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May
9
Wed
Legitimate Interests under the GDPR: Findings, Case Studies and Guidance
May 9 @ 10:00 am – 11:00 am
Legitimate Interests under the GDPR: Findings, Case Studies and Guidance

Organizations are trying to  better understand how to use legitimate interests as a lawful basis for processing under the GDPR.

Date: May 9, 2018     Time: 10:00 am EDT

Nymity and the FPF (Future of Privacy Forum) released an important study on legitimate interests under the GDPR to wide acclaim: Processing Personal Data on the Basis of Legitimate Interests Under the GDPR. In this webinar, our panelists will discuss specific cases that have been decided at the national level by DPAs and Courts from the European Economic Area (EEA) and the most relevant cases where the Court of Justice of the European Union interpreted and applied the “legitimate interests” ground.

Join us to gain valuable insight concerning over 40 cases examined representing a wide variety of data processing activities from over 15 countries, such as:

  • Using key-logger software for employee monitoring
  • Use of GPS tracking data for private investigations
  • Disclosing health data for litigation purposes
  • Disclosing personal data for debt collection purposes
  • Sending emails without consent for electoral purposes
  • Publishing the sale price of homes that are no longer on the market
  • Recording employee misconduct

All of the cases discussed are found in the Nymity Research™ legal compliance software solution which contains over 25,000 References, including English translations of foreign documents.

May
14
Mon
FPF Advisory Board Annual Meeting @ Middleburg, VA
May 14 – May 16 all-day
FPF Advisory Board Annual Meeting @ Middleburg, VA | Middleburg | Virginia | United States

Members only event that gathers Future of Privacy Forum‘s (FPF) leading academic, advocacy and corporate stakeholders.  By invitation only. For FPF membership information, please contact Barbara Kelly at [email protected].

May
16
Wed
RightsCon Toronto @ Toronto
May 16 – May 18 all-day
RightsCon Toronto @ Toronto | Toronto | Ontario | Canada

Hosted by Access Now, RightsCon is where the world’s human rights experts, business leaders, technologists, engineers, investors, activists, and government representatives come together to share ideas, build strategies, showcase new technologies, and create tomorrow’s internet. It is an energizing reminder of the existence of a powerful global digital rights community that is determined to defend human rights and keep the internet open and free.

Convened in locations that are power centers for the internet, RightsCon has begun rotating each year around the world to various global cities. Importantly, our conference programming is shaped by our participants, with an an explicit focus on driving to the outcomes they define. Our goal is to ensure that the RightsCon community affects real and positive change in the world. In March of 2017, we had more than 250 community-led, groundbreaking sessions at RightsCon Brussels. You can find the sessions in our official program.

In 2018, RightsCon will be hosted in Toronto, Canada. To get updates on RightsCon Toronto, be sure to sign up to our newsletter for updates.

May
17
Thu
Privacy and Surveillance in a Digital Era: Challenges for Transatlantic Cooperation and European Criminal Law @ London
May 17 @ 2:00 pm – May 18 @ 5:00 pm
Privacy and Surveillance in a Digital Era: Challenges for Transatlantic Cooperation and European Criminal Law @ London | England | United Kingdom

 

The Annual Conference of the European Criminal Law Academic Network (ECLAN) will be on ‘Privacy and Surveillance in a Digital Era: Challenges for Transatlantic Cooperation and European Criminal Law’ and will take place at the School of Law of Queen Mary, University of London on 17-18 May 2018.

The chosen theme revolves around state surveillance activities and transatlantic relations between the EU and the US regarding legal assistance and transfer of personal data. In that respect, two keynote speeches are foreseen -one for each of the two jurisdictions- along with four panel discussions, which will touch upon the following topics: Session 1: Collection and Exchange of Digital Evidence: Possible Models and Challenges for Human Rights and the Rule of Law; Session 2: Telecommunications Data: From Digital Rights Ireland to Watson and Beyond; Session 3: Surveillance of Mobility as Preventive Justice and; Session 4: Countering Transborder Crime through Mutual Legal Assistance. Mr Mark Rotenberg from Electronic Privacy Information Centre (EPIC) will deliver the keynote speech on the Microsoft case currently pending in the US.

