Podcasts about data portability

  • 31PODCASTS
  • 37EPISODES
  • 36mAVG DURATION
  • 1MONTHLY NEW EPISODE
  • Jan 17, 2025LATEST

POPULARITY

20172018201920202021202220232024


Best podcasts about data portability

Latest podcast episodes about data portability

Ganbei
The TikTok Ban and the Chinese Brand Dilemma with Ivy Yang

Ganbei

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 17, 2025 40:48


The TikTok Ban and the Chinese Brand Dilemma with Ivy YangThis episode of the Asia Business Podcast features a deep dive into the complex arena of cross-cultural business dynamics with guest Ivy Yang, founder of Wavelet Strategy. Ivy brings a wealth of experience in public relations and a nuanced understanding of the U.S.-China macro relationship, making her insights invaluable for companies navigating these waters.Introduction to Ivy YangEmail Ivy: ivy@waveletnyc.comIvy's SubstackConnect on LinkedInVisit Wavelet StrategyIvy Yang is the founder of Wavelet Strategy, holds a BA from NYU, and an MBA from Columbia. Her extensive background in crisis management, financial media reporting, and media relations offers invaluable perspectives, particularly in the realm of cross-cultural business between the U.S. and China. Ivy also contributes to the Financial Times Chinese and has a Substack blog called "Calling the Shots," which is highly recommended for anyone interested in these topics.TikTok, RedNote, and The User Migration PhenomenonThe conversation kicks off with a hot topic: the potential shutdown of TikTok in the U.S. and the ripple effects on its massive user base. Ivy shares her perspective on the current media reports suggesting an imminent shutdown, drawing parallels with past events in other countries. As users consider migrating to RedNote (Xiaohongshu), Ivy provides her firsthand insights into this platform, noting its unique user experience compared to TikTok.Highlighting the Cultural Exchange on RedNoteIvy emphasizes the fascinating dynamic of TikTok "refugees" transitioning to RedNote, a starkly Chinese platform with no translation features. This migration, Ivy notes, represents an act of protest and defiance against geopolitical narratives. She describes the rich cultural exchanges unfolding in RedNote's comment sections, reminiscent of past platforms like Clubhouse that fostered U.S.-China dialogues.The Cross-Border Challenges for Chinese BrandsArt and Ivy delve into broader challenges faced by Chinese brands in the U.S., notably in building trust amid geopolitical tensions. Ivy underscores the significance of defining a dual narrative to maintain a global brand perception while acknowledging Chinese roots and operations. Art adds to the discussion by highlighting brands like Lenovo that have navigated these waters successfully, contrasting them with current challenges faced by apps like TikTok and Shein.Managing U.S. Perceptions and Media RelationsThe conversation explores the critical role of media relations in shaping public perception. Ivy argues that Chinese companies need to engage more proactively with media to manage narratives before they become defined by external forces. She stresses the importance of transparency and adapting to U.S. cultural norms in hiring and operations.Practical Advice for Chinese Companies Entering the U.S. MarketIvy concludes with practical strategies for Chinese brands entering the U.S. market:Adopt Cultural Norms: Understand U.S. hiring practices and navigate media relations with transparency.Strategize Media Relations: Engage in active narrative management, especially during crises, by supplying context and data to reporters.Own Communication Channels: Develop robust owned media strategies to swiftly communicate your company's stance and developments. Substack and other platforms can be effective for reaching niche, influential audiences.ConclusionThis episode serves as a crucial guide for navigating the complex landscape of U.S.-China business relations. Ivy Yang's insights illuminate how companies can better manage their cross-cultural narratives, engage with media, and respect local norms to succeed in the U.S. market. For those interested in more of Ivy's perspectives, her blog, "Calling the Shots," provides deeper dives into these topics. As the landscape continues to evolve, staying informed and adaptable remains key. Timestamps00:00 Introduction and Guest Introduction01:17 Current Events: TikTok Controversy02:58 The Migration to RedNote06:38 Geopolitical Implications for Chinese Apps09:56 Challenges for Chinese Brands in the U.S.16:23 PR Strategies for Chinese Companies27:52 The Role of Media and Owned Channels33:44 Final Thoughts and Contact Information  ProducerJacob ThomasFollow UsLinkedInApple Podcasts

Diritto al Digitale
The legal challenges of the Data Act with Stefano Leucci of Mobilisights

