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Understanding Privacy
Date:
July 17, 2009
Location:
ASCE Bechtel Conference Center,
Reston, Virginia
Click Here for Directions
Synopsis:
What is privacy? Why is
it valuable? How should we balance it against other interests?
What does privacy mean in the world of modern technology?
Privacy, as many have lamented, is currently a concept in
disarray. Professor Daniel Solove will discuss his new book,
Understanding Privacy, in which he proposes a new theory for
understanding privacy that draws from a broad array of
interdisciplinary sources and provides clear guidance for
engaging with privacy issues in law and policy.
Preparation Materials:
Chapter One: Understanding Privacy
Review:
Understanding Privacy
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In order to facilitate
discussion, please come prepared to discuss how your
organization currently defines privacy and how one can assess
the impact of new
technologies and practices on privacy.
Presented by
Daniel J. Solove:
Daniel J. Solove is a professor of law at the
George Washington University Law School. An
internationally-known expert in privacy law, Solove is the
author of several books, including Understanding Privacy
(Harvard 2008), The Future of Reputation: Gossip and Rumor in
the Information Age (Yale 2007) (winner of the 2007 McGannon
Award), and The Digital Person: Technology and Privacy in the
Information Age (NYU 2004). Professor Solove is also the
author of a textbook, Information Privacy Law with Aspen
Publishing Co. now in its third edition, with co-author Paul
Schwartz. Solove has published more than 30 articles and essays,
which have appeared in leading law reviews such as the Yale Law
Journal, Stanford Law Review, California Law Review, Michigan
Law Review, NYU Law Review, University of Pennsylvania Law
Review, and Duke Law Journal. Professor Solove has testified
before Congress and has been interviewed and featured in several
hundred media broadcasts and articles, including the New York
Times, Wall Street Journal, Washington Post, Chicago Tribune,
USA Today, Associated Press, Time, Newsweek, ABC, CBS, NBC, CNN,
and NPR. A graduate of Yale Law School, he clerked for Judge
Stanley Sporkin, U.S. District Court for the District of
Columbia and Judge Pamela Ann Rymer, U.S. Court of Appeals for
the 9th Circuit. He also worked at the law firm Arnold & Porter
in Washington, DC. Professor Solove teaches information privacy
law, criminal procedure, criminal law, and law and literature.
He blogs at
http://www.concurringopinions.com,
which in 2007 and 2008 was selected by the ABA Journal as among
the 100 best law blogs.
Afternoon Session with
Stefano Grazioli
Ever wondered whether you were
having a perfectly secure, encrypted communication... with a
crook? All too often, information security focuses on what the
computer scientists can engineer (and the vendors sell) and not
enough on the management of the human element involved in
business communication and transactions. For the last ten years
Professor Grazioli has studied business lies, frauds and
misrepresentations in fields as different as commercial lending,
ecommerce, and benefit card management. He will briefly
introduce some key results of his research and describe
opportunities to partner with UVA in initiatives designed to
better understand, and eventually curb, various forms of
deception and fraud that affect business life.
Agenda:
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10:00 a.m. - 10:30
a.m. |
Welcoming Reception and
Registration
(A continental breakfast will be served)
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10:30 a.m. - noon |
Presentation by
Daniel Solove |
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Noon - 1:00 p.m. |
Lunch
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1:00 p.m. - 2:00 p.m. |
Presentation by Professor
Stefano Grazioli |
Registration:
Please contact Jenny
Leslie at
jleslie@virginia.edu
or call 434-924-3553 to register for this event by
June 26, 2009. Please
include names, titles and emails for all members of your
organization planning to attend. |
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