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You are invited to a Family Online Safety Institute briefing on the impact of the Internet of Things on families, including important findings from FOSI’s research project. The event, featuring Congressman Ted W. Lieu (CA- 33), will discuss the potential risks, harms and rewards that our increasingly connected homes, devices and children’s toys bring.What responsibilities does industry have to better communicate how our data is stored, used and distributed? What roles do government and regulators have in overseeing this vast expansion of the Internet of Things into our homes? And how confident are parents in monitoring their children’s connected devices and toys?
March 6th 2018
421 Cannon House Office Building8:30
Registration, Coffee and Doughnuts8:45
Welcome – Congressman Ted W. Lieu (CA- 33)9:00
Connected Families: Toys, Devices and the Connected Home Panel
- Jennifer Hanley, Family Online Safety Institute (moderator)
- Kristin Cohen, Federal Trade Commission
- Sven Gerjets, Mattel
- John Verdi, Future of Privacy Forum
9:50
Event Ends
To RSVP please email [email protected] This is a widely attended event, held in compliance with House and Senate Ethics rules, hosted by the Family Online Safety Institute
PrivacyConnect Workshop
PrivacyConnect GDPR workshops are free, practitioner-focused half-day events. Through a combination of structured educational sessions, peer-led discussions, and networking, PrivacyConnect GDPR workshops offer a unique professional development opportunity. Hear interesting privacy program use cases, network with privacy peers, and learn practical GDPR compliance tips that you can execute on immediately.The PrivacyConnect Workshop offers attendees:
• 4.5 IAPP CPE credit hours
• Comprehensive handbook with session content
• The Official GDPR text pocket reference book
• Access to free software tools and how-to guides on the topics covered
• Complimentary lunch and breaks throughout the day
• Cocktail Hour and networking after the workshop
The 2018 Congress is your opportunity to explore leading issues at the crossroads of privacy, access, security, law and technology. Network with peers and colleagues from industry and government to explore this year’s theme — The Road Ahead — Balancing privacy and the public interest.
The PACC Congress takes a refreshingly practical approach that gives you a clearer view of how privacy, access, security, compliance, law and technology intersect, and why that matters to you and your organization. Speakers from different locations, industries and organizations offer practical guidance and a range of views that are never the same-old, same-old. The Congress is a unique professional development opportunity. Sessions are longer than at most conferences, and formal presentations are shorter — so that speakers have plenty of time to present their views, and delegates have time to ask questions and get real, unscripted answers. To accomplish that — and because the Congress is about quality, not quantity — registration is strictly limited. |
Privacy Offices need to understand how to navigate the different types of privacy compliance software to mitigate risk, build accountability, and achieve ongoing compliance with the GDPR (and the 700+ other regulations).
Time is Running Out for GDPR Readiness and Compliance This webinar is eligible for 1 CPE Credit. In this Webinar, we will: Help you assess when software would be beneficial and provide a return on investment; Legal Research Software Privacy Office Support Software Privacy Management Software In the final portion of the webinar, we will showcase the features and benefits of Nymity privacy compliance software in the categories above. We are here to help you assess whether your organisation would benefit from software and which tools will ensure you are GDPR ready and compliant. |
We are currently at capacity for this event, please contact Jean Butcher at [email protected] to be placed on the wait list.
The University Center for Human Values (UCHV) and the Center for Information Technology Policy (CITP) at Princeton University are hosting a joint conference on ethics and artificial intelligence technology, which address a range of topics at the intersection of computer science, public policy, political theory and philosophy. This interactive conference will feature speakers and panel discussions, as well as several focused breakout groups in which participants and speakers will engage with one another directly. The major themes of this event will be moral imperialism and the democratic frontiers of artificial intelligence (see the schedule for more information). The aim of this event is to continue and deepen the ongoing conversation about ethics and artificial intelligence, with an eye toward the development of a set of intellectual and reasoning tools that can guide practitioners and policy makers in developing the ethical framework that will ultimately underpin their technical and legislative decisions.
Background
In fall 2017, the University Center for Human Values(UCHV) and the Center for Information Technology Policy (CITP) launched a joint initiative on AI and Ethics. This interdisciplinary series brings Princeton University faculty from the humanities, social sciences and computer science together with proprietors of AI technologies and others working in the field in order to discuss the intersection of philosophical and technical issues raised by new developments in artificial intelligence technologies. In this project, we encourage a critical and positive approach to set some parameters within which these technologies can be further developed in keeping with human values considerations and engineering feasibilities.
This event is sponsored by:
To request accommodations for a disability, please contact Jean Butcher, [email protected], 609-258-9658 at least one week prior to the event.
George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School
Program on Economics & Privacy
Third Annual Digital Information Policy Scholars Conference
April 27, 2018
Antonin Scalia Law School at George Mason University, Arlington, VA
The Program on Economics & Privacy (PEP) at Antonin Scalia Law School will host a scholars conference on the economics of digital information policy on April 27, 2018. The conference will be open to the public.
The mission of PEP is to promote the sound application of economic analysis to issues surrounding the digital information economy through original research, policy outreach, and education. The annual Digital Information Policy Scholars Conference is intended to further this goal by providing a forum to present original research on this important area of the US economy.
