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View 20 years of Medical Identity Theft
The World Privacy Forum has mapped
the location of incidents of medical identity theft in the United
States Using Data from the ....
Consumer
Privacy Tip of the Week
Apps to get free credit reports?
Are you thinking about getting a free credit report? Terrific, because
Congress mandated that US consumers can receive one free credit report
per year from the major credit bureaus. You can get your official free
report from www.annualcreditreport.com or by calling
877-322-8228. What about apps that will help you do
the same thing? Currently, we have not found an app that delivers the
same official free annual credit report. Looking on the Apple App Store
and at the Amazon Apps for Android, WPF searched for the term free
credit report and found an app called freecreditscore.com. WPF
discovered that the freecreditscore.com app will deliver an Experian
credit report and PLUS score. It is not the same thing as the Congressionally-mandated
annual free credit report. Right now, the official free annual credit
report is only available on the annualcreditreport.com website and via
phone. For more on the official free annual credit report, see the US
Federal Trade Commission's page on this. http://www.ftc.gov/bcp/edu/microsites/freereports/index.shtml.
Also check out our consumer tips on how to get your annual credit report
here.
WPF's new interactive
map identifies Health Information Exchanges in
California. A Health Information Exchange, or HIE, is technology that
enables the electronic movement of health-related information among
health care providers and others. HIEs are an increasingly popular way
for hospitals, pharmacies, labs, and emergency room physicians to share
patient information. HIEs can exchange records across one hospital,
across multiple hospitals in a region, or across a whole state. If your
health information is being shared through an HIE, your lab test results,
medications, medical history, or other clinical information related
to your health care may be included in the sharing. See more about HIEs
and our California HIE Map here.
05/09/2013 ID Ecosystem
WPF participating in ID Ecosystem Plenary
WPF Senior Projects Manager Marianne Fitzpatrick will be participating
at the ID Ecosystem's Plenary meeting this week. Of top concern at the
plenary will be a new ID theft use case that requires substantive discussion
regarding privacy checks and balances. For more information, see NSTIC's
page on the National Strategy for Trusted Identities in Cyberspace.
Also see the ID Ecosystem Steering
Group page for documents and meeting dates.
05/07/2013 Senior Identity Theft - FTC
WPF Executive Director Pam Dixon will be speaking at the Federal
Trade Commission Tuesday on the issue of Senior ID theft, and specifically,
about medical forms of the crime. Dixon, who wrote the first
report on medical ID theft and coined the term for the crime, will
be presenting new research at the panel.
Related:
Medical ID theft page
04/29/2013 India's national biometric ID card
In the May/June, 2013 issue of Foreign Policy Magazine, Pam Dixon writes
about the privacy issues related to India's
national biometric ID card. In the piece, Mission Creep, Dixon discusses
how government-issued biometric ID cards that serve as national ID cards
and as the basis for employment and financial transactions create profound
civil liberties and privacy challenges that are neither easily or well-constrained
by government policy.
Read
the article
Related: WPF's India video series:
Children
and Privacy: India Series
Medical
Privacy in India: India Series
Privacy
by Obscurity: India Series
Thoughts
on Privacy in India: India Series
Reimagining
Privacy in a Digital Era: Privacy Series
04/23/2013 Commercial drone privacy
In comments filed with the FAA, the World Privacy Forum urged the agency
to establish a robust privacy committee to focus on drone privacy and
to clarify the applicability of the Privacy Act of 1974 to UAS test site
operators. WPF also requested the FAA conduct mandatory Privacy Impact
Assessments and provide a FIPS-compliant privacy notice. "We have
offered our comments to the FAA with the acknowledgement that everyone
has much to learn in the area of commercial drone privacy. Our suggestions
to the FAA seek to increase general knowledge about drones and their effect
on privacy," said Pam Dixon.
Read
the comments (PDF)
04/12/2013 WPF on privacy and trust
WPF on panel of MSI
Pam Dixon is speaking on a panel on privacy and trust at Marketing
Science Institute in Boston. The panel, led by John Deighton of the
Harvard Business School, includes experts from EPIC, the DAA, and CBS.
04/01/2013 Visiting Scholar Lecture Pacific Northwest College of Art
Visiting Scholar: Privacy in a Modern Era
Pam Dixon is a visiting scholar at Portland's PNCA. She is scheduled
to speak with students in a round of interdisciplinary classes, and she
will also be giving a public keynote at 7 pm in Swigert Commons. Her public
lecture is on Modern Privacy.
03/27/2013 Senior ID theft
Senior ID theft: Issues, Causes, and Cures
Pam Dixon speaks to Los Angeles County social workers and financial abuse
support teams today to share WPF's wealth of information about medical
identity theft and how this crime impacts seniors. WISE and Healthy Aging
is hosting this important meeting.
03/05/2013 Privacy in India and Developing Economies
World Privacy Forum Executive Director Pam Dixon will present WPF's research
and India privacy videos at the FTC - IAPP Global Privacy Conference workshop
Wednesday, March 7. The session, Global
Perspectives on Consumer Privacy, is the first session of its kind
at IAPP or the FTC focused on privacy in developing economies. WPF has
researched privacy extensively in India, and has documented a number of
key privacy issues in a video series. So far, 5 videos in the series have
been released. All of the videos were shot on location in India and feature
Pam Dixon, with videographer Blake Hamilton. These videos offer a rare
and early glimpse into privacy interactions and issues in India. WPF will
be releasing one more video on biometric ID cards in India.