Diritto al Digitale

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 28, 2024 18:51


In this episode of Diritto al Digitale, Giulio Coraggio, Location Head of the Italian Intellectual Property & Technology Department at the law firm DLA Piper, sit down with Stefano Leucci, the Head of Data Protection and Governance at Mobilisights, the data company of the Stellantis group, to explore the dynamic world of data sharing and the impact of the Data Act on businesses exploiting Internet of Things and connected technologies. Our guest shares a personal journey through previous experiences with open government data and the European Data Protection Supervisor (EDPS), highlighting how these roles shaped a deep understanding of data's evolving landscape. We discuss the pivotal role of the Data Act as an essential enabler in this transformation.Tune in as we delve into the most pressing challenges arising from the Data Act for connected and IoT products. We examine the intersection of the GDPR and the Data Act, uncovering how this convergence is set to influence data governance strategies, especially in terms of privacy and sharing.Finally, we explore the emergence of compensation strategies within the data-sharing ecosystem with the expanded data portability right provided by the Data Act. What does this mean for businesses and consumers? How will it reshape the way data is valued and exchanged?You can read on the topic the following article “EU Commission FAQs on the Data Act published: Here are the main contents!”. Follow us on

WPwatercooler - Weekly WordPress Talk Show
EP475 – The Great Escape: WordPress Data Liberation Project

WPwatercooler - Weekly WordPress Talk Show

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 13, 2024 46:01


On this episode of WPwatercooler, titled “The Great Escape: WordPress Data Liberation Project,” Jason Tucker and Jason Cosper discuss the significance of data portability in WordPress. They delve into the recent push towards data liberation, enabling content to move freely between different Content Management Systems (CMS), including the import and export of data from WordPress to other platforms and vice versa. The conversation touches on the challenges and technical considerations involved in migrating data, the impact of block editors, and the importance of making data migration user-friendly to support the growth and flexibility of WordPress as a platform. The episode explores the broader implications of data portability for users and the ecosystem, highlighting the need for more intuitive tools to facilitate data movement without compromising content integrity. Links WordPress Data Liberation [Github] Data Liberation in 2024 – wordpress.org https://simian.rodeo/@boogah/111881606693610144 http://textbundle.org Chapters 00:00 Introduction 01:41 Discussion on Data Liberation in WordPress 03:33 The Importance of Data Portability 10:13 Challenges with Block Editors and Data Migration 15:20 Exploring Alternatives and Future of Data Formats 20:59 User Experiences and Expectations on Data Migration 25:46 Technical Aspects and Solutions for Data Export/Import 30:00 The Role of Open Source in Data Portability 35:27 Final Thoughts on WordPress and Data Liberation What is WPwatercooler? WPwatercooler is streamed live and recorded as the self-titled show on the WPwatercooler Network. Our objective with the show since the beginning has been to help people in this industry have a place to hear people, much like themselves, talk about the technologies and methods we all use on a daily basis. We named WPwatercooler to be that, the watercooler that WordPress folks can gather around and participate in the conversation, or just sit back and learn from the discussion. Our listeners and contributors come from all walks of life and all backgrounds. We strive to make this place as welcoming and accessible as we can. Learn more at https://www.wpwatercooler.com/wpwatercooler What is Dev Branch? Dev Branch is streamed live and recorded monthly on the first friday of the month as the developer-focused discussions of the WPwatercooler Network. Dev Branch is released on its own podcast feed and made available live and on-demand in video format on Facebook, YouTube, LinkedIn, and Twitch. Learn more at https://www.wpwatercooler.com/devbranch Want to create live streams like this? Check out StreamYard: https://streamyard.com/pal/d/5756954563575808

Interpreting India
Exploring India's Data Protection Law with Rahul Matthan

Interpreting India

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 17, 2023 53:19


The past week has been momentous for those awaiting the enactment of a legal framework for data protection in India. India's parliament passed the Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023, and the law has now also received the assent of the President of India. This law has been enacted after multiple rounds of deliberations and consultations. Multiple committees have submitted reports on the proposed legislation, and three previous drafts of the legislation have been circulated for public consultation. What changes has this law undergone? How will the cost of data protection and privacy compliance impact Indian businesses?In this episode of Interpreting India, Rahul Matthan joins Anirudh Burman to give us insights into these questions and more.Episode ContributorsRahul Matthan is a partner at Trilegal, one of India's leading law firms, and heads the technology, media, and telecommunications (TMT) practice of the firm. He has extensive experience advising on high-value TMT transactions in the country. Rahul's expertise spans several sectors in the technology space, including data protection, digital finance, cryptocurrencies, e-commerce, and more. Rahul has advised the government on the data privacy law and has served on the Kris Gopalakrishnan Committee on Non-Personal Data. He has authored numerous articles and thought pieces on various topical issues relating to computers, the internet, and other new technologies.Anirudh Burman is an associate research director and fellow at Carnegie India. He works on key issues relating to public institutions, public administration, the administrative and regulatory state, and state capacity.  He has also worked extensively on financial regulation and regulatory governance.He has published works related to parliamentary oversight in India, the freedom of movement and residence, measuring the responsiveness of independent regulators in India, the design of insolvency professionals as a regulated profession, and the right to information.Additional ReadingsGet On with Data Protection Now That the Law's Enacted by Rahul MatthanCompanies Must Work Hard to Ensure Data Protection by Rahul MatthanResisting the Leviathan: The Key Change in India's New Proposal to Protect Personal Data by Anirudh BurmanWill India's Proposed Data Protection Law Protect Privacy and Promote Growth? by Anirudh Burman—-Key Moments:(0:00); Introduction (3:00); Chapter 1: The Journey of This Act(7:03); Chapter 2: Data Protection in India(10:58); Chapter 3: Key Components of the Data Protection Act (14:19); Chapter 4: Applying GDPR Compliance in India(22:00); Chapter 5: Right to Data Portability(27:57); Chapter 6: Consent Manager Framework (32:44); Chapter 7: The Indian Government's Data Accessing Powers(37:30); Chapter 8: Restrictions on Data Fiduciaries(42:46); Chapter 9: Blocking Data Fiduciaries' Access to Public Information  (45:18); Chapter 10: Data Localization(46:56); Chapter 11: Establishing a Data Protection Board(49:48); Closing Comments(52:40); Outro