 

How to book

This event is free but prior booking is required. Register online via Eventbrite.

Please note, Registration for this conference closes on 15 May 2018.

May
21
Mon
Data Justice 2018 @ Cardiff, UK
May 21 – May 22 all-day
Data Justice 2018 @ Cardiff, UK | Wales | United Kingdom

The collection and processing of massive amounts of data has become an increasingly contentious issue. Our financial transactions, communications, movements, relationships, all now generate data that are used to profile and sort groups and individuals. With the platformisation of digital media alongside governmental and corporate uses of citizen data, developments in AI, the Internet of Things, smart homes and smart cities, the systematic collection and analysis of massive data sets across our social life is being normalised and entrenched – what has been described as the ‘datafication’ of society.

With the emergence of this data paradigm comes a new set of power dynamics requiring investigation and critique. Whilst promises of value-neutral information and possibilities for prediction are said to advance better responses to a range of social problems, they may also have serious implications for social and economic inclusion, autonomy, basic freedoms, and established notions of ethics, trust, accountability, governance and citizenship.

What are the implications for social justice? How do we understand social justice in an age of datafication? In what way do initiatives around the globe address questions of data in relation to inequality, discrimination, power and control? What is the role of policy reform, technological design and activism? How do we understand and practice ‘data justice’? How does data justice relate to other justice concerns?

This conference will examine the intricate relationship between datafication and social justice by highlighting the politics and impacts of data-driven processes and exploring different responses. Hosted by the Data Justice Lab at Cardiff’s School of Journalism, Media and Cultural Studies (JOMEC), it will bring together international scholars, practitioners, and activists to engage with data from a social justice perspective. Confirmed speakers include:

Anita Gurumurthy (IT for Change, India)
David Lyon (Queen’s University, Canada)
Evelyn Ruppert (Goldsmiths, University of London, UK)
Rob Kitchin (Maynooth University, Ireland)
Sasha Costanza-Chock (MIT Center for Civic Media, US)
Seeta Peña Gangadharan (London School of Economics, UK)
Solon Barocas (Cornell University, US and FAT/ML)

The conference will combine academic papers with hands-on workshops relating to methods of investigation, policy and design. We welcome submissions of abstracts for both types of sessions.

Themes of the conference include (but are not limited to):

  • Social justice and data
  • Data governance
  • Data discrimination
  • Data colonialism
  • Data sovereignty
  • Digital labour
  • Prediction and Preemption
  • Data scores and dashboards
  • Data ethics
  • Data policy and reform
  • Social justice-informed design
  • Uses of data by social justice groups
  • Data activism and advocacy

Submissions

Deadline for 250-word abstracts: 27th of November, 2017.
Submit via EasyChair: https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=dj2018

All submissions must include a title, author name(s), institutional affiliation(s) and full contact information (mailing address, email address). If you propose a workshop or practical demonstration, please provide a clear statement of purpose and a detailed description of activities, as well as any infrastructure requirements.

Information

Cardiff is a 2-hour train journey West of London and Heathrow airport. The closest airports are Cardiff and Bristol.

‘Data Justice’ will take place shortly before the ICA 2018 conference in Prague, 24-28 May. Flights to Prague take 2 hours from Heathrow.

