Intellectual Privacy: Rethinking Civil Liberties in the Digital Age (Past Event)
RSVP is required for this free event.
Open to the public. Read more about Intellectual Privacy: Rethinking Civil Liberties in the Digital Age
RSVP is required for this free event.
Open to the public. Read more about Intellectual Privacy: Rethinking Civil Liberties in the Digital Age
The 2015 Santa Clara Journal of International Law presents
“Critical Global Business Issues: When Theory Meets Practice”
Hosted by Santa Clara Law, the Santa Clara Journal of International Law, and the Center for Global Law and Policy
Friday, February 6th, 2015 (all day)
Saturday, February 7th, 2015 (morning session) Read more about 2015 Santa Clara Journal of International Law Symposium
CIS Non-Residential Fellow Catherine Crump will be presenting at the Center for Information Technology Policy at Princeton University. Read more about The Fourth Amendment in the Era of Mass Dataveillance: A View From The Trenches
CIS Non-Residential Fellow Richard Salgado will be testifying before the Senate Judiciary Committee. Read more about The Surveillance Transparency Act of 2013
Privacy Implications of the New Mobile App Ecosystem: (30 minutes) Read more about Overview of Constitutional Privacy Principles and Existing State and Federal Privacy Laws
Solutions to many pressing economic and societal challenges lie in better understanding data. New tools for analyzing disparate information sets, called Big Data, have revolutionized our ability to find signals amongst the noise. Big Data techniques hold promise for breakthroughs ranging from better health care, a cleaner environment, safer cities, and more effective marketing. Yet, privacy advocates are concerned that the same advances will upend the power relationships between government, business and individuals, and lead to prosecutorial abuse, racial or other profiling, discrimination, redlining, overcriminalization, and other restricted freedoms. Read more about Big Data and Privacy: Making Ends Meet
People rarely read privacy policies, but they're important. So let's make it easier for users to understand the most meaningful things a website does with their data. To accomplish this Disconnect is hosting a project to crowd-source -- think Wikipedia -- turning websites' privacy policies into a set of Creative Commons licensed privacy icons. The project also will publicly launch with an API so that any developer can build tools using the icons and crowd-sourced data. Here's a link to the current iteration of the project and a rudimentary Firefox add-on we created for the hackathon: Read more about Privacy Icons Legal Hackathon
Technology Reporter Steven Henn leads a conversation on new innovations in face recognition technology and the legal & ethical challenges they raise with two leading privacy experts: University of Washington Law's Ryan Calo and Carnegie Mellon University's Alessandro Acquisti
More Info Read more about Weekend in Washington - What's The Big Idea? Technology & The Future of Privacy
Hosted by the Stanford Center for E-Commerce.
5:30 pm - 6:30 pm: Registration/Reception (Manning Faculty Lounge, second floor breezeway fo Stanford Law School) Read more about Behavioral Advertising and Privacy Law Reboot - US and International Legal Trends and Best Practices for Internet, Cloud and E-Commerce Companies