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Sabrina Nanji from Queen's Park Observer joins for party for Two to discuss the top stories of the day. Ann Cavoukian, former Ontario Information and Privacy Commissioner discusses the woman whose conversation in a Lyft was recorded, transcribed, and texted to her. It's Telescopic Tuesday! Dan Riskin joins the show to talk science! Then, Conservative MPs invested in Mark Carney's former company, Brookfield Asset Management.
EU AI Act – Why, What & How with Dr. Ann Cavoukian, Nicola Fabiano, Punit Bhatia and Raghu Bala The EU AI Act. Let us demystify the EU AI Act in this podcast that features a panel of experts. Together, they delve into the reasoning behind the Act, its core tenets, why was it needed? What does it entail? How does this legislation benefit society? They also discuss the crucial topics of responsible AI, trustworthy AI, and ethics in AI. The conversation explores critical questions surrounding the Act's effectiveness, the technical preparedness of regulators, and its potential societal benefits. But the discussion doesn't stop there. The panel also tackles broader challenges in AI development, including mitigating bias in data and fostering ethical and responsible AI practices. Join us with Dr. Ann Cavoukian, Nicola Fabiano, Punit Bhatia and Raghu Bala as we embark on a journey to understand the significance of compliance with AI regulations, not just limited to the EU AI Act but within a broader global context. KEY CONVERSATION POINT Why did we need this EU AI Act? What is this EU AI Act all about? Do Lawmakers and regulators have sufficient technical expertise? How does this EU AI Act help society? How do we reach a state wherein data is not biased? Responsible AI, trustworthy AI and ethics in AI. How to start the journey to compliance with AI regulation? And when? ABOUT THE GUEST Dr. Ann Cavoukian is a globally recognized privacy expert, distinguished academic, and passionate advocate for privacy by design. As the former Information and Privacy Commissioner of Ontario, Canada, she pioneered the concept of Privacy by Design, which emphasizes embedding privacy protections into the design and operation of systems, processes, and technologies. Dr. Cavoukian's groundbreaking work has earned her numerous accolades, including being named as one of the Top 25 Women of Influence in Canada and receiving the Meritorious Service Medal from the Governor General of Canada. Her expertise is sought after globally, and she has served as a consultant, advisor, and speaker for governments, corporations, and academic institutions worldwide. Nicola Fabiano is a distinguished Italian lawyer with a rich background in data protection, privacy, and artificial intelligence (AI) regulation. As an adjunct professor at Ostrava University in Rome and a former President of the San Marino Data Protection Authority, he brings a wealth of expertise to the table. Nicola has served as a national expert for the Republic of San Marino on key committees of the Council of Europe, including those focused on Convention No. 108 and the Ad hoc Committee on Artificial Intelligence. With his extensive experience as a government advisor for drafting legislation on personal data protection and his innovative contributions such as the Data Protection and Privacy Relationships Model (DAPPREMO), Nicola is at the forefront of shaping AI policy and ethics. Raghu Bala is a distinguished technology thought leader, entrepreneur, and author whose expertise spans a broad spectrum of cutting-edge domains, including IoT, AI, blockchain, mobile technologies, cloud computing, and Big Data. With a unique blend of deep technical knowledge and robust business acumen, Raghu has established himself as a visionary in Internet-related ventures. As the CEO of UnifyGPT Agentic Platform and an instructor for MIT Sloan's AI, De-Fi, and Blockchain courses, he is at the forefront of shaping the future of technology. Raghu's impressive resume includes co-authorship of the Handbook on Blockchain and contributions as a Contributing Editor to Step into the Metaverse. RESOURCES Websites www.fit4privacy.com, www.punitbhatia.com Podcast https://www.fit4privacy.com/podcast Blog https://www.fit4privacy.com/blog YouTube http://youtube.com/fit4privacy
Why did we need the EU AI Act? We'll be diving deep into this question for you with Dr. Ann Cavoukian, Nicola Fabiano, and Raghu Bala. This is an extract from the full episode of The FIT4PRIVACY Podcast. If you like this, you would enjoy the full episode. If this is your first time, the FIT4PRIVACY Podcast is a privacy podcast for those who care about privacy. In this podcast, you listen to and learn from the industry influencers who share their ideas. The episodes are released as audio every Wednesday and video every Thursday. If you subscribe to our podcast, you will be notified about the new episodes. And, if you have not done it, write a review and share this with someone who will benefit from this. RESOURCES: Websites: www.fit4privacy.com , www.punitbhatia.com Take advantage of our Free GDPR training: https://www.fit4privacy.com/course/free --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/fit4privacy/message
In this conversation with Dr. Ann Cavoukian, we delve into the crucial topic of privacy and its role in building trust. In an era marked by a growing trust deficit, Ann shares strategies for fostering trust with your employees and customers. We also explore the implications of privacy in the context of leading change and how to maintain trust while navigating these challenges. Hosted by Yvonne Ruke Akpoveta.