Conference fee:
Full fee: £75 (early bird) / £100
Reduced student fee: £50 (early bird) / £75

Conference organizing committee: Lina Dencik, Arne Hintz, Joanna Redden (Data Justice Lab, Cardiff University, UK)

For information about the Data Justice Lab, see: http://www.datajusticelab.org

Contact for further information

May
22
Tue
Accountability in the Algorithmic Economy @ Washington, DC
May 22 @ 1:00 pm – 2:30 pm
Accountability in the Algorithmic Economy @ Washington, DC | Washington | District of Columbia | United States

Increasingly, many people are raising concerns that the growing prevalence of artificial intelligence (AI) will exacerbate human bias, manipulate consumers, and cause other harms. Whether or not these concerns have merit, most proposed solutions have been substantially lacking: they either fail to effectively reduce potential harm, stifle innovation, or both. What is needed is a proposal that offers policymakers a viable middle ground that maximizes the potentially vast benefits of algorithmic decision-making while minimizing the risks.

Join the Center for Data Innovation for a presentation of its new report and a panel discussion on how policymakers can hold algorithms accountable while accelerating adoption of AI.

Date and Time:

  • Tuesday, May 22, 2018, from 1:00-2:30 PM

Location:

  • 1101 K Street NW, Suite 610, Washington, DC, 20005

Speakers:

  • Daniel Castro, Director, Center for Data Innovation (Moderator)
  • Neil Chilson, Senior Fellow for Technology and Innovation, Charles Koch Institute, and former Acting Chief Technologist, Federal Trace Commission
  • Joshua New, Policy Analyst, Center for Data Innovation
  • Lauren Smith, Policy Counsel, Future of Privacy Forum
  • Frank Torres, Director of Consumer Affairs, Microsoft
  • Additional speakers to be announced.
May Privacy Lab – Privacy for Safety @ San Francisco
May 22 @ 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm
May Privacy Lab - Privacy for Safety @ San Francisco  | San Francisco | California | United States
Privacy for Targeted Populations explores where and why so many apps and tech products fail in protecting privacy for end users from targeted groups. As we often fail to see what is not relevant to ourselves, our speaker will use affairs/cheating (think Ashley Madison) as a relatable and humorous context. She will examine how societal ‘normalized” behavior and bias affects design, development and incident response, exploring why this happens and how we can improve. While it is a big problem, the solutions are actually very simple and effective.
Stella, our speaker’s career has spanned school teacher, private training, event planning, inclusion training and now privacy and security. Her freelance work involves advising companies on creating inclusion programs that work, while also working directly with targeted groups, to advise on privacy and security online. Inspiration for her talks comes from a professional life filled with people confiding in her, while she tries to find secure and discreet ways to resolve their problems. She notes that she would make an excellent spy.
Please RSVP only if you do plan to attend in person. A light dinner will be served, sponsored by HackerOne, so we’d like to get an accurate catering count.
May
24
Thu
Workshop on Technology and Consumer Protection (ConPro ’18) @ San Francisco
May 24 all-day
Workshop on Technology and Consumer Protection (ConPro ’18) @ San Francisco | San Francisco | California | United States

Arvind Narayanan and I are excited to announce that the Workshop on Technology and Consumer Protection (ConPro ’18) will return in May 2018, once again co-located with the IEEE Symposium on Security and Privacy.

The first ConPro brought together researchers from a wide range of disciplines, united by a shared goal of promoting consumer welfare through empirical computer science research. The topics ranged from potentially misleading online transactions to emerging biomedical technologies. Discussions were consistently insightful. For example, one talk explored the observed efficacy of various technical and non-technical civil interventions against online crime. Several—including a panel with technical and policy experts—considered steps that researchers can take to make their work more usable by policymakers, such as examining and documenting the agreement between researched practices and a company’s public statements.

We think the first workshop was a success. Participants were passionate about the social impact of their own research, and just as passionate in encouraging similarly thoughtful but dramatically different work. We aim to foster and build this engaged and supportive community.

As a result, we are thrilled to be organizing a second ConPro. Our interests lie wherever computer science intersects with consumer protection, including security, e-crime, algorithmic fairness, privacy, usability, and much more. Our stellar program committee reflects this range of interests. Check out the call for papers for more information. The submission deadline is January 23, 2018, and we look forward to reading this year’s great work!