Taking Inventory
16: Evan Prodromou, co-author of ActivityPub breaks down decentralized social networks and the Fediverse, how this affects monetization for walled gardens, and why users need data portability

Taking Inventory

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 8, 2023 38:43


This week's guest: Evan Prodromou Evan is one of the co-editors of ActivityPub and has spent more than 15 years working on distributed social network protocols. He ran an open-source social project called StatusNet, formerly chaired the W3C working group on Social Web standards, and is now the Director of Open Technology at Open Earth, where he builds digital architecture to scale climate action.   Fediverse account: https://cosocial.ca/@evan ActivityPub: https://activitypub.rocks/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/evanpro LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/evanprodromou/  OpenEarth Foundation: https://www.openearth.org/about

Zoo Logic
The Future of Conservation Research & Improved Welfare: Animal Data Portability

Zoo Logic

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 27, 2023 32:15


Three leaders behind some of today's top animal record-keeping software management systems discuss their joint effort to establish data portability as the new standard for zoos, aquariums and related organizations. On the surface, David Kleven, Mark Simmons and Tony Niemann are competitors in the electronic animal record-keeping arena. Behind the scenes, however, these three recognize the greater purpose for their collaboration when it comes to seamlessly sharing critical animal data profiles to foster better individual and species level understanding and care.  Animal Care Software Animal Data Sharing

What the Dev?
How Web 3.0 will affect data portability - Episode 157

What the Dev?

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 26, 2022 18:30


In this week's podcast episode, we talked about Web3's fundamental improvements to data portability and user authentication enable new experiences.Joining us is Reed-McGinley Stempel, CEO and co-founder of Stytch, an authentication platform for developers.

ceo affect web3 stytch data portability
Our Curious Amalgam
#162 How Has It Been Working? A Reflection on Europe's General Data Protection Regulation Four Years In

Our Curious Amalgam

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 4, 2022 38:16


Europe's General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) was created to protect the personal data of individuals and to simplify the regulatory environment for data protection in Europe. As a regulatory scheme that has served as a model for other jurisdictions developing their own data protection and data privacy laws, is the GDPR living up to its intended purposes? Adam Penman of McGuireWoods London joins Kayla Odom and Matthew Hall to reflect on the GDPR's impact on organizations and to discuss the trends relating to the rights afforded to individuals by the GDPR. Listen in for a look at the key developments in the data protection and data privacy landscape upon the GDPR's fourth anniversary. Related Links: #33 Can I Just Disappear? The Privacy Right to Be Forgotten. #89 What's the Deal with Data Portability? Understanding the Competition and Privacy Aspects Surrounding the Movement of Data. Hosted by: Kayla Odom, Freitas & Weinberg LLP and and Matthew Hall, McGuireWoods

The Encrypted Economy
Open Banking and Privacy Enhancing Technologies. Alistair Muir, CEO of Vanteum. - E73

The Encrypted Economy

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 22, 2022 44:32 Transcription Available


This week's episode of The Encrypted Economy, our guest is Alistair Muir, CEO of Vanteum. Vanteum provides advisory services for privacy enhancing technologies, and Alistair shares his perspective into how thought leaders are approaching these innovations outside the United States. Be sure to subscribe to The Encrypted Economy for more insight on the innovations in privacy technology and its adoption around the globe. Topics Covered:·       Introduction·       Alistair's Background·       Understanding the Importance of Privacy Enhancing Technology·       Uses Cases for Homomorphic Encryption·       Discussing Open Thinking·       Open Banking and the User Experience·       Issues With Open Banking and PET Solutions·       Use Cases for Data Portability·       Benefitting from Monetization of PETs  Resource List:·       Privacy Enhancing Tech Summit - Europe·       Alistair's LinkedIn·       Alistair's Medium·       Vanteum·       Boston Privacy Enhancing Technology Summit·       Homomorphic Encryption·       IMDA Singapore ·       Homomorphic Encryption Market 2022·       Open banking: Strategies and implementationFollow The Encrypted Economy on your favorite platforms! Twitter LinkedIn Instagram Facebook      

Hubungan Internasional
Episode 47: GigCV - Alternative Model of Governing Data Portability in the Labour Market