See the WPF India Privacy Series:
Children
and Privacy: India Series
Medical
Privacy in India: India Series
Privacy
by Obscurity: India Series
Thoughts
on Privacy in India: India Series
Reimagining
Privacy in a Digital Era: Privacy Series
03/05/2013 ID Ecosystem
WPF is participating in the ID Ecosystem meetings as a consumer privacy
representative. Senior Projects Manager Marianne Fitzpatrick is taking
the lead on this project, and is working on general privacy and financial
privacy areas. The next meeting of the ID Ecosystem is Tuesday March 5.
The ID Ecosystem meetings are open to the public. The meetings are important,
as this process will set the stage regarding how online identities are
managed. For more information, see NSTIC's
page on the National Strategy for Trusted Identities in Cyberspace.
Also see the ID Ecosystem Steering
Group page for documents and meeting dates.
02/26/2013 Online privacy
Online privacy debate at leadership summit
Pam Dixon will participate in the IAB's formal privacy policy debate
as a privacy and consumer representative on Tuesday, Feb. 26. This marks
the first time the IAB annual leadership summit has hosted a formal policy
debate. The debate will be moderated by Katy Kay of Advertising Age. Event
information: http://www.iab.net/events_training/2013/alm/overview.
Related: Pam
Dixon's Congressional testimony on consumer expectation of privacy online.
02/22/2013 Reputation and privacy
Consumer experiences of job searching and online reputation
Pam Dixon spoke at the Southwestern Law School Privacy Conference on
the topic of reputational privacy Friday the 22cnd along with Neville
Johnson and Paul Tweed. Dixon highlighted three key consumer situations
WPF assisted with recently, discussing the employment challenges consumers
faced when harmful material was available online during the job search
process.
Related: WPF's
job search privacy page
02/17/2013 Mobile Privacy
NTIA drafting process ongoing
The World Privacy Forum attended the NTIA Multistakeholder meeting as
one of the drafters of the code of conduct being considered by the NTIA
Multistakeholder process. WPF and the other drafters are accepting comments
from all stakeholders in preparation of the next iteration of the draft.
Current drafts, including redline drafts, are available on the NTIA
website.
02/01/2013 The future of privacy
Debating the future of privacy
Pam Dixon participated as a discussant and contributor to the Arizona
School of Law's private workshop on the topic of the future of privacy.
Key areas of discussion included the European Union's Right to be Forgotten
proposal, consent and health privacy, and Do Not Track.
01/24/2013
WPF to Present Consumer Privacy Perspective at DMA Webinar
This Thursday, Pam Dixon will be presenting the consumer privacy perspective
for a DMA Webinar on data innovation. While marketers are interested in
innovating to use consumer data, consumers have real privacy concerns
that need to be addressed. Dixon will present some of the key implications.
More information about the event is here.
01/23/2013 The Privacy Gap
WPF's Pam Dixon will speak on privacy gaps at Silicon Valley's Churchill
Club Wednesday, January 23 in San Francisco. The panel is part of International
Privacy Day activities and will be moderated by Chris Kelley, Former Chief
Privacy Officer of Facebook. More event information is available at http://www.churchillclub.org/LandingPage.aspx.
01/17/2013 NTIA Mobile privacy
Mobile app privacy discussions continue
WPF participated in the January 17th meeting of the NTIA Multistakeholder
Process. The jointly crafted code WPF, ACLU, Mobile App Alliance, and
Consumer Action created was again discussed and edited. A growing consensus
is moving toward the joint code. The next meeting is January 31, 2013.
01/09/2013 CES Facial Recognition
CES Panel on Facial Recognition
Pam Dixon spoke at a CES panel on privacy issues in facial recognition
technologies as part of the Leaders in Technology program at CES. The
panel was moderated by Tony Romm of Politico and included FTC Commissioner
Maureen Ohlhausen and Harley Geiger, legislative counsel for Representative
Zoe Lofgren. Dixon spoke on the need for increased work on consumer options
in a "sensor rich environment where there is no option to opt out
by walking out." Referenced in the panel was WPF's report on digital
signage and facial recognition, The One-Way Mirror Society.
Read the
One Way Mirror Society.
12/04/2012 VIDEO: Reimaging privacy in a digital era, Children's Privacy
During our research in India, we captured our experiences in video along
the way. This video focuses on children's privacy from a global perspective.
We were in south India conducting interviews on privacy, and had the opportunity
to talk with these children about privacy. We came away with some surprising
results. Our first video, Reimaging Privacy in a Digital Era, and the
second video on children's privacy are viewable on computers and mobile
devices. Watch the video here:
World Privacy Forum: Children and
Privacy, India 2012 from World
Privacy Forum's Video Channel.
