[Air-L] CFP Privacy Ethics workshop at Facebook

Page, Xinru XPAGE at bentley.edu
Sat Sep 9 09:10:18 PDT 2017


We’re really excited to launch this initiative, please spread the word - Deadline approaching!

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Bridging Industry and Academia to Tackle Responsible Research and Privacy Practices

Location: Facebook in New York City Dates: November 2-3, 2017

Workshop Organizers: Margaret Honda, Future of Privacy Forum; Xinru Page, Bentley University; Pamela Wisniewski, University of Central Florida; Jen Romano-Bergstrom, Instagram and UXPA; Sona Makker, Facebook; and Norberto Andrade, Facebook

Advisory Board:

•        Christopher Clifton, Perdue University

•        Lorrie Cranor, Carnegie Mellon University, Director CyLab Usable Privacy and Security Laboratory

•        Lauri Kanerva, Facebook, Research Management Lead

•        Helen Nissenbaum, Cornell Tech and New York University

•        Jules Polonetsky, Future of Privacy Forum, Chief Executive Officer

Overview
As more human interactions move online and the amount and variety of information shared digitally continues to grow, decisions regarding the collection, sharing, and use of this data must take into account both ethical and privacy considerations. It is important that industry and academia come together to find joint solutions for making these difficult decisions regarding privacy and ethics to maximize the benefits of data-driven research and practices, while ensuring that harms and negative outcomes are prevented. To bridge communication between these communities, we are organizing a workshop for thought leaders from academia, industry and civil society to identify common goals, establish a long-term vision, and initiate working teams for tangible projects focused on responsible research ethics and privacy practices around user data. The workshop will kick-off with a keynote from Facebook’s Deputy Chief Privacy Officer, Rob Sherman, and a panel discussion from our advisory board members.

Workshop Themes

1.     Data Analytics and Privacy-Preserving Technologies. How should organizations decide which data uses and applications are fair and appropriate? What are the strengths and limitations of privacy-preserving techniques, such as differential privacy and obfuscation, to remove sensitive information or add uncertainty to a dataset before it is released, or before further services are developed with data? In what contexts have privacy preserving technologies been deployed to unlock new types of data analysis while guaranteeing meaningful protection of privacy?

2.     Privacy and Ethics in User Research. Data-driven research conducted to understand people’s behavior online raises questions about the types of research practices and techniques that should be used to respect privacy (e.g. around de-identification and re-identification of individuals through data-mining, linking, merging and re-using of large datasets). How might ethical considerations guide new data collection and use practices so that they respect privacy and promote societal benefits for all?

3.     People-Centered Privacy Design. The privacy landscape has for too long been dominated by long policy statements and formal consent processes. By leveraging design thinking, there is an opportunity to raise the bar and reorient our approach to privacy in a way that puts people at the center. How can organizations use design thinking to provide people better visibility and control over their data? And how can a more people-focused approach enable us to reorient toward a modern, innovative approach to privacy?

Workshop Goals
Initiatives in each of these areas continues to gain considerable momentum, making it the opportune time to identify promising avenues for forming new academic and private sector collaborations. Toward this end, the goals for this workshop are to:


1.     Convene experts in each of the three focus areas to highlight recent advances and integrate different perspectives from the various communities.

2.      Foster new collaborations and start working together to forge meaningful progress in these areas by creating working groups.

At the workshop, we will develop concrete project proposals and solidify new partnerships across disciplinary lines by drafting goal-specific research or design proposals. The teams will pursue these projects after the conclusion of the workshop. The outcomes of this inaugural meeting will be sustained through future workshops that will be co-created by our growing community – if you attend this workshop, you will be expected to collaborate with your working group and return to the next workshop (in about a year) to present group outcomes.

Call for Participation
Our intent is to bring together experts from different fields who are engaging in research or initiatives in the themed areas outlined above. To encourage a diverse set of attendees, we ask those who are interested to provide their resume or CV and a 1 to 2-page submission that includes the following information (no specific format required):

•        Biosketch. A one to two paragraph biosketch that provides an introduction to who you are and your background. Clearly articulate whether you come from industry, academia, or civil society.

•        Project Theme. A description of your planned or existing research projects that aligns with one of the three themes. Clearly indicate the progress you have made, lessons learned, as well as the contribution of the work to the field.

•        Influence. A statement on how you would be influential within your respective community in disseminating the workshop outcomes after the conclusion of the workshop.

Please send submissions to rcn at fpf.org<mailto:rcn at fpf.org>. Submissions are due September 22nd, 2017, 11:59PM EST. Submissions will be peer-reviewed by the workshop program committee and will be accepted based on selection criteria that ensures a diverse set of attendees who are able to work together on the relevant workshop themes and goals. Limited travel funding will be available to workshop participants based on need.

For more information, including schedule, housing options, and sponsors, see our website:
https://fpf.org/research-privacy-practices/<https://na01.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Ffpf.org%2Fresearch-privacy-practices%2F&data=02%7C01%7CPamela.Wisniewski%40ucf.edu%7C9a6b7f48ec9d45c7111108d4f78e3345%7Cbb932f15ef3842ba91fcf3c59d5dd1f1%7C0%7C0%7C636405637897762465&sdata=8txkUEi1Qa5wfa9KMa8OVY7MGYB7qAVU3rpz9Lwit54%3D&reserved=0>

Program Committee: Adam Smith, Boston University; Bart Knijnenberg, Clemson University; Casey Fiesler, University of Colorado Boulder; Janice Tsai, Mozilla; Jed Brubaker, University of Colorado Boulder; Jessica Vitak, University of Maryland; Lorraine Kisselburgh, Purdue University; Luke Stark, Dartmouth College; Marco Gaboardi, University at Buffalo, SUNY; Mary Ellen Zurko, Independent Consultant; Nicholas Proferes, University of Kentucky; Norah Abokhodair, Microsoft; Rachel Cummings, Georgia Tech; Shannon Vallor, Santa Clara University; Woodrow Hartzog, Northeastern University School of Law; Yang Wang, Syracuse University; (See website for most up-to-date list of PC members)




Xinru Page
Assistant Professor
Computer Information Systems
Bentley University
Waltham, MA 02452
Web: http://cis.bentley.edu/xpage/<https://na01.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=http%3A%2F%2Fcis.bentley.edu%2Fxpage%2F&data=02%7C01%7CPamela.Wisniewski%40ucf.edu%7C9a6b7f48ec9d45c7111108d4f78e3345%7Cbb932f15ef3842ba91fcf3c59d5dd1f1%7C0%7C0%7C636405637897762465&sdata=OzBT2UuyxWffUr%2FgwAfc2lUsFLQBP6ZyWvuImpk7gyE%3D&reserved=0>



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