Hubungan Internasional

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 15, 2022 22:16


The discussion of platform or gig economy has been a very worldwide issue nowadays. Martijn Arets, the founder of GigCV, tries to address the most profound problems faced by gig workers around the globe. What is GigCV? How does it work using data portability? What is the most appropriate governance which can benefit all actors? Watch Suci Lestari Yuana's talk with Martijn Arets in Podcast Hubungan internasional Ep. 47! _________________ Music:  Judul : [FREE FOR PROFIT] "Lucky" Happy Groovy background music/montage for vlogs no copyright - prod. OBI Channel : OBI  Link : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V1Y6whi9r2w  Track: Percussion And Stomps [Sports Music] by MokkaMusic / Take A Step https://youtu.be/9s_c1gYpyk8  Music provided by "MokkaMusic" channel and https://inaudio.org _________________ YouTube: https://youtu.be/MuiAk72f4_4

governing labour market data portability alternative model mokkamusic martijn arets
Hacking Humans
Collaboration, data portability, and employee mobility fuel insider risk.

Hacking Humans

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 8, 2021 41:12


Guest Joe Payne of Code 42 joins Dave to discuss insider risks Joe has a story about Frank Abagnale who's conned everyone one way or another, Dave's story is about a real estate scam conning a single mother of her life savings, and our Catch of the Day is from listener Michael with an "Extremely Urgent Attention Required" email. Links to stories: Confessions of a Famous Fraudster: How and Why Social Engineering Scams Work Real estate scam robs Florida mom of $63K in life savings Have a Catch of the Day you'd like to share? Email it to us at hackinghumans@thecyberwire.com or hit us up on Twitter.

Get IT: Cybersecurity insights for the foreseeable future.
Data Portability Across the Hybrid Cloud

Get IT: Cybersecurity insights for the foreseeable future.

Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2021 18:29


The difference between data gravity and data inertiaHow data can be moved across clouds, and from on-premises to the cloudWhy having a solid data fabric helps empower businesses and adds business valueHow to change data from being a business detractor to a business enablerHow to address security in the cloud while keeping data portableHow NetApp is embracing containers and the open-source communityThe direction of data across the hybrid cloud, AIOps and NetApp’s focus for the next five years

AppStories
216 – Substack, Email, and Data Portability

AppStories

Play Episode Listen Later May 3, 2021 49:59


This week, Federico and John explore the popularity of Substack among writers leaving big media companies, rethink their email workflows after leaving Hey, and consider data portability and the tradeoffs of proprietary app systems.

substack federico data portability
Message à caractère informatique
#40 - Dans La Silicon Valley De Java

Message à caractère informatique

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2021 103:01


Toutes les notes sont disponibles sur https://www.clever-cloud.com/fr/podcast/episode40 00:00:00 Avec par ordre d'apparition : @ldoguin @zepag @waxzce @starbuxman 00:04:22 Apple news https://www.macrumors.com/2021/04/20/apple-april-event-recap/ 00:16:50 The 4 Definitions of Multicloud: Part 1 — Data Portability https://thenewstack.io/the-4-definitions-of-multicloud-part-1-data-portability/ 00:24:21 Firefox Begins Rolling Out QUIC + HTTP/3 Support https://www.phoronix.com/scan.php?page=news_item&px=Firefox-QUIC-HTTP3-Rollout Firefox 88 to disable FTP support and to support javascript in PDF https://www.phoronix.com/scan.php?page=news_item&px=Firefox-88-Released 00:30:50 Gnome 40 (GTK 4) commence à être dispo dans les distros mainstream (Fedora 34 beta, Opensuse Tumbleweed) https://www.phoronix.com/scan.php?page=news_item&px=GNOME-40-openSUSE-Tumbleweed yellowdog https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yellow_Dog_Linux 00:36:26 Grafana passe de la licence Apache 2 à AGPLv3 https://grafana.com/blog/2021/04/20/qa-with-our-ceo-on-relicensing/ 00:49:20 Bintray ferme https://spring.io/blog/2020/10/29/notice-of-permissions-changes-to-repo-spring-io-fall-and-winter-2020 00:53:15 OpenJDK & Microsoft https://devblogs.microsoft.com/java/announcing-preview-of-microsoft-build-of-openjdk/ 01:02:20 Java is criminally underrated https://jackson.sh/posts/2021-04-java-underrated/ 01:15:52 Scala 3 RC2 https://dotty.epfl.ch/blog/2021/03/31/scala3-rc2.html 01:21:00 Didacticiel sur Biscuit https://www.clever-cloud.com/blog/engineering/2021/04/15/biscuit-tutorial/ 01:26:22 Livebook https://dashbit.co/blg/announcing-livebook 01:29:50 Zenreader: A 4.7 inches E-Ink RSS Reader Powered by ESP32 https://www.tnhh.net/posts/zenreader-4.7-in-rss-eink-reader.html Rust on ESP32 https://github.com/MabezDev/rust-xtensa 01:37:25 Terminal multiplexer en rust https://zellij.dev/ Le choix musical de l'invité https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=80hMEKlLVgQ

