Home
Use our global calendar of privacy events to locate an event near you.
FILTER BY
The 3rd European Data Protection Law Summer School will equip participants to adequately tackle the implementation of the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) and prepare them for the many challenges ahead. This practical dimension will be combined with a more general exploration of the evolving global and European privacy landscape, with a particular emphasis on transatlantic issues, and current policy debates.
Topics * Privacy and Data Protection: Introduction and recent developments in jurisprudence* The GDPR: Key issues* Data subject’s rights and remedies* Obligations of data controllers and processors* Behavioural advertising* E-Privacy* How to do a D/PIA including practical session* European Data Protection Board* International data transfers in EU data protection law* Data protection: An international perspective* Data Protection and humanitarian action*Privacy professionals in the private sector* EU data protection law, police and criminal justice* GDPR Case Studies
Lecturers Cecilia Alvarez (Pfizer)Istvan Böröcz (d.pia.lab, LSTS, VUB)Cedric Burton (Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati)Christopher Docksey (Hon. Director General, EDPS)Gloria González Fuster (Brussels Privacy Hub, LSTS, VUB)Graham Greenleaf (University of New South Wales)Hielke Hijmans (Brussels Privacy Hub, LSTS, VUB)Mireille Hildebrandt (LSTS, VUB)Joris van Hoboken (LSTS, VUB)Dariusz Kloza (d.pia.lab, LSTS, VUB)Christopher Kuner (Brussels Privacy Hub, LSTS, VUB)Caroline Louveaux (Mastercard)Massimo Marelli (International Committee of the Red Cross Data Protection Office)Juraj Sajfert (European Commission)Brendan Van Alsenoy (Legal Advisor, Belgian Privacy Commission & Affiliated Researcher, Centre for IT & IP Law, KU Leuven)Frederik Zuiderveen Borgesius (LSTS, VUB & Universiteit van Amsterdam)
ProgrammeFind a provisional programme here. Please note that the programme may be subject to change.
Registration
- Early bird registration: 30 March 2018
- Standard registration: 1 June 2018
31st Annual International Conference – Navigating GDPR: The art of the possible
The conference is held at St John’s College, Cambridge, where participants will enjoy the excellent refurbished facilities at the new conference centre. Come and experience a classic Cambridge college and walk across the Bridge of Sighs. This residential conference is an opportunity to enjoy a unique friendly summer school atmosphere, while mingling with a group of Data Protection Commissioners, privacy managers, specialist lawyers and academics from many countries. The conference brings you into close contact with privacy regulators, challenges conventional wisdom, offers good networking experience and provides excellent value for money. 2018 Conference themes: CPD Points: |
Educational Data Mining is a leading international forum for high-quality research that mines data sets to answer educational research questions that shed light on the learning process. These data sets may originate from a variety of learning contexts, including learning management systems, interactive learning environments, intelligent tutoring systems, educational games, and data-rich learning activities. Educational data mining considers a wide variety of types of data, including but not limited to raw log files, student-produced artifacts, discourse, multimodal streams such as eye-tracking, and other sensor data. The overarching goal of the Educational Data Mining research community is to better support learners by developing data-driven understandings of the learning process in a wide variety of contexts and for diverse learners.
Please join us at the upcoming Washington, DC KnowledgeNet Chapter meeting and discuss Artificial Intelligence (AI). Artificial intelligence and machine learning offer considerable opportunity to redefine business and society through increased productivity, innovation, and growth. AI also creates new legal, regulatory, and policy challenges for stakeholders to address, including in the areas of privacy, data protection, law enforcement, and ethics. This panel presentation will discuss recent developments in example AI technologies, key legal implications, and potential frameworks for addressing AI challenges.
The one hour panel presentation will begin at 5 p.m. followed by a cocktail hour from 6 – 7 p.m.
Panelists:
- Tiffany George, Senior Attorney, Federal Trade Commission Bureau of Consumer Protection, Division of Privacy and Identity Protection
- Britanie Hall, CIPP/US, Senior Associate, Hogan Lovells
- Brenda Leong, CIPP/US, Senior Counsel and Director of Strategy, Future of Privacy Forum
Moderator:
- Mark Brennan, Partner, Hogan Lovells
|
|||||
|
Across our country’s history – from the surveillance of the Separatists we now know as Pilgrims in 16th and 17th century England, to federal house raids and interrogations of early Mormons in the Utah Territory in the 19th century, to the 20thcentury surveillance of Jewish, Muslim, Quaker, and Sikh communities, to modern post-9/11 surveillance systems –government monitoring has long had a deep and disparate impact on American religious minorities.
