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![MIT and Georgetown Law Privacy Legislation Pitches @ Washington, DC | Washington | District of Columbia | United States](https://privacycalendar.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/Privacy-Pitches-232x300.jpg)
Watch teams of students pitch a panel of experts on draft legislation addressing:
- always-on in-home listening devices
- police geolocation tracking
- predictive policing
- commercial face recognition
- driver privacy and data transparency
- face news
Panel of Judges:
- Jay Edelson
- Alex MacGillivray
- Betsy Masiello
- Maneesha Mithal
- Michelle Richardson
Contact [email protected] for details.
![April Privacy Lab - The Future of Privacy & AI @ Berkeley | Berkeley | California | United States](https://privacycalendar.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/privacy-lab-300x152.png)
bout Privacy Lab:
Privacy Lab is a meetup for privacy minded people to foster communication and collaboration. This event focusing on the Future of Privacy and Artificial Intelligence (AI) features Peter Eckersley as its speaker.
About The Speaker:
Peter Eckersley
Peter is Chief Computer Scientist for the Electronic Frontier Foundation. He leads a team of technologists who watch for technologies that, by accident or design, pose a risk to computer users’ freedoms—and then look for ways to fix them. They write code to make the Internet more secure, more open, and safer against surveillance and censorship. They explain gadgets to lawyers and policymakers, and law and policy to gadgets.
Peter will discuss the new EFF initiative that he is leading on the policy, strategy and governance questions raised by artificial intelligence and machine learning technologies.
About The Venue Host:
Bonsai makes AI for everyone and is helping everyone become producers of AI. It is on a mission to make intelligence a core component of every hardware and software application. Big thanks to Team Bonsai, including but not limited to Keen Browne, Darius Garza, and Bridget Hickey, for hosting us!
Address & Logistics:
Bonsai is headquartered in downtown Berkeley (near the Downtown Berkeley BART Station). Its offices are located at: 2150 Shattuck Avenue, Suite 1100 Berkeley, CA 94704
FYI: Parking near the office can be tricky; come early if parking. You are highly encouraged to use BART.
Additional Information:
More about Privacy Lab: https://wiki.mozilla.org/Privacy/Privacy_Lab
Mailing list: https://mail.mozilla.org/listinfo/privacy-events.
Anti-harassment policy: https://wiki.mozilla.org/Privacy/Privacy_Lab#Code_of_Conduct
![Second Annual Digital Information Policy Scholars Conference @ Arlington](https://privacycalendar.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/lec-logo.png)
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 28, 2017. 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 academic research surrounding this important area of the US economy.
![Second Annual Digital Information Policy Scholars Conference @ Arlington | Arlington | Virginia | United States](https://privacycalendar.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/gmu2-300x290.png)
The Program on Economics & Privacy (PEP) at George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School will host a Scholars Conference on the economics of digital information policy on Friday, April 28, 2017. 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 Scholars Conference will showcase fourteen original law & economics research papers on such topics as:
- James Cooper (Director, PEP) on Measuring Autonomy Losses from the 2012 Google Privacy Policy Changes
- Martina Ferracane (European Centre for Intl Political Economy) on Stricter Regimes of Data Flows
- Mark Flood (US Treasury Office of Financial Research) on Cryptography and the Economics of Supervisory Information
- Jon Klick (U of Pennsylvania Law) on State Data Breaches and Income Tax e-Filing
- Meiping Sun (Columbia) on EMV Technology and Credit Card Fraud
- Jose Tudon (U of Chicago) on an Empirical Investigation on Net Neutrality
The Conference will also feature a luncheon keynote from Ginger Jin, Director of the Federal Trade Commission’s Bureau of Economics.
A full list of speakers is available on the PEP website here.
![Algorithms and Explanations @ New York | New York | New York | United States](https://privacycalendar.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/nyu-law-300x69.png)
Abstract:
Explanation has long been deemed a crucial aspect of accountability. By requiring that powerful actors explain the bases of their decisions — the logic goes — we reduce the risks of error, abuse, and arbitrariness, thus producing more socially desirable decisions. Decisionmaking processes employing machine learning algorithms and similar data-driven approaches complicate this equation. Such approaches promise to refine and improve the accuracy and efficiency of decisionmaking processes, but the logic and rationale behind each decision remains opaque to human understanding. The conference will grapple with the question of when and to what extent decisionmakers should be legally or ethically obligated to provide humanly meaningful explanations of individual decisions to those who are affected or to society at large.