Our Curious Amalgam
#94 Who Is Ready for 2021? Year in Review: Part 2

Our Curious Amalgam

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 31, 2020 38:17


This past year has been anything but a slowdown in antitrust enforcement around the world and has also put privacy and consumer protection issues in the limelight. What do you need to know? In Part Two of this three-part series, members of the International, Privacy and Information Security, and Consumer Protection committees discuss what they believe to be the key happenings and issues in 2020 and what to expect in 2021. Regular Our Curious Amalgam hosts Sergei Zaslavsky, John Roberti, Christina Ma, Matthew Hall, and Kayla Odom join to provide further context. Listen to this episode for a summary of the key international, privacy, and consumer protection themes of 2020. Related Links: #90 How Do We Respond to the Dilemma? Developing a Data Portability Solution #89 What’s the Deal with Data Portability? Understanding the Competition and Privacy Aspects Surrounding the Movement of Data. #86 Can They Really Do That? The Use of Advanced Analytics by Antitrust and Consumer Regulators Hosted by: Sergei Zaslavsky, John Roberti, Christina Ma, Matthew Hall, and Kayla Odom

Our Curious Amalgam
#90 How Do We Respond to the Dilemma? Developing a Data Portability Solution.

Our Curious Amalgam

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2020 30:18


The ongoing debate of data portability has produced many unanswered questions, resulting in a need for a more structured analysis of the issues surrounding of the movement of data. How can governments, or various sectors, industries, or companies develop solutions for data portability that encompass the often-competing goals of promoting competition and protecting privacy rights? Internationally-recognized privacy and cybersecurity expert Peter Swire joins Christina Ma and Kayla Odom to discuss his proposed framework for analyzing the issues surrounding the portability of data and evaluating initiatives on portability and other required data transfers. Listen to this episode to learn how, through the use of structured questions, the impact of data portability can be assessed. Related Links: Swire, Peter, The Portability and Other Required Transfers Impact Assessment: Assessing Competition, Privacy, Cybersecurity, and Other Considerations (September 8, 2020). Hosted by: Christina Ma, Wachtell Lipton Rosen & Katz and Kayla Odom, Freitas & Weinberg LLP

Our Curious Amalgam
#89 What’s the Deal with Data Portability? Understanding the Competition and Privacy Aspects Surrounding the Movement of Data.

Our Curious Amalgam

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 30, 2020 29:06


With the enactment of stronger privacy laws in Europe and California, and with the prominent use of digital platforms and intense policy debates surrounding their regulation, issues regarding what has been termed "data portability" have been brought to the forefront. What is data portability, and how is it being addressed in the law? Alex Brown and Gabe Maldoff join Christina Ma and Kayla Odom to discuss what it means for data to be "portable" and the various issues that arise when it comes to the transferability of a person's data. Listen to this episode to understand the competition, consumer protection, and cybersecurity issues that are being debated by policymakers, companies, and others when it comes to data portability. Related Links: Data To Go: An FTC Workshop on Data Portability (September 22, 2020) Comment Submitted by The American Bar Association Antitrust Law Section In Connection With “Data To Go: An FTC Workshop On Data Portability” (August 27, 2020) EU General Data Protection Regulation – Right to data portability, Article 20 California Consumer Privacy Act – Data portability requirements, Cal Civ. Code. § 1798.100(d) Hosted by: Christina Ma, Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz and Kayla Odom, Freitas & Weinberg LLP

RTP's Free Lunch Podcast
Deep Dive 139 – Implications of Data Portability: A Consumer Protection Tool or Burden?

RTP's Free Lunch Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 19, 2020 59:35


Data portability has been a hot topic of late, from GDPR to CCPA to the FTC’s recent Data to Go Workshop. To some, data portability is a consumer right to access and move individual data. For others, data portability means the sharing of larger swaths of data with other services and platforms to lower entry barriers to effective competition.Although both forms of portability aim to enhance consumer welfare and increase competition, data portability raises a host of issues, such as privacy protection, data security, and intellectual property rights. Additionally, there is evidence that data portability mandates, when used as a competition remedy, is costly, ineffective, and may reduce business incentives, and could entrench incumbents by making it difficult for smaller competitors to change their services and modernize their products.This comes as many competition agencies and legislatures alike are considering interoperability and data portability mandates to increase competition. And, Congress is set to release a report with recommendations for reducing the market power of online platforms, which may include these mandates.The Regulatory Transparency Project explored the hot topic of data portability over the course of a two-part virtual panel series entitled, "Data Portability Mandates, Consumer Privacy Protections, and Competition Law." This panel discussed the consumer protection and privacy implications of data portability, and the second panel turned to the use of portability and interoperability mandates in competition law.Featuring:- Peter Swire, Elizabeth and Thomas Holder Chair and Professor of Law and Ethics, Scheller College of Business, Georgia Institute of Technology- Liad Wagman, Professor of Economics, Stuart School of Business, Illinois Institute of Technology- Gabriela Zanfir-Fortuna, Senior Counsel, Future of Privacy Forum- [Moderator] Svetlana Gans, Vice President & Associate General Counsel, NCTAVisit our website –www.RegProject.org – to learn more, view all of our content, and connect with us on social media.

