that exist between the two.
The adoption of artificial intelligence in the financial service industry, particularly the adoption of machine learning, presents challenges and opportunities. Challenges include algorithmic fairness, explainability, privacy, and requirements of a very high degree of accuracy. For example, there are ethical and regulatory needs to prove that models used for activities such as credit decisioning and lending are fair and unbiased, or that machine reliance doesn’t cause humans to miss critical pieces of data. For some use cases, the operating standards require nothing short of perfect accuracy.
Privacy issues around collection and use of consumer and proprietary data require high levels of scrutiny. Many machine learning models are deemed unusable if they are not supported by appropriate levels of explainability. Some challenges like entity resolution are exacerbated because of scale, highly nuanced data points and missing information. On top of these fundamental requirements, the financial industry is ripe with adversaries who purport fraud and other types of risks.
The aim of this workshop is to bring together researchers and practitioners to discuss challenges for AI in financial services, and the opportunities such challenges represent to the community. The workshop will consist of a series of sessions, including invited talks, panel discussions and short paper presentations, which will showcase ongoing research and novel algorithms.