Kelly talks to Dr. Adil Shamji and Ann Cavoukian. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Dr. Ann Cavoukian, executive director, Global Privacy & Security by Design Centre Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Guest: Dr. Ann Cavoukian, Executive Director of the Global Privacy and Security by Design CentreWebsite | https://gpsbydesign.org/On LinkedIn | https://www.linkedin.com/in/ann-cavoukian-ph-d-3a78809/On Twitter | https://twitter.com/anncavoukianWikipedia | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ann_CavoukianHost: Dr. Rebecca WynnOn ITSPmagazine
Hour 1 for the Drew Mariani Show for 1-3-24 News Roundup Drew talks about the Google Lawsuit regarding incognity mode and privacy in general with Dr. Ann Cavoukian. Dr. Charles Camosy talks about his article regarding AI as a person.
Hour 1 of The Drew Mariani Show on 11-30-23 Dr. Ann Cavoukian explores the latest news that exposes the US Government in a giant web of illegal censorship against it's own citizens - we listen to the testimony of Michael Shellenberger who has extensive reports from a government whistleblower Jamie Bogle looks at the case of Baby Indi, who was fighting for life just weeks ago - and the UK government "ruled" that it was in the "child's best interest" to be taken off life support AND denied further treatment in Italy (who had offered her citizenship to treat her at Bambino Jesu Hospital)
Host Alex Pierson speaks with Ann Cavoukian, Executive Director at the Global Privacy and Security by Design Centre, former three-term privacy commissioner of Ontario. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Will Canada Post face consequences for illegally selling our personal information to businesses? Guest: Dr. Ann Cavoukian, Executive Director of Global Privacy & Security by Design Centre, and Senior Fellow of the Ted Rogers Leadership Centre at Ryerson University Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Seg 1: How dark literature can help first-year university students find their path Guest: Caron Gentry, Professor Vice-Chancellor of Design and Social Sciences at Northumbria University Seg 3: View From Victoria: John Rustad comes out against SOGI, being the only provincial leader to promise to scrap the learning module Guest: Rob Shaw, Political Correspondent for CHEK News is here with his take on the day's headlines. Seg 4: What caused BC to experience 30 earthquakes in 3 days? Guest: Dr. John Cassidy, Senior Research Scientist with Natural Resources Canada Seg 5: How will free 911-only mobile phones benefit seniors? Guest: Constable Tania Visintin, Media Relations Officer for the Vancouver Police Department Seg 6: Will Canada Post face consequences for illegally selling our personal information to businesses? Guest: Dr. Ann Cavoukian, Executive Director of Global Privacy & Security by Design Centre, and Senior Fellow of the Ted Rogers Leadership Centre at Ryerson University Seg 7: Are BC landlords evicting tenants to re-rent at a higher price? Guest: Pete Fry, Director of the Union of BC Municipalities and Green Party Vancouver City Councillor Seg 8: Why an advocacy group is putting stickers with crash stats at dangerous intersections Guest: Jade Buchanan, Member of Vision Zero Vancouver Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Party for Two with Mark Towhey goes over the top stories of the day. Ann Cavoukian talks about privacy with drones outside homes. Dan Riskin joins the show to discuss the top science stories. And, Brian Lilley makes the case for getting rid of school boards in Ontario.