business future law professor data congress economics tool deep dive ethics implications burden corporations gdpr ftc georgia institute senior counsel ccpa consumer protection illinois institute associate general counsel competition law data portability scheller college regulatory transparency project administrative law & regulatio securities & antitrust telecommunications & electroni regproject
The Shared Security Show
Uber CISO Charged, Facebook Data Portability, Malicious iOS SDK

The Shared Security Show

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 31, 2020 24:57


In episode 136 for August 31st 2020: Uber’s former security chief is charged over covering up a 2016 data breach, Facebook pushes for data portability legislation, and how a malicious iOS SDK breached the privacy of millions of mobile users. ** Links mentioned on the show ** Former Uber Security Chief Charged Over Covering Up […] The post Uber CISO Charged, Facebook Data Portability, Malicious iOS SDK appeared first on The Shared Security Show.

Management Accounting Concepts For Noobs

Brief overview on data portability

data portability
TBD: Technology By Design
002 • Caron Beaton-Wells

TBD: Technology By Design

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 10, 2019 47:55


This episode of TBD: Technology By Design, is brought to you by another podcast, Competition Lore, with Caron Beaton-Wells. Competition Lore is a podcast series that engages us all in a debate about the transformative potential and risks of digitalized competition. Caron Beaton-Wells, Professor in Competition Law at the University of Melbourne, tackles what it means to participate as a competitor, consumer or citizen in a digital economy and society. This recording originally aired on Competition Lore on December 5th, 2019, and Caron graciously agreed to allow us to co-publish it here.  If we regulate to protect privacy, do we risk competition? If we regulate to strengthen competition, do we risk innovation? If we regulate to exclude harmful content, do we risk free speech? Over-simplified perhaps, but these are in essence some of the hard questions in tech policy right now, and grappling with such questions from within a tech company must be one of the most challenging jobs there is. In this episode we Caron interviews our own host, Matt Perault, former head of global policy development at Facebook. Matt has looked the challenges squarely in the eye and shares with us how the social network giant has been dealing with them, together with his thoughts on how interactions between stakeholders can affect policy outcomes, for better or worse. It’s a rich and wide-ranging conversation that you won’t want to miss.  Access Mark Zuckerberg’s recent speech at Georgetown University Facebook’s Statement on a Privacy-Focused Vision for Social Networking and its White Paper on Data Portability.

Vertical Hold: Behind The Tech News
Facebook offers data portability, Optus cops hefty fine, excess data gets the boot - Vertical Hold: Episode 257

Vertical Hold: Behind The Tech News

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 5, 2019 26:09


cops offers boot excess optus hefty nbn data portability vertical hold
Competition Lore Podcast
Developing policy at Facebook?

Competition Lore Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 3, 2019 47:46


If we regulate to protect privacy, do we risk competition? If we regulate to strengthen competition, do we risk innovation? If we regulate to exclude harmful content, do we risk free speech? Over-simplified perhaps, but these are in essence some of the hard questions in tech policy right now, and grappling with such questions from within a tech company must be one of the most challenging jobs there is. In this episode we are joined by Matt Perault, former head of global policy development at Facebook. Matt has looked the challenges squarely in the eye and shares with us how the social network giant has been dealing with them, together with his thoughts on how interactions between stakeholders can affect policy outcomes, for better or worse. It’s a rich and wide ranging conversation that you won’t want to miss.  Matt has now taken on the role as Director of a Center for Science and Technology Policy at Duke University. The Center will act as an interdisciplinary hub for science and technology policy research and bring together stakeholders from the tech industry, government and academia to exchange insights and perspectives on policy development. Here are some of items on which we touched in the episode: Mark Zuckerberg’s recent speech at Georgetown University, Facebook’s Statement on a Privacy-Focused Vision for Social Networking and its White Paper on Data Portability. You can read a recent Opinion piece by Matt in the New York Times here.  His Center is launching a podcast on tech policy, TechKnowledgey, so be sure to take a listen. Featuring regular cut-through interviews with leading thinkers, movers and shakers, Competition Lore is a podcast series that engages us all in a debate about the transformative potential and risks of digitalised competition. Join Caron Beaton-Wells, Professor in Competition Law at the University of Melbourne, to tackle what it means to participate as a competitor, consumer or citizen in a digital economy and society. Competition Lore is produced by Written & Recorded.

