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Designing for Digital is a two-day conference packed with intensive, hands-on workshops and informative sessions meant to bring together colleagues working on user experience, discovery, design and usability projects inside and outside of libraries, drawing expertise from the tech and education communities, as well as from peers. Learn more about who we are and what we’re doing.
Join us for demos and lightning talks by Columbia researchers presenting their latest work in data science. The event is designed to foster collaboration between innovators in academia and industry.
How and why do people resist (perceived or actual) invasions of their privacy? Empirically, we know relatively little about resistance practices, and we lack developed theoretical frameworks to help us understand how and why it occurs. But resistance is fast becoming an important focus for scholarly attention, as surveillance becomes more pervasive, wholesale opt-out becomes less feasible, and circumvention strategies are criminalized. This talk takes a grounded approach to developing new theoretical and empirical knowledge about resistance to surveillance, based on an in-depth ethnographic study of digital monitoring in the United States trucking industry. I discover a wide range of resistance practices truckers use to foil regulatory and organizational surveillance of their work behaviors – ranging from material interventions to creative data manipulations, organizational strategies to collaborative evasion tactics that enlist seemingly disinterested third parties.
It’s an old adage that journalists write the first draft of history, and historians compose the second. But what happens after that? Now in its second year, “Mistakes Were Made” proposes that getting history wrong is the inevitable precondition of historical research, as each generation of writers explores that gaps and ghosts left by the previous. Turning these insights on the swiftly obsolescing world of computer history, this event gathers emerging scholars challenging traditional technology narratives, and pairs them with creative coders, new media artists, tech innovators, and other members of computer culture’s past and present “fringe.”
The Intensive is where the data protection community meets to gain new insight on the top issues and new skills and operational expertise while networking with colleagues and peers from across Europe. Recognised as one of the world’s leading privacy conferences, it offers practical education, distinguished networking and data protection training and certification.
For more information, including paper submissions, please click here.
FACETS grew out out of a need for a new type of conference and a new type of conversation. Art, interactive technology, new media and game design are making innovative, beautiful things and are using similar tools and having similar, ground breaking discoveries and conversations but not with each other. What can a game designer learn from the linear mathematics used from procedurally generated music? What can the new media academic teach the creative technologist? How does technology inform storytelling, and how will video game design change cinema? The aim of FACETS is to create a cross disciplinary conference that facilitates conversation, mentorship, innovation, and ideation across these disciplines. We all make amazing things, let’s make them together.
Organized by Caroline Sinders and created by Caroline Sinders, Mohini Freya Dutta, Phoenix Perry, and Jane Friedhoff, FACETS started out of a frustration with a lack of places to discuss interactive art, media, and game design, particularly with talented and underrepresented demographics in STEM.
Join The Hill on Tuesday, May 24 for a panel discussion on the future of cross-border commerce, featuring Adam Schlosser, Director and Policy Counsel at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. Schlosser will highlight the Chamber of Commerce’s efforts to advance data privacy and transfer rules while preserving cross-border data flows.
TONY SCOTT, Administrator & Federal Chief Information Officer, Office of Management & Budget, Executive Office of the President
HUGH STEVENSON, Deputy Director for International Consumer Protection, Office of International Affairs, Federal Trade Commission
See the full speaker lineup here.
This webinar will enable you to enhance your privacy management using Nymity Benchmarks™ and Nymity Templates™, the ideal solutions to help you:
- Baseline your privacy management program
- Compare your organization’s privacy management program with others based on region, size, or industry
- Understand the gaps and weaknesses in your privacy management program
- Embed appropriate privacy management activities to reduce privacy risks and ensure ongoing compliance with minimal resources