11/30/2012 Mobile privacy
The WPF co-presented a jointly conceived and written consumer mobile
transparency proposal with the Application Developers Alliance, the ACLU,
and Consumer Action on Friday, Nov. 30. All four groups were on hand to
present the idea of moving forward with simple, clear, direct transparency
guidelines for consumers in the mobile app space. "This document
and the accompanying screenshots are just a beginning, but it is a beginning
I can get behind," said Pam Dixon, who was in Washington to make
the presentation to the stakeholders and the NTIA. "Mobile transparency
is crucial to consumers, especially as we continue to shift more and more
toward smartphone and app use." This is one of the first instances
of a co-self-regulatory process that has been successful in generating
a document both privacy, civil liberties, industry, and consumer groups
have jointly created and agreed on.
NTIA
process information
11/26/2012 VIDEO: Re-imagining privacy in a digital era
The World Privacy Forum has spent time in India studying several key
privacy issues of profound importance. We have done on-the-ground research
regarding the national biometric identification card system being deployed
in India, it is called the AADAAHR Card, or the Total ID. This biometric
project is the largest known biometric deployment in the world to date.
We have also been researching additional core WPF issues, such as electronic
health record privacy. In a series of five videos, we outline and share
the key privacy issues we have been looking at in India, and offer a first-seen
peek into a world that is not often seen or experienced in Western policy
circles.
This video is the first in the series, and it outlines how privacy today
must be reimagined, in India, and in the US.
Watch the video:
World Privacy Forum Re-Imagining
Privacy in a Digital Era from World
Privacy Forum's video channel.
11/19/2012 CES | facial recognition and privacy
WPF tapped for Leaders in Technology talk at 2013 CES
WPF's Pam Dixon will be speaking at the 2013 International CES as part
of the Leaders in Technology program. "I am honored to be part of
CES' Leaders in Technology Program," said Dixon, who will be speaking
on January 9, 2013 about the policy issues of facial recognition technology,
particularly those relating to consumer privacy.
More
on CES Leaders in Technology program
11/10/2012 Medical ID Theft
WPF was quoted in a NYT article on patient biometric identification systems,
notably, palm vein readers. The idea is that patients will be uniquely
identified to prevent fraud and other misidentifications. However, in
cases of medical ID theft, biometric identification can go terribly awry,
and can actually create a lot of problems for victims. WPF has written
about palm vein scanners and other uses of ID technology in our Red Flag
and best practices documents.
See
the NYT piece | Read
WPF's best practices for health care providers | Related:
A Patient's Guide to HIPAA
11/09/2012 Data brokers
The World Privacy Forum has filed
comments with the US Federal Trade Commission, sending the FTC documentation
that a credit bureau was selling information about consumers who had paid
their mortgages 30, 60, or 90 days late. WPF made the filing in response
to FTC's request for comments regarding its recent enforcement action
against Equifax. The FTC's complaint against Equifax showed that for a
period of two years, Equifax sold the names of consumers who were late
on their mortgages to businesses that used that information to market
financially damaging and in some cases fraudulent products and services
to these consumers. WPF is concerned that lists of consumers who are late
on their mortgages are still being sold, and has requested additional
information from the FTC regarding this matter.
Read
the WPF letter to the FTC | Related: FTC
information regarding case
10/29/2012 Consumer privacy trends
Today Pam Dixon spoke at the California
Consumer Affairs conference on a panel led by California Department
of Justice's JoAnne McNabb, outlining key trends in consumer privacy.
Focusing on mobile privacy, Dixon noted that privacy trends were moving
very quickly in the mobile environment. "Privacy on mobile apps has
become a major focus for consumers," noted Dixon. "We need to
ensure that consumers can use their smartphones with full confidence and
no privacy surprises."
10/09/2012 Medical ID Theft
The American Academy of Neurology has published an excellent article
distilling Executive Director Pam Dixon's newest tips on medical identity
theft. Pam Dixon discovered medical identity theft as a crime in 2006.
Her subsequent research and well-known 2006 report was the first published
research on the issue. The AAN article is available
in full online for the next few weeks, and is free.
American
Academy of Neurology - Medical ID Theft | WPF
medical ID theft page with tips, map, reports
09/26/2012 Health privacy
Each year, the US Department of Justice is required to submit a report
to the US President disclosing how individual patient health information
has been used for certain law enforcement investigations. This requirement
comes from an Executive Order signed in 2000, To
Protect the Privacy of Protected Health Information in Oversight Investigations.
The Order states:
"On an annual basis, the Department of Justice, in consultation
with the Department of Health and Human Services, shall provide to the
President of the United States a report that includes the following information:
(i) the number of requests made to the Deputy Attorney General for authorization
to use protected health information discovered during health oversight
activities in a non-health oversight, unrelated investigation;
(ii) the number of requests that were granted as applied for, granted
as modified, or denied;
(iii) the agencies that made the applications, and the number of requests
made by each agency;
(iv) the uses for which the protected health information was authorized."
The World Privacy Forum has requested a copy of this report. This is
our second request for the information. A copy of our full request is
here,
and gives additional background information about why this report is important
for patient privacy.
Read
the WPF Request | See
the Executive Order
09/14/2012 slide deck, mobile privacy webinar
The slide deck from