Techmeme Ride Home
Mon. 12/02 - When An E-Sports Team IPO's

Techmeme Ride Home

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 2, 2019 18:30


Interesting Galaxy S11 leaks, T-Mobile flips the switch on its 5G network, might different models of next year’s iPhone have different versions of 5G, the rundown of Black Friday/Cyber Monday and why an e-sports team is IPO-ing.Sponsors:Legacybox.com/rideSofi.com/rideLinks:Samsung Suddenly Exposes Radical New Galaxy Smartphone [Updated] (Forbes)T-Mobile launches 600MHz 5G across the US, but no one can use it until December 6th (The Verge)4 new iPhones could have 5G in 2020, but not the same kind of 5G (Mashable)Google and Facebook run into more trouble over data in Europe (CNN Business)Driving Innovation in Data Portability with a New Photo Transfer Tool (Facebook Newsroom)Black Friday sees record $7.4B in online sales, $2.9B spent using smartphones (TechCrunch)Now even the FBI is warning about your smart TV's security (TechCrunch)Amazon debuts automatic speech recognition service, Amazon Transcribe Medical (TechCrunch)Amazon’s kooky new keyboard lets humans and AI write music together (Fast Company)Counter-Strike World Champions Aim for First Esport Team IPO (Bloomberg)

a16z
a16z Podcast: Dark Data in Healthcare

a16z

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 16, 2019 36:07


with Susannah Fox (@susannahfox), Anil Sethi (@anilsethiusa / @ciitizencorp), Vijay Pande (@vijaypande), and Sonal Chokshi (@smc90) The problem of "dark data" in healthcare isn't just a feel-good empowerment thing, but a structural issue that leads to miscommunication and extra friction, different players in the entire healthcare system not being able to collaborate with each other, and just major missed opportunities all round. And yes, it also leads to lack of empowerment for patients, not to mention doctors too (who often have less than 30 minutes on site to do their jobs). But we already know all that. What's not clear is WHY and HOW is this the case, when the very point of HIPAA -- the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (of 1996!) -- is to make data portable, not private. That is, IF patients know to ask for it... and can easily get it. So what if we could have a sort of permissioned "permissionless innovation" for healthcare data, not only bringing all that dark data to light, but more importantly -- borrowing from the history of internet innovation -- letting all sorts of expected and unexpected uses be built on top as a result? What happens when data and entities can talk to each other (à la APIs) through patients at the center of the circle of data? From the Dr. Google problem (or opportunity!) to clinical trials and even the opioid crisis, we -- Susannah Fox (former CTO of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services); Anil Sethi (CEO and founder of Ciitizen); and a16z bio general partner Vijay Pande; in conversation with Sonal Chokshi -- explore all this and more in this episode of the a16z Podcast. Let there be light!

Open Data Institute Podcasts
ODI Fridays: How personal data portability could grow the UK economy

Open Data Institute Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2018 51:41


This talk highlights the findings in a foundational piece of analysis by Ctrl-Shift of the economic opportunities for the UK economy of personal data mobility, the market challenges and a framework to design for trust. Personal data mobility is a significant economic and policy issue. Enabling personal data to flow between entities in a trusted and lawful manner, that protects and respects the data protection rights of individuals, is widely recognised as critical to the growth of digital economies and the unlocking of significant public and social value. Data portability as laid out in GDPR lays out an important new right, however it opens up new risks and yet unproven impact on value creation or human behaviour change towards their data sharing. Data mobility provides the rails to make this market safe, easy and valuable, the key elements needed for market success. About the speaker Liz Brandt, CEO, Ctrl-Shift Liz has over 20 years experience in consulting and has spent the last 16 building and running innovative businesses that focus primarily on the digital interaction between business and consumers. Throughout here career Liz has worked both in and for large corporates and has developed deep skills and strong networks across private, public and the 3rd sectors. Since the beginning of her career Liz has worked at the disruptive edge, where business and technology meet. She brings deep and strong experience in the impact on business models and operating environments of the shifting landscape of consumers, digital, trust and value. Liz combines vision married with evidence and market knowledge, business strategy and operational implementation and the ability to bring together strong teams to deliver extraordinary results. Ctrl-Shift The opportunities for organisations arising from a new personal information economy are game changing. Ctrl-Shift is the world’s leading market analyst and consulting business helping organisations to capitalise on these opportunities. As trusted personal information sharing becomes central to the creation of digital value, we work with market leading organisations providing evidence, insight and advice to make sense of market trends, identify and size market opportunities, and lead innovation and change programmes for efficiency and growth.

MyData Podcast
S18E14 - Petteri Kivimäki

MyData Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 27, 2018 32:25


Petteri Kivimäki is the CTO of the Nordic Institute for Interoperability Solutions (NIIS). The NIIS is an association founded jointly by Finland and Estonia which mission is to develop e-governance solutions, kicking off with the X-Road technology. Before joining the NIIS, Petteri worked as a technology architect in a leading global professional services company. During years 2014–2017 Petteri worked at the Population Register Centre of Finland as an information systems manager. He was the technical lead of X-Road implementation project in Finland and was coordinating the joint open source development of the X-Road solution between Finland and Estonia.