List of Speakers:
Julius Adebayo, FastForward Labs
Guruduth Banavar, IBM Watson Lab
Solon Barocas, Microsoft Research
Enrico Bertini, NYU (Engineering)
Kiel Brennan-Marquez, NYU (Law)
Julie Brill, Hogan Lovells
Jim Burch, Police Foundation
Jenna Burrell, UC Berkeley (Information)
Federico Cabitza, Università degli Studi di Milano-Bicocca (Italy)
Rich Caruana, Cornell (CS)
Alexandra Chouldechova, Carnegie Mellon (CS)
Anupam Datta, Carnegie Mellon (CS)
Deven Desai, Georgia Tech (Law)
Nick Diakopoulos, University of Maryland (Journalism)
Brad Greenberg, Yale ISP (Law)
Krishna Gummadi, MPI-SWS (Germany)
Jeremy Heffner, Hunchlab
Alison Howard, Microsoft
Zachary Lipton, UCSD (Biomedical Informatics)
Gilad Lotan, Buzzfeed
Frank Pasquale, University of Maryland (Law)
Foster Provost, NYU (Stern)
Dan Raviv, Lendbuzz
Aaron Rieke, Upturn
Paul Rifelj, Wisconsin Public Defenders
Andrea Roth, UC Berkeley (Law)
Andrew Selbst, Information Society Project
Kevin Stack, Vanderbilt (Law)
Katherine Strandburg, NYU (Law)
Jer Thorpe, Office for Creative Research
Sandra Wachter – Alan Turing Institute
Duncan Watts, Microsoft Research
![connect:ID 2017 @ Washington, DC | Washington | District of Columbia | United States](https://privacycalendar.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/connect-id-300x88.png)
connect:ID – an innovative international conference and a free global exhibition that together focus on all aspects of identity technologies and the opportunities for their management in both the physical and digital worlds.
connect:ID Conference – May 1-3, 2017
Hear from some of the key players in the identity technology marketplace from thought leaders to end users with three days of cutting-edge revelations, future insights, case histories and panel discussions. Book before March 3, 2017 to take advantage of our early bird rates.
connect:ID Exhibition – May 2-3, 2017
Explore the latest developments and releases in identity technolgy solutions with 75+ exhibitors all under one roof. Entrance to the exhibition is free
![Internet Privacy: Technology and Policy Developments @ Washington, DC | Washington | District of Columbia | United States](https://privacycalendar.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/ctic-1-300x157.jpg)
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![VRM Day 2017a @ Mountain View | Mountain View | California | United States](https://privacycalendar.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/vrm-day-300x150.png)
By VRM Day and IIW (which follows over the next three days at the same location), we should have terms individuals can assert as first parties in dealings with others—especially companies—in the world. These terms, at the very least, can provide personal privacy protections, especially regarding collection and use of personal data.
This is new, and huge. It may also be the most leveraged thing ever to come out of ProjectVRM.
Background. Ever since industry won the Industrial Revolution, individuals have been subordinate second parties when dealing with large companies, especially in mass markets. When we click “accept” to those companies’ terms, we are always second parties. But now we will have first person terms of our own that companies can accept as second parties. These terms will live at Customer Commons, much as personal copyright terms now live at Creative Commons. (In fact Customer Commons is modeled after Creative Commons, which also came out of the Berkman (now Berkman Klein) Center.
Until now the timing hasn’t been right, because there were always too many reasons for companies to say no. But now the timing is right, thanks to new privacy protecting regulations, especially the GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation) in the EU. Punishments to companies not complying with the GDPR are very nasty. Accepting friendly but privacy-protecting terms individuals assert can make companies GDPR compliant, and do it simply, easily and automatically. This will be especially good news to the compliance offices at large international companies. It will also be good for business, because it will involve better signaling of good will and commercial intentions by customers, while saving companies the expense of purely speculative (and soon illegal) spying-based adtech.
These terms can be accepted (or not) automatically by CRM systems. This was demonstrated using the JLINC protocol and a Salesforce CRM system at the last VRM Day. At this VRM Day we want to discuss both developed and possible terms, the technologies required to advance, accept, record and retrieve them, and ways to grow Customer Commons as well.
As always, VRM Day will also be prep for the next three days at IIW, where we can dig down a lot farther and start fostering or developing supportive code. VRM Day is free. IIW is cheap as conferences go. (You won’t find a conference as leveraged, period. Or one as cheap for three solid and productive days of real work—and good food.) Register for VRM Day here, and for IIW here.
![@ Brussels](https://privacycalendar.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/iapp-brussels-300x89.jpg)
- Privacy Program Management (2-3 May 2017)
- European Data Protection (4-5 May 2017)
Venue: Madera Room, ICAB Business and Technology Incubator, Site Arsenaal, Witte Patersstraat 4, 1040 Brussels