The Color of Surveillance: Government Monitoring of American Religious Minorities will trace that history, and ask hard questions about what it means: Is modern surveillance consistent with the intentions of the American founders – or, for that matter, the events that precipitated the migration of English Separatists to the New World on the Mayflower? Do modern counterterrorism initiatives appropriately protect civil rights and civil liberties? How are local communities, advocates, and artists responding to these challenges?
Now in its third year, The Color of Surveillance, organized by the Center on Privacy & Technology at Georgetown Law, convenes academic, policy and government experts alongside local and community activists and artists. Prior speakers have included the Pulitzer-winning biographers of Martin Luther King, Jr. and W.E.B. DuBois, Guggenheim award-winning artists, and the general counsel of the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
Welcome & Introduction to The Color of Surveillance: Government Monitoring of Religious Minorities
8:45 – 9:00am
Dean William Treanor, Georgetown Law
Alvaro Bedoya, Center on Privacy & Technology at Georgetown Law
Elizabeth I to the Early 20th Century
9:00 – 10:15am
“Hunted”: 16th & 17th Century Surveillance of Pilgrims
John Coffey, University of Leicester
Is the United States a Christian Nation?
Brooke Allen, Bennington College
“Mohammedan Barbarism”: The Campaign Against Early Mormons
J. Spencer Fluhman, Brigham Young University
The Military Intelligence Division and American Jews
Alvaro Bedoya, Center on Privacy & Technology at Georgetown Law
The FBI and the Moorish Science Temple of America
Sylvester A. Johnson, Virginia Tech
BREAK
10:15 – 10:30am
The 1960s to the Aftermath of 9/11
10:30 – 12:05pm
J. Edgar Hoover, Black Clergy, and Martin Luther King, Jr.
Lerone A. Martin, PhD, Danforth Center on Religion and Politics at Washington University in St. Louis
The Feeling of Being Watched: A Filmmaker’s Response
Assia Boundaoui, The Inverse Surveillance Project
Rabia Boundaoui
Xiangnong (George) Wang (moderator), Center on Privacy & Technology at Georgetown Law
Post-9/11 Watchlists
Hina Shamsi, ACLU National Security Project
Community Reflections
Members of the Center for Media Justice’s National Delegation of MASA Community Activists
LUNCH BREAK
12:05 – 1:00pm
Life in Affected Communities
1:00 – 2:45pm
A Conversation on Countering Violent Extremism
Faiza Patel, Brennan Center for Justice
Ayaan Dahir, Young Muslim Collective
Eric Rosand, The Prevention Project
William Braniff, START, University of Maryland
Alvaro Bedoya (moderator), Center on Privacy & Technology at Georgetown Law
“Mosque Crawlers” and the Raza and Hassan cases
Asad Dandia, NYU Graduate Student
Farhaj Hassan, Muslims United For Justice
Laura Moy (moderator), Center on Privacy & Technology at Georgetown Law
“If they should come for us”: A Poet’s Response
Fatimah Asghar
Renata Barreto (moderator), Center on Privacy & Technology at Georgetown Law
BREAK
2:45 – 3:00pm
Community Action
3:00 – 5:25pm
Organizing after Raza
Fahd Ahmed, DRUM – Desis Rising Up & Moving
Stopping the Digital Muslim Ban: A Case Study
Rachel Levinson-Waldman, Brennan Center for Justice
Natasha Duarte, Center for Democracy & Technology
Yolanda C. Rondon, American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee
Steven Renderos, Center for Media Justice
Harrison Rudolph (moderator), Center on Privacy & Technology at Georgetown Law
Organizing in Silicon Valley
Maya Berry, Arab American Institute
Michelle Miller, Coworker.org
Jameson Spivack (moderator), Center on Privacy & Technology at Georgetown Law
Organizing Locally
Brian Hofer, Oakland Privacy
Religious Surveillance and Intersectionality
Brandi Collins-Dexter, Color Of Change
“Stealth Wear”: An Artist’s Response
Adam Harvey
Closing Remarks
5:25 – 5:30pm
Reception to follow in Hart lobby
Speakers:
- Fahd Ahmed of Desis Rising Up and Moving, a grassroots organizer on the issues of racial profiling, immigrant justice, and police accountability
- Professor Brooke Allen of Bennington College, author of Moral Minority: Our Skeptical Founding Fathers, a New York Times notable book