Topics:
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
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- Consumer valuation of privacy
- Markets for privacy
- The impact of state and federal privacy & data security regulation on consumers and firms
- The GDPR and other European privacy regulations
- Private litigation under state and federal privacy and data security laws
- Liability issues surrounding the Internet of Things
- The use of big data for consumers scoring
- The intersection of privacy and competition policy
- Competition policy and Internet platforms
- Student privacy
- Consumer responses to disclosures
- Privacy and data security issues surrounding biometrics
Submissions:
Please send your paper or abstract by February 19, 2018, to Jeff T. Smith, Coordinator of PEP, at [email protected]. Preference will be given to completed papers. The selection committee includes Alessandro Acquisti (Carnegie Mellon), Jane Bambauer (University of Arizona, James E. Rogers College of Law), Michael Baye (Indiana University, Kelley School of Business), James Cooper (George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School), Sasha Romanosky (RAND), Andrew Stivers (Federal Trade Commission), and Catherine Tucker (MIT, Sloan School of Management). Selections will be made by March 5, 2018.
Selected authors will receive a $300 honorarium and will be provided lodging for the night of April 26, 2018. There will be a dinner for participants on April 26. Selected authors will be responsible for submitting a final version of their paper by April 13, 2017. In addition to presenting their paper, selected authors will be expected to serve as a discussant for one paper at the conference.
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The Internet of Things Consortium, in conjunction with the Future of Privacy Forum (FPF), will host a VIP Breakfast event on March 13, 2018 in Washington D.C. Join us for a morning of food, executive-level networking, and a presentation by the FPF on the evolution of IoT privacy norms within connected homes and cities.
Space for this reception is very limited. Please note that this event is by individual invitation only and is non-transferable. RSVP ASAP should your schedule permit you to join and while space is still available.
Trump and Privacy
Wednesday, March 14, 5:30 to 7:00 pm | 250 Dockser
Ranging across consumer protection, data aggregation, digital networks, high-tech devices and surveillance, this panel brings together top privacy and surveillance experts to discuss how the Trump administration has and will continue to shape our privacy in these and other areas.
Light refreshments will be served.
FEATURED SPEAKERS:
Elizabeth Joh
Professor of Law, UC Davis School of LawAhmed Ghappour
Associate Professor of Law, Boston University School of LawAndrea Matwyshyn
Professor of Law, Northeastern University School of LawMODERATOR
Woodrow Hartzog
Professor of Law, Northeastern University School of Law
LOCATION
Northeastern University School of Law
250 Dockser Hall
65 Forsyth Street, Boston, MA 02115
Sponsored Northeastern University School of Law’s Center for Law, Innovation and Creativity
Privacy has become a focal point in M&A transactions, including those in which data may not be one of the primary assets. Our speakers will provide a framework, and discuss in practical terms, transaction due diligence, negotiating privacy terms in transaction documents, and the post-transaction integration process, including international data transfer options for cross-border transactions.
Speakers: Darren Abernathy, John Pavolotsky, Jonathan Millard (moderator).
Darren Abernethy is a Senior Global Privacy Manager at TrustArc, where his work includes assisting companies on compliance with international data transfer frameworks, digital advertising self-regulatory programs, and EU GDPR readiness. Licensed to practice law in California, New York and Washington, D.C., Darren’s prior experience includes advising broadband ISPs, technology start-ups and ad tech companies in private practice on telecom regulatory and data privacy/data security matters.
John Pavolotsky, CIPP/US/E, CIPM is Senior Privacy and Security Counsel at Intel Corporation. Prior to joining Intel, John was a member of the Intellectual Property and Technology Group of Greenberg Traurig LLP. John is a member of the CIPP/US Exam Development Board, chair of the Licensing Interest Group of the IP Section of the California Lawyers Association, and co-author of the Licensing Corner column in New Matter, the IP Section’s quarterly journal. He is a graduate of the U.C. Davis School of Law, where he is also on the alumni Board of Directors, and holds an MBA from the Haas (U.C. Berkeley) School of Business.
Moderated by:
Jonathan Millard is a Partner in Fenwick & West’s Privacy and Cybersecurity Practice, and leads the M&A Privacy Practice. Jonathan counsels clients with respect to international privacy issues, particularly in the context of corporate acquisitions and international aspects of personal data processing and transfer between the EU and the US. Jonathan has advised clients in a broad range of sectors including Cisco, Amazon, American Express and Callidus Software. Jonathan is a member of the International Association of Privacy Professionals (IAPP) and is a Certified Information Privacy Professional (CIPP/E). Prior to joining Fenwick & West, Jonathan practiced both in London and New York, advising on privacy and technology related matters.
Additonal resources: https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/privacy-data-security-mergers-acquisitions-esq-fip-cipp-t-e-a-m/
LOGISTICS:
Fenwick & West LLP
San Francisco Office
555 California Street
12th Floor
San Francisco, CA 94104
415-875-2300
Parking: The entrance to 555 California Street’s parking garage is on Pine Street (440 Pine St). Additional parking nearby is located at St. Mary’s Square Garage at 433 Kearny Street.
Note: Guests will need to check in at building security with their ID, receive a guest pass and take the elevators up to the 12th floor to check in at Fenwick’s reception desk.
In just two months, organisations that are not GDPR-ready will face potential actions. Are you prepared?
The GDPR Deadline is Almost Here This webinar is eligible for 1 CPE Credit. Focusing on the practical and operational aspects of the GDPR, in this webinar you will discover: Which GDPR compliance issues are at the forefront of Privacy Officers’ minds; |