Despite previous claims that Public Safety Minister Marco Mendicino's office had no idea that convicted killer Paul Bernardo was getting transferred to medium security, in fact, Mendicino's staff knew for three months that the transfer was going to happen. Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre is calling on Mendicino to resign, though all the public safety minister is committing to is a new “policy directive” allowing for more information to be shared. Also, True North's Andrew Lawton weighs in on the Bell Media layoffs. Plus, Dr. Ann Cavoukian, head of Toronto Metropolitan University's Privacy by Design Centre of Excellence, joins the show to talk about the privacy dangers of digital ID. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The Hamilton Today Podcast with Scott Thompson: A Chinese warship came within 150 yards of hitting American destroyer USS Chung-Hoon, during a rare joint Canada-U.S. mission sailing through the Taiwan Strait, the latest aggressive military move from Beijing in the South China Sea. As we heard from Jagmeet Singh when he joined us on Friday, he will be taking security meetings in the near future, as a follow-up to his concerns about Special Rapporteur David Johnston's report on foreign interference. The federal prison service says it will have a second look at its decision to move convicted killer Paul Bernardo to a medium-security facility as political leaders of all stripes react to the news with shock and outrage. Wildfires are having a big impact across Canada. The sun might look different, and in some regions of our province, you may even smell the smoke wafting across the land, and even here in Southern Ontario, our air quality has worsened. It is all coming up on the Hamilton Today Podcast! Guests: Dr. Ann Cavoukian. Former Ontario Privacy Commissioner. Now executive director of the Global Privacy and Security by Design Centre, Toronto, Toronto Metropolitan University. Elliot Tepper, Emeritus Professor of Political Science with Carleton University. Diane Pacom, Professor of Sociological and Anthropological Studies, Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Ottawa. Tys Theysmeyer, Head of Natural Lands for the Royal Botanical Gardens. Phil Gurski, President of Borealis Threat and Risk Consulting, Distinguished Fellow with the University of Ottawa's National Security program, and former CSIS analyst. Dan McTeague, President of Canadians for Affordable Energy; Former Liberal Member of Parliament. Timothy Danson, Lawyer for the Mahaffy and French families. Dr. Terry Flynn, Associate Professor, Communications Management, Department of Communication Studies & Multimedia at McMaster University Mitch Meredith, Severe Weather Meteorologist with Environment Canada. Host – Scott Thompson Content Producer – William Erskine Technical/Podcast Producer – Tom McKay Podcast Co-Producer – Ben Straughan News Anchor – Dave Woodard & Jen McQueen Want to keep up with what happened in Hamilton Today? Subscribe to the podcast! https://megaphone.link/CORU8835115919
In this episode, Luiza Jarovsky talks with Dr. Ann Cavoukian - the inventor of Privacy by Design - about:The origins of Privacy by DesignHow it is essential for businesses, especially todayHer new Privacy by Design ISO certificationHow should we think of Privacy by Design in the Age of AIQuestions brought by the audienceLuiza Jarovsky is a lawyer, CEO of Implement Privacy, and author of Luiza's Newsletter.Read more about Luiza's work at https://www.luizajarovsky.comSubscribe to Luiza's Newsletter: https://www.luizasnewsletter.comCheck out the courses and training programs Luiza is leading at https://www.implementprivacy.comFollow Luiza on social media:LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/luizajarovskyTwitter: https://www.twitter.com/luizaJarovskyYouTube: https://youtube.com/@luizajarovsky
Let's talk about digital identity with Oscar Santolalla, Ann Cavoukian and Katryna Dow. In this latest episode within the Identity Story Series, Ann Cavoukian, creator of Privacy by Design and Katryna Dow, CEO at Meeco, join Oscar to explore the road to becoming ISO 31700 for Privacy by Design. They discuss the importance of Privacy by Design and how it can help organisations protect their customers' personal data and comply with data protection regulations and the impact of Privacy by Design becoming an ISO Standard. [Transcript below] “If you don't have a strong foundation of security from end to end with full lifecycle protection, you're not going to have any privacy.” ~ Ann Cavoukian Dr Ann Cavoukian is recognised as one of the world's leading privacy experts. Dr Cavoukian served an unprecedented three terms as the Information & Privacy Commissioner of Ontario, Canada. There she created Privacy by Design, a framework that seeks to proactively embed privacy into the design specifications of information technologies, networked infrastructure and business practices, thereby achieving the strongest protection possible. In 2010, International Privacy Regulators unanimously passed a Resolution recognising Privacy by Design as an International Standard. Since then, PbD has been translated into 40 languages! In 2018, PbD was included in a sweeping new law in the EU: the General Data Protection Regulation. Dr Cavoukian is now the Executive Director of the Global Privacy & Security by Design Centre. She is also a Senior Fellow of the Ted Rogers Leadership Centre at Ryerson University, and a Faculty Fellow of the Centre for Law, Science & Innovation at the Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law at Arizona State University. Listen to Episode 73, where Ann joined the podcast to discuss Privacy by Design, and connect with Ann on LinkedIn. “One of the really challenging things about privacy and security is if you don't bake it in at the lower layers, if you don't build that foundation, it's really hard to go back and put it into a product or service afterwards.” ~ Katryna Dow Katryna Dow is the founder and CEO of Meeco; a personal data & distributed ledger platform that enables people to securely exchange data via the API-of-Me with the people and organisations they trust. Katryna has been pioneering personal data rights since 2002, when she envisioned a time when personal sovereignty, identity and contextual privacy would be as important as being connected. Now within the context of GDPR and Open Banking, distributed ledger, cloud, AI and IoT have converged to make Meeco both possible and necessary. Find out more about Meeco at meeco.me. For the past three years, Katryna has been named as one of the Top 100 Identity Influencers. She is the co-author of the blockchain identity paper ‘Immutable Me' and co-author/co-architect of Meeco's distributed ledger solution and technical White Paper on Zero Knowledge Proofs for Access, Control, Delegation and Consent of Identity and Personal Data. Katryna speaks globally on digital rights, privacy and data innovation. Listen to Episode 30, where Katryna joined the podcast to discuss Data minimisation, and connect with Katryna on LinkedIn. Go to our YouTube to watch the video transcript for episode 89. We'll be continuing this conversation on Twitter using #LTADI – join us @ubisecure! Podcast transcript Let's Talk About Digital Identity, the podcast connecting identity and business. I am your host, Oscar Santolalla. Oscar Santolalla: Today we're happy to bring you a new episode of our Identity Stories Series. Privacy by Design has just become an ISO standard, which we want to celebrate, so let's go back in time and hear moments of this journey. Let's first hear from Privacy by Design's creator herself, Dr Ann Cavoukian. She is recognised as one of the world's leading privacy experts and she served an unprecedented three terms as the Information & ...
ePrivacy y marco regulatorio Hemos vivido un invierno cargado de iniciativas regulatorias y multas de gran relevancia. Vamos por partes, empezando con el marco normativo y siguiendo con multas y demandas privadas. Actualizaciones normativas En la UE, el Reglamento de Inteligencia Artificial (que hemos cubierto este trimestre en un par de entrevistas de Masters of Privacy) dio un paso importante en el Consejo con su adopción de una posición final. Estos días esto es importante porque el nuevo marco legal diferencia ya entre las medidas que deben adoptar diferentes empresas a lo largo de la cadena de uso de, por ejemplo, un OpenAI (detrás del omnipresente ChatGPT) o un Stability AI. Al mismo tiempo, en noviembre vieron la luz las nuevas reglas comunes en materia de ciberseguridad con la aprobación de la Directiva NS2 (una versión mejorada de la Directiva de Seguridad de la Información y de las Redes). El marco actualizado cubre la respuesta a incidentes, la seguridad de la cadena de suministro y el cifrado, entre otras cosas. Por su parte, la Agencia Española de Protección de Datos (AEPD) emitió una decisión sobre el uso de Google Analytics por parte de la Real Academia de la Lengua Española (“RAE”), convirtiéndose en la primera autoridad supervisora de la UE en ver el vaso medio lleno en el uso del extendido servicio de analítica digital (habiendo sido considerado de alto riesgo en Dinamarca, Italia, Francia, los Países Bajos y Austria). Huelga tener en cuenta que la RAE hacía solo uso de la versión más básica de la herramienta, sin integraciones de medición de campañas publicitarias ni perfilado de usuarios individuales, y en este sentido alineado con las pautas de la autoridad supervisora francesa (CNIL) para el uso válido de la herramienta. Ya en el nuevo año, el Comité Europeo de Protección de Datos (EDPB) publicó sus deliberaciones en dos informes importantes, sobre el consentimiento válido en el contexto de los faldones de cookies (con la esperanza de acordar un enfoque común frente a múltiples quejas de Max Schrems/NOYB en toda la UE), y sobre el uso de servicios basados en la nube por parte del sector público. El primero de ellos concluyó que la gran mayoría de las autoridades supervisoras no aceptan ocultar el botón de "Rechazar todo" en una segunda capa, lo que parece dejar a la AEPD aislada en su empeño. Sí que ha habido unanimidad en la no conformidad de: a) casillas de verificación de consentimiento previamente marcadas en la segunda capa; b) el uso del interés legítimo como base legal; c) el uso de patrones oscuros en el diseño de enlaces o colores/contraste de botones; y d) la imprecisión en la clasificación de cookies esenciales. El segundo concluyó que los organismos públicos de toda la UE pueden tener dificultades para proporcionar medidas complementarias al enviar datos personales a una nube basada en los Estados Unidos (según los requisitos de Schrems II) en el contexto de algunas implementaciones de Software as a Service (SaaS), lo que sugiere que cambiar a un proveedor de servicios en la nube (CSP, en inglés) basado en el Espacio Económico Europeo resolvería el problema y haría que muchos se preguntaran si también se refiere a los CSP de propiedad estadounidense, lo que dejaría pocas opciones sobre la mesa y ninguna capaz de competir a muchos niveles en términos de funcionalidades o escalabilidad. Al otro lado del charco, el 1 de enero entraron en vigor las muy esperadas nuevas leyes de protección de datos en California (CPRA) y Virginia (CDPA). Aunque ambas ofrecen un conjunto amplio de derechos en términos de garantizar el control individual sobre los datos personales que se recopilan a través de internet (exclusión voluntaria, acceso, eliminación, corrección, portabilidad...), la de California crea un derecho privado de acción que podría allanar el camino para una nueva avalancha de demandas. En cualquier caso, solo las empresas que alcancen un umbral mínimo en términos de ingresos o la cantidad de consumidores afectados por sus prácticas de recopilación de datos tendrán que preocuparse por las nuevas normas. Por último, la Privacidad desde el diseño se convertirá en unos días en el nuevo estándar ISO 31700, inaugurando finalmente un proceso estructurado y auditable para cumplir con los siete principios establecidos en su día por Ann Cavoukian, ex directora de la agencia de protección de datos de Ontario (Canadá). Multas y demandas privadas Las agencias continentales de protección de datos siguen ordeñando la vaca del cabo suelto de la Directiva ePrivacy (artículo 22.2 de la