- Poet Fatimah Asghar, author of If They Come For Us & co-creator of the Emmy-nominated web series Brown Girls
- William Braniff of the National Consortium for the Study of Terrorism and Responses to Terrorism (START), studies CVE and alternative counterterrorism approaches
- Filmmaker Assia Boundaoui, director of The Feeling of Being Watched, a “riveting” account (New York Times) of surveillance of a suburban Muslim community in the 1990s
- Professor John Coffey of the University of Leicester, a scholar of Tudor and Stuart-era surveillance of the Puritans we now know as Pilgrims
- Brandi Collins-Dexter of Color Of Change, a civil rights advocate on media, environmental justice, and economic issues
- Ayaan Dahir of the Minneapolis Young Muslims Collective, a Somali American youth leader and civil liberties advocate
- Asad Dandia, M.A. candidate in Middle Eastern Studies at New York University and plaintiff in the Raza v. NYPD case
- Natasha Duarte of the Center for Democracy & Technology, author of Mixed Messages: The Limits of Automated Social Media Analysis
- Professor Spencer Fluhman of Brigham Young University, author of “An ‘American Mahomet’: Joseph Smith, Mohammad, and the Problem of Prophets in Antebellum America”
- Artist Adam Harvey, creator of Stealth Wear, a clothing collection “inspired by traditional Islamic dress… reimagined in the context of drone warfare”
- Syed Farhaj Hassan, a Sergeant in the U.S. Army Reserve and lead plaintiff in the Hassan v. City of New York case
- Brian Hofer of Oakland Privacy and the Privacy Advisory Commission of the City of Oakland, an advocate for local anti-surveillance legislation
- Professor Sylvester Johnson of Virginia Tech’s Center for the Humanities, co-editor of The FBI and Religion: Faith and National Security before and after 9/11
- Rachel Levinson-Waldman of the Brennan Center for Justice, co-coordinator of the Immigrant Surveillance Working Group
- Professor Lerone Martin of the John C. Danforth Center on Religion and Politics, a scholar on the FBI’s mobilization of African American clergy to discredit Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
- Michelle Miller of coworker.org, leading facilitator of tech sector employee activism and mobilization
- Faiza Patel of the Brennan Center for Justice, author of an in-depth critique of federal CVE programs
- Steven Renderos of the Center for Media Justice, co-organizer of a grassroots petition to IBM opposing the company’s interest in ICE’s “Digital Muslim Ban”
- Yolanda Rondon of the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee, a civil rights attorney critical of DHS surveillance initiatives
- Eric Rosand of the Prevention Project: Organizing Against Violent Extremism, a non-resident Senior Fellow at Brookings, and a former State Department senior CVE official
- Hina Shamsi of the American Civil Liberties Union, which is challenging watchlists as unfair and discriminatory
We are delighted to announce Isabelle Falque-Pierrotin as the opening keynote speaker for the 2018 summit. As President of the French Data Protection Authority and former Chair of the EU Article 29 Working Party, Isabelle is truly a global influencer. She led the EU process to develop the general Data Protection Regulations (GDPR) that take effect in May 2018, granting individuals tough new privacy protections for personal data.
Our 8th annual conference will be the biggest yet in a game-changing year, as GDPR become a significant influence on multi-national corporations’ management of individuals’ personal data, irrespective of where they are headquartered.
Places are limited so please register today to join us at the 2018 Data Privacy summit.
When: July 24th – 26th 2018.
Where: The Lyndon Baines Johnson Presidential Library, University of Texas, Austin. TX
Attendance: Free to the public or to watch via live-streaming video.
A limited number of reserved seats are available plus optional off-campus tours to explore Austin’s innovative technology and health communities, tickets to the July 24th Celebration of Privacy Gala Dinner when Isabelle Falque-Pierrotin will receive the Louis D Brandeis Privacy Award.