MyData Podcast
S18E10 - Benjamin Goering

MyData Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 7, 2018 45:06


Benjamin started his career at age 19, dropping out of university and moving to San Francisco. He served for 6 years as a Founding Engineer and Product Manager at Livefyre, a real-time commenting and social media aggregation platform. As an Invited Expert in the W3C Social Web Working Group, he helped refine the ActivityStreams social data vocabulary and ActivityPub federated social networking protocol. In 2016, he created the first implementation of ActivityPub. After Adobe acquired Livefyre in 2016, Benjamin started, where he works with nonprofits and startups to build new features, scale cloud architectures, and adopt continuous integration and deployment best practices. In 2018, he founded Permanent.Company to build a cloud platform and community that everyday people can use to replace proprietary SaaS apps with sustainable open source alternatives. Benjamin volunteers with a community-owned-and-operated wireless network in the SF Bay Area, and is passionate about making technology accessible to everyone and designing systems that anyone can contribute to.

MyData Podcast
S18E06 - Olivier Dion

MyData Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 10, 2018 44:20


Olivier is a French entrepreneur. He created Onecub in 2011 in order to give personal data back to people. He studied telecommunications before working in big information systems implementation, where he witnessed personal data usage with no user consent on a large scale. After a few months in an open data association Olivier decided to start his own startup with the vision of empowering people with their data. He started to join different expert circles in the US and in France and then talked about this vision to French big industry and user groups. Then GDPR was voted in 2016 including a new right for data portability and the situation changed for users, as companies now had to rethink their approach. Onecub raised funds and are now working in the booming French and European PIMS (Personal Information Management System) sector. Onecub offers a PIMS and is also working on Data Portability commons and standards based on blockchain technology. The vision now is to decentralise personal data management.

Thexyz
Data Portability

Thexyz

Play Episode Listen Later May 17, 2018 3:07


The right to data portability allows individuals to obtain and reuse their personal data for their own purposes across different services. It allows them to move, copy or transfer personal data easily from one IT environment to another in a safe and secure way, without affecting its usability.

data portability
Let's Know Things
Data Portability

Let's Know Things

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 13, 2018 45:11


This week we talk about edge cases, WHOIS, and information brokers.We also discuss China's Social Credit System, the GDPR, and data ownership. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit letsknowthings.substack.com/subscribe

Let's Know Things
Data Portability

Let's Know Things

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 13, 2018 47:36


This week we talk about edge cases, WHOIS, and information brokers. We also discuss China's Social Credit System, the GDPR, and data ownership. For more information about this podcast and to view the copious show notes, visit letsknowthings.com. Become a patron on Patreon: patreon.com/letsknowthings You can find a list of the books I've written at Colin.io.

gdpr data portability china's social credit system
Bio2040 - Bottlenecks & Future of Science, Healthcare & Drug Discovery
05 How Citizen Science Can Transform Drug Discovery with Ernst Hafen

Bio2040 - Bottlenecks & Future of Science, Healthcare & Drug Discovery

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 3, 2018 30:13


In this episode, Prof. Ernst Hafen from ETH Zurich tells us how citizens can play a very important role in biomedical research and drug discovery. Recruiting the right patients for a study is a big challenge for biotech and pharma companies. He presents us his radical initiative midata.coop, which allows patients to store their health data in a secure way and allows them to participate in clinical studies. Part 1 of a very interesting interview.

Legal Studies at the School of Advanced Study

Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Restricted and Redacted: Where now for human rights and digital information control? Panel A - Afternoon Session Rights to Data Portability (RDP) Wenlong Li (University of Edinburgh)

Der Open Web Podcast
Episode 14 - Was bringt eigentlich Data Portability?

Der Open Web Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 18, 2009


Folge 14 besteht nochmal aus ner ganze Menge News: Kantara Initiative WGUMA - ProtectServe Blog Post von Alex Korth on Web of Identities Twitter Security Problem Nick Givotovsky Zensursula und Vodafone pubsubhubbub Google Apps werden OpenID-Provider Noch eine Chance für RDFa (HTML5)…und Christian und ich sprechen ein wenig über DataPortability und die Vorteile für Seiten- bzw. Community-Betreiber.Viel Spaß beim hören… Ihr Browser unterstützt diesen Audio-Player nicht.Die Links zur Sendung findet ihr hier! Den Podcast bekommen: Download MP3 RSS Feed iTunes

FastWonderPodcast – Fast Wonder
Episode 5: Data Portability and Social Networking in Online Communities with Scott Kveton

FastWonderPodcast – Fast Wonder

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 12, 2008


In this podcast, I talked to Scott Kveton, who was kind enough to take 15 minutes out of atttending OpenID DevCamp to record this interview via Skype. We talked about how the impact of data portability and other open technology standards are influencing the way that we think about online communities. Scott is currently on … Continue reading Episode 5: Data Portability and Social Networking in Online Communities with Scott Kveton →