Dear Readers
I am pleased to invite you to attend our forthcoming workshop entitled 'Balancing Business Innovation with Data Protection? Regulating the Digital Age' which will be held at the University of Oxford on 26 January 2015 at 14:00. The workshop is organised by the Regulation Discussion Group of the Centre for Socio-Legal Studies of the University of Oxford.
Our detailed programme is pasted below.
If you wish to attend, please email me at asma.vranaki@qmul.ac.uk.
Balancing Business Innovation with Data
Protection? Regulating the Digital Age
First Technology Regulation Workshop
Haldane
Room, Wolfson College, 26 January 2015
In recent years, there has been a rapid proliferation of a diverse range of information communication technologies, such as online social networking sites, cloud computing technologies, and, messaging applications. Hardly a day goes by without a new information communication technology being rolled out. As the world of Snapchat, Amazon Web Services, and the likes become firmly entrenched in modern society, new questions are being raised by regulators, scholars, and technologists about the risks such information communication technologies pose to the protection of ‘personal data.’ By ‘personal data’, we mean any information which relates to an individual, who is or can be identified from the data, such as an individual’s internet protocol address, cookies, characteristics or electronic mail address.
The
challenges which information communication technologies pose to the protection of
personal data have been one of the major drivers for reforming the regulation
of personal data, including the current reform of the EU data protection
package. How to strike a balance between
the protection of personal data and the promotion of the European Union as a
world leader in the digital economy is at the heart of the current European reform
exercise. For example, the recent ruling
of the European Court of Justice in the Google Spain case has raised
perplexing, pressing, and practical questions about how companies, such as
Google, will deal with the additional regulatory burdens which are now placed on them whilst continuing
to drive innovation in the field of information communication technologies.
Google reportedly received over 12,000 requests from individuals to remove
information relating to them from the results of Google search engine within 24
hours of the Google Spain ruling.
This
workshop will investigate whether it is possible for regulators and companies to
strike a balance between business innovation and data protection in the Digital
Age. This and many more questions will be explored during this workshop by academics,
regulators, and practitioners from a range of disciplinary perspectives.
1. What are the major patterns of data
use in the digital advertising economy and what are the implications of these
for regulation?
2. In what ways can the so-called
‘co-regulation model’ empower and protect consumers?
3. Is ‘co-regulation’ a viable option
or will it lead to regulatory capture?
4. Can privacy-enhancing technologies improve
the accountability and transparency of companies’ practices in the context of
self-regulation?
Programme
14:00 – 14:10
Opening remarks from the co-convenor of the
Regulation Discussion Group
Dr Bettina Lange
Associate
Professor in Law and Regulation
Centre for
Socio-Legal Studies, University of Oxford
KEYNOTE SPEECH
14:10- 14:40
Transborder Data Flow in Competing Regulatory
Frameworks: The EU Perspective
Dr
Christopher Kuner
Associate
Professor, University of Copenhagen
PANEL ONE
RETHINKING THE USE AND REGULATION OF PERSONAL
DATA
DATA
14:40-15:40
Regulation by Privacy Seals and Certification
Steve Wood,
Head of Policy Delivery
ICO
Review of the Practices of Self-Regulation in
Digital Advertising in the UK: Innovation and Data Use
Nick
Stringer, Director of Regulatory Affairs
UK Internet
Advertising Bureau
Reflecting on the Distinction between Data Processors and Data Controllers: A View from Practice
Ronnie
Preiskel, Partner
Preiskel
& Co LLP
15:40 -16:00
Panel discussion
Moderator: Dr Bettina Lange
16:00 -16:20 Coffee break
PANEL TWO CO-REGULATION AND SELF-REGULATION:
BALANCING
INNOVATION AND DATA PROTECTION
INNOVATION AND DATA PROTECTION
16:20 -17:20
Data Sovereignty, Data Flow, and International
Jurisdiction in Cloud Computing
Christopher
Millard, Professor of Privacy and Information Law
Queen Mary,
University of London
Net Neutrality and Personal Data Protection:
Towards a Co-regulatory Solution
Christopher
T. Marsden, Professor of Internet and Media Law
University
of Sussex
Cloud Computing: Technical Protections and
Directions
Dr Jatinder
Singh, Senior Research Associate
Computer Laboratory, University of Cambridge
Computer Laboratory, University of Cambridge
17:20-17:40
Panel discussion
Moderator: Dr Asma Vranaki, Post-Doctoral
Researcher in Cloud Computing, Queen Mary, University of London
Drinks
Organising Committee
Dr Bettina
Lange, Associate Professor in Law & Regulation (University of Oxford)
Dr Asma Vranaki,
Post-Doctoral Researcher in Cloud Computing (QMUL)
Janet Hui
Xue, PhD Candidate in Internet Regulation (Macquarie University)
We gratefully
acknowledge the contributions of Macquarie University and the Oxford Regulation
Discussion Group for this workshop.
For further
details, please email Dr Asma Vranaki at asma.vranaki@qmul.ac.uk
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