May
30
Wed
11th Annual Privacy Law Scholars Conference (PLSC 2018) @ Washington, D.C.
May 30 @ 9:09 pm – May 31 @ 10:09 pm
11th Annual Privacy Law Scholars Conference (PLSC 2018) @ Washington, D.C. | Washington | District of Columbia | United States

11th Annual Privacy Law Scholars Conference (PLSC 2018), to be held WednesdayThursday, May 30–31 at the George Washington University Marvin Center in DC.

PLSC is a paper workshop. There is no opportunity or obligation to publish flowing from it. Our goal is simply to improve and provide support for in-progress scholarship. To do so, PLSC assembles a wide array of privacy law scholars and practitioners from around the world to discuss the papers. Scholars from many disciplines (psychology/economics, sociology, philosophy, political science, computer science, and even math) also participate.

We follow a format where a discussant, rather than the author, introduces and leads a discussion on the paper.  There are no panels nor talking heads, and everyone is a “participant.” Participation is by invitation only; please do not transfer this invite to another person.
PLSC is co-sponsored by the George Washington University Law School and the Berkeley Center for Law & Technology.

CALL FOR ABSTRACTS & OUTLINES

If you would like to workshop a paper, please create an account on our conference management system, and submit a title, short abstract that grounds your work in a literature (see below), and high-level outline by Friday, December 22, 2017: https://cmt3.research.microsoft.com/PLSC2018

Email Chris ([email protected]) if you encounter any problems.

We will announce accepted abstracts on January 19, 2017.

Workshop versions of the paper will be due April 27, 2018.  There is no commitment (or opportunity) to publish.

Please note, there is a large and growing list of privacy scholarship. For instance, the SSRN eJournal for privacy has over 3,000 papers, and this excludes pre-internet works, books, and scholarship from non-legal fields. http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/JELJOUR_Results.cfm?form_name=journalbrowse&journal_id=1125502

In writing your abstract, please situate your project in a literature. If your topic is too new or spans multiple literatures, please indicate this. Please also explain the contribution your work makes to the literature.

The Program Committee has adopted new rules on sponsored scholarship at PLSC. We will not accept papers that are subject to pre-publication review/veto, or those where the sponsor controls the content of the paper. We furthermore require a conflicts of interest statement on scholarship.

When we survey participants, the most common complaint surrounds late papers.  Thus, we reserve the right to cancel workshops if the paper draft is not provided sufficiently in advance for meaningful evaluation by participants.

Conference participants will be expected to read the papers in advance.  Thus, please calendar two days of preparation time in advance of PLSC.

HOTEL

We do not have a hotel block because we’ve found that participants can easily locate rooms in DC.

Be seeing you at PLSC 2018,

Chris Jay Hoofnagle & Dan Solove

Program Committee
Franziska Boehm, University of Münster
Ryan Calo, University of Washington
Danielle Citron, University of Maryland Carey School of Law
Julie Cohen, Georgetown University Law Center
Deven Desai, Georgia Institute of Technology
Woodrow Hartzog, Samford University’s Cumberland School of Law
Kristy Hughes, University of Cambridge
William McGeveran, University of Minnesota Law School
Paul Ohm, Georgetown University Law Center
Paul Schwartz, Berkeley Law
Priscilla Regan, George Mason University
Neil Richards, Washington University Law

Jun
1
Fri
Privacy Workshop Sydney @ Sydney
Jun 1 all-day
Privacy Workshop Sydney @ Sydney | Sydney | New South Wales | Australia

BIOMETRICS INSTITUTE PRIVACY WORKSHOP | 1 JUNE 2018 | DARLING HARBOUR SYDNEY

This half-day workshop will take place alongside the Biometrics Institute Asia-Pacific Conference 2018.

Details will be announced shortly.

For further information, please contact Christine at [email protected]

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