Ley de Servicios de la Sociedad de la Información en España) con relación a la ventanilla única de GDPR (“One-Stop Shop”). Como muy comentado por estos lares, el tan esperado Reglamento ePrivacy nunca llegó a ver la luz para mantener ambos cuerpos normativos en sintonía, y esto permite que cualquier autoridad supervisora gestione independientemente los casos relativos al consentimiento de cookies y otras tecnologías similares. Este criterio se ha visto reforzado por las recientes conclusiones del Cookie Banner Task Force del Comité Europeo de Protección de Datos (sumadas a las mencionadas anteriormente). Microsoft fue la última gran víctima de esta particular casuística en el año que ya hemos dejado atrás (después de Meta y Google), recibiendo una multa de 60 millones de euros de la CNIL francesa, que poco después agració a TikTok con otra multa de 5 millones de euros (una vez más, por la ausencia de un botón “Rechazar todo” en su primera capa -o “no siendo tan fácil rechazar las cookies como aceptarlas”). También llegó su turno a Apple a pesar de toda la publicidad gastada en promover su supuesto abanderamiento de la privacidad, con una multa de 8 millones de euros por recopilar identificadores de dispositivos únicos de los visitantes de su tienda de aplicaciones sin previo consentimiento o aviso, con el fin de gestionar su propio sistema publicitario. La carnicería de sanciones-ePrivacy de la CNIL no se detuvo en las Big Tech. Voodoo, un líder en juegos móviles hiper-casuales (incluyendo Helix Jump, Baseball Boy, Hole, Aquapark o Paper.io - con cinco mil millones de descargas a mediados de 2021), también recibió su ración de jarabe de palo con una multa de 3 millones de euros por falta de consentimiento adecuado al servir un IDFV (identificador único "para proveedores", que Apple permite que los editores de aplicaciones lancen cuando el IDFA, que permite hacer un seguimiento a través de todas las apps, ha sido rechazado por los usuarios como consecuencia del aviso de App Tracking Transparency). Dejando a un lado la Directiva ePrivacy, y en el dominio puro del RGPD/GDPR, Discord recibió una multa de 800k euros (nuevamente, a manos de la CNIL) sobre la base de: a) la ausencia de un periodo de retención específico; b) la inobservancia de los principios de Privacidad desde el diseño en el desarrollo de sus productos; c) aceptar niveles de seguridad excesivamente bajos para la creación de contraseñas de usuario; y d) no realizar una Evaluación de impacto en materia de protección de datos (dado el volumen de datos que trata y la popularidad de la herramienta entre los menores de edad). Y, sin embargo, una noticia en particular eclipsó casi todo lo demás en esta categoría: el DPC de Irlanda impuso una multa de 390 millones de euros a Meta, a instancias del EDPB, por confiar en la base legal contractual para servir publicidad personalizada en Facebook e Instagram, en sí misma constituyendo el modelo de negocio que sustenta ambas redes sociales. En Masters of Privacy hemos tenido un debate sobre el asunto y sus consecuencias con ambos, Tim Walters (Inglés) y Alonso Hurtado (español). También hemos publicado un artículo de opinión en nuestro blog. Este último asunto es una buena transición a los últimos problemas de Twitter. Su nuevo dueño, Elon Musk, no contento con haber despedido a altos ejecutivos clave a cargo del cumplimiento de la privacidad en la UE (incluido su Chief Privacy Officer y DPO), ha sugerido que obligará a sus usuarios del servicio gratuito a dar su consentimiento a la publicidad personalizada. Este tipo de práctica nos ha recordado a los “cookie walls” que el Consejo de Estado francés ha obligado a la CNIL a aceptar en ese país, resultando en las solicitudes de consentimiento con pistola en mano que se han ido propagando por Le Monde y otros grupos editoriales. El DPC irlandés (una vez más, a cargo de su supervisión bajo la regla de ventanilla única o One-Stop Shop) ha solicitado de todos modos a Twitter una reunión con la esperanza de trazar algunas líneas rojas. Por su parte, la AEPD, que sigue batiendo todos los récords en cuanto a multas mensuales, ha sancionado (70.000 euros) a la empresa de paquetería UPS por hacer un envío de MediaMarkt a un vecino, incumpliendo así su deber de confidencialidad. Al otro lado del charco, Epic Games y el regulador estadounidense han acordado pagar una multa de 520 millones de dólares por dirigirse directamente a niños menores de 13 años con su juego Fortnite (la configuración predeterminada les permitía además participar en comunicaciones de voz y texto con extraños), así como por usar "patrones oscuros" en las compras de “artefactos” digitales. En el frente de las demandas privadas (especialmente importante en EEUU), Meta ha acordado pagar $725 millones después de que se presentara una demanda colectiva en California contra su red social Facebook a raíz del siempre presente escándalo de Cambridge Analytica. Además, la Ley de Privacidad de la Información Biométrica de Illinois (BIPA, por sus siglas en inglés) siguió poniendo dinero en los bolsillos de los demandantes y abogados de demandas colectivas, en este caso obligando a Whole Foods (una cadena de supermercados de alimentos orgánicos de lujo propiedad de Amazon) a negociar un pago de 300.000 dólares - por ahí han pasado ya TikTok, Facebook o Snapchat, aunque aquí haya sido el seguimiento, a través de "huellas de voz", de sus propios empleados lo que ha desencadenado la demanda. Competencia y Mercados Digitales Google ha recibido una demanda del Departamento de Justicia por abuso de su posición en el mercado abierto de AdTech (o los anuncios que se muestran en la web y más allá de sus propios "jardines amurallados" de Google Search y YouTube), aprovechando su control del mercado de Ad Servers de editores (controlando el inventario publicitario de “display”) y su posición privilegiada como dueño del principal espacio de gestión de pujas (AdX, haciendo el encaje en tiempo real entre demanda y oferta) para bloquear cualquier posible desafío a su dominio del mercado de anunciantes (cada vez más pequeños, menos sofisticados y más necesitados de la simplicidad ofrecida por Google Ads para invertir tanto en anuncios de búsqueda como en publicidad “display”). Entre otras cosas, se ha acusado a Google de manipular artificialmente AdX para favorecer a los editores a expensas de los anunciantes. Zero-Party Data y el futuro de los medios (La noticia a continuación nos obliga a compaginar ambas categorías esta temporada) La BBC ha desplegado su propia versión de SOLID pods (carteras de datos y preferencias) para permitir que sus clientes aprovechen sus propios datos (exportados de Netflix, Spotify y la BBC) para obtener recomendaciones relevantes mientras mantienen el control total de dichos datos en sus dispositivos. Aquí se acaba nuestra puesta al día, ¡pero no el invierno! No olvides abrigarte… del frío y de los riesgos en el tratamiento de datos personales :) Podrás encontrar todos los links y referencias en el blog de Masters of Privacy. Con Cris Moro y Sergio Maldonado
When it comes to privacy, Ann Cavoukian is a legend. She created Privacy by Design during her tenure as Privacy Commissioner of Ontario, which landed her in the upper echelon of cybersecurity peeps. And she's Raffi's sister! Check it out. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
This episode features an interview with privacy expert Ann Cavoukian
Hour 1 of The Drew Mariani Show on 7-7-22 Lieutenant General Tom Spoehr joins Drew to talk about Russia's desire to "reunite" with old countries Dr. Ann Cavoukian takes a look at China's surveillance systems, which are being adopted by countries around the world...
Join the former Privacy Commissioner of Ontario, Canada and creator of PrivacyByDesign (PbD), translated into 40 languages and incorporated into General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) and used by many organizations to proactively “bake-in” privacy into our systems. Every CISO needs to pay attention to and support the various country privacy laws. To view the article from the CISO COMPASS Book that sparked this interview, please visit: https://securityweekly.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/05/CISOSTORIES_AnnCavoukian_Article.pdf Cavoukian, A. 2019. Lead with Privacy by Design for Competitive Advantage. In CISO COMPASS: Navigating Cybersecurity Leadership Challenges with Insights from Pioneers, 1st Ed, pgs. 270-1. Fitzgerald, T. CRC Press, Boca Raton, Fl. www.amazon.com/author/toddfitzgerald. Visit https://securityweekly.com/csp for all the latest episodes! Follow us on Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/cyberleaders Follow us on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/cybersecuritycollaborative/ Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/csp76
Hour 3 of The Drew Mariani Show on 4-26-22 Dr. Ann Cavoukian joins Drew to talk about Italy starting to use social credit scores for environmental purposes Dr. Wayne Phillips tells us about the new testing methods that have been used on the Shroud of Turin... that date it to the time of Christ!
Desperate to get out of the pandemic, Canadians have rushed to give up their privacy. We offer our sensitive digital health information to go out in public. Contact tracing, COVID-19 apps and QR codes trace our movements. Meanwhile, we're building an information network that can give governments vast surveillance powers that remain long after the pandemic, says privacy expert Ann Cavoukian. The former Ontario privacy commissioner, and author of Privacy by Design, joins Anthony this week to explain why she's alarmed by this zero-sum arrangement that trades privacy for health security. And she explains how we can keep public health without creating a permanent digital surveillance state — but only if we demand it. (Recorded November 25, 2021.) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
How do we design applications for the highest utility for individuals? Do we always need to share data or can we include the data value in that utility and have it remain with the individual? In this podcast episode we explore how with former Information and Privacy Commissioner of Ontario, Canada, Dr. Ann Cavoukian, who in addition to serving three terms as Commissioner, created the Privacy by Design Framework utilized all over the world today. In this episode we discuss: How value can be created by utilizing privacy preserving methods and computation What types of approaches organizations are taking Consumer sentiment and interest, who cares about their data and how its utilized How engineers and device developers can build new innovations and unlock even more value
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Ann Cavoukian, the creator of Privacy By Design, shares how she created Privacy By Design and how it can be made actionable in companies. She also talks about how companies with legacy systems can incorporate Privacy By Design principles into their old legacy systems. Dr. Ann Cavoukian is recognized as one of the world's leading privacy experts. Dr. Cavoukian served an unprecedented three terms as the Information & Privacy Commissioner of Ontario, Canada. There she created Privacy by Design, a framework that seeks to proactively embed privacy into the design specifications of information technologies, networked infrastructure, and business practices, thereby achieving the strongest protection possible. Dr. Cavoukian is the author of two books i.e., “The Privacy Payoff: How Successful Businesses Build Customer Trust” with Tyler Hamilton, and “Who Knows: Safeguarding Your Privacy in a Networked World” with Don Tapscott. She has received numerous awards recognizing her leadership in privacy, including being recognized among the Top 100 Identity Influencers (February 2019), and also awarded the 2020 Canadian Women in Cybersecurity Lifetime Achievement Award In Recognition of Your Outstanding Contributions to Cybersecurity and Privacy in Ontario (March 2020). You can listen to the full conversation at Anchor, iTunes, Spotify, Stitcher. Please do share your comments on what you think and what you like to listen to in the future episodes. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/fit4privacy/message
Ann Cavoukian, the creator of Privacy By Design talks to Punit Bhatia in The FIT4PRIVACY Podcast episode that is focussed on Privacy By Design. She shares a perspective on how she got into privacy, what was her rationale when creating privacy by design, and so on. Dr. Ann Cavoukian is recognized as one of the world's leading privacy experts. Dr. Cavoukian served an unprecedented three terms as the Information & Privacy Commissioner of Ontario, Canada. There she created Privacy by Design, a framework that seeks to proactively embed privacy into the design specifications of information technologies, networked infrastructure, and business practices, thereby achieving the strongest protection possible. In 2010, International Privacy Regulators unanimously passed a Resolution recognizing Privacy by Design as an International Standard. Since then, PbD has been translated into 40 languages! In 2018, PbD was included in a sweeping new law in the EU: the General Data Protection Regulation. Dr. Cavoukian is now the Executive Director of the Global Privacy & Security by Design Centre. She is also a Senior Fellow of the Ted Rogers Leadership Centre at Ryerson University, and a Faculty Fellow of the Center for Law, Science & Innovation at the Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law at Arizona State University. Dr. Cavoukian is the author of two books, “The Privacy Payoff: How Successful Businesses Build Customer Trust” with Tyler Hamilton, and “Who Knows: Safeguarding Your Privacy in a Networked World” with Don Tapscott. She has received numerous awards recognizing her leadership in privacy, including being named as one of the Top 25 Women of Influence in Canada, named as one of the Top 10 Women in Data Security and Privacy, and named as one of the ‘Power 50' by Canadian Business. She was awarded the Meritorious Service Medal by the Governor-General of Canada for her outstanding work on creating Privacy by Design and taking it globally (May 2017), named as one of the 50 Most Impactful Smart Cities Leaders (November 2017), named among the Top Women in Tech (December 2017), was awarded the Toastmasters Communication and Leadership Award (April 2018), recognized among the Top 100 Identity Influencers (February 2019), and most recently, she was named among the Top 18 Global AI Influencers within the AI & Tech Space (February 2019), was awarded the 2020 Canadian Women in Cybersecurity Lifetime Achievement Award In Recognition of Your Outstanding Contributions to Cybersecurity and Privacy in Ontario (March 2020). Listen to the conversation and share your views on what you think about it. You can listen to The FIT4PRIVACY Podcast conversations at Anchor, iTunes, Stitcher, Spotify... --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/fit4privacy/message
Ann Cavoukian, Executive Director, Global Privacy & Security by Design Centre talks about 419 million Facebook records containing user phone numbers exposed online
Ann Cavoukian, Executive Director, Global Privacy & Security by Design Centre and three-term Privacy Commissioner talks about an unprecedented Facebook fine over privacy breaches
Ann Cavoukian, Executive Director, Global Privacy & Security by Design Centre and “three-term Privacy Commissioner” talks about Toronto council to improve procedures after two cyber-attacks go unreported and a Twitter pilot project will allow Canadians to hide replies to posts — to a point
Ann Cavoukian, Executive Director, Global Privacy & Security by Design Centre and three-term Privacy Commissioner talks about updating laws and privacy to prepare for smart cities
In today's podcast, Steve Durbin, Managing Director of the ISF talks with Dr. Ann Cavoukian, the Distinguished Expert-in-Residence of Ryerson University's Privacy by Design Centre of Excellence. Ann Cavoukian is recognised as one of the world's leading privacy experts. Since 2017, Cavoukian has been the distinguished expert in residence of Ryerson University's Privacy by Design Centre of Excellence. In fact, Ann developed the concept of Privacy by Design and its later evolution, Security by Design. In today's conversation, Dr. Cavoukian will discuss the necessity that businesses "bake in" security and privacy into their business plan. https://www.securityforum.org/videos-podcasts/isf-podcast-dr-ann-cavoukian-privacy-by-design-security-by-design/
Ann Cavoukian, Distinguished Expert-in-Residence, Privacy by Design Centre of Excellence, Ryerson University AND “three-term Privacy Commissioner talks about the latest on the Sidewalk lab plan
Ann Cavoukian, Distinguished Expert-in-Residence, Privacy by Design Centre of Excellence, Ryerson University AND “three-term Privacy Commissioner talks about emotional privacy and Side Walk Labs
Ann Cavoukian, Distinguished Expert-in-Residence, Privacy by Design Centre of Excellence, Ryerson University and three-term Privacy Commissioner talks about a new ‘digital charter' to emphasize Canadians' control over personal data
Ann Cavoukian Distinguished Expert-in-Residence, Privacy by Design Centre of Excellence, Ryerson University and “three-term Privacy Commissioner” talks about San Francisco Bans Use of Facial Recognition Technology by Law Enforcement and WhatsApp the target of a hack
Ann Cavoukian Distinguished Expert-in-Residence, Privacy by Design Centre of Excellence, Ryerson University and three-term Privacy Commissioner talks about Facebook breached Canada's privacy laws, and App that spy on Alexa
Ann Cavoukian Distinguished Expert-in-Residence, Privacy by Design Centre of Excellence, Ryerson University talks about civil liberties group sues to quash Sidewalk Labs project, with final master plan due within weeks
Ann Cavoukian, Distinguished Expert-in-Residence, Privacy by Design Centre of Excellence, Ryerson University AND “three-term Privacy Commissioner talks about reasons to be wary' of ID scanners at marijuana stores, and why we should be aware of Facebook data
Ann Cavoukian, Distinguished Expert-in-Residence, Privacy by Design Centre of Excellence, Ryerson University AND “three-term Privacy Commissioner” talks about Facebook pressuring Canada to ease up on data rules
Ann Cavoukian, Distinguished Expert-in-Residence, Privacy by Design Centre of Excellence, Ryerson University and three-term Privacy Commissioner talks about Metrolinx continues to share Presto users' data without requiring warrant and family tree tests sharing your DNA.
Ann Cavoukian, Distinguished Expert-in-Residence, Privacy by Design Centre of Excellence, Ryerson University and three-term Privacy Commissioner talks about Presto card and your privacy.
Alex Pierson is joined by Ann Cavoukian, Distinguished Expert-in-Residence, Privacy by Design Centre of Excellence, Ryerson University, to discuss StatsCan's planned pilot census. First StatsCan was taking people's banking information without their knowledge and now the new census would be mandatory for people to answer. As StatsCan asks for more and more of our personal information, the question must be asked: do we really have privacy anymore?
Ann Cavoukian, Distinguished Expert-in-Residence, Privacy by Design Centre of Excellence, Ryerson University AND “three-term Privacy Commissioner” talks about RBC, Facebook, Amazon, drones and privacy.
Ann Cavoukian former three-term Privacy Commissioner talks about the Starwood hack that could be the biggest since Yahoo.
ALex Pierson is joined by Ann Cavoukian, Distinguished Expert-in-Residence, Privacy by Design Centre of Excellence, Ryerson University and Former Privacy Commissioner to discuss Statistic Canada. Statistic Canada banks across the country for financial transaction data and personal information of 500,000 Canadians without their knowledge, Global News has learned.
Ann Cavoukian, Expert-in-Residence, Privacy by Design Centre of Excellence, Ryerson University resigns from Sidewalk Labs
Ann Cavoukian, Distinguished Expert-in-Residence, Privacy by Design Centre of Excellence, Ryerson University and “three-term Privacy Commissioner” talks about Privacy by Design for Roadside speed signs and Facebook
Ann Cavoukian, Distinguished Expert-in-Residence, Privacy by Design Centre of Excellence, Ryerson University and three-term Privacy Commissioner talks about a new Facebook security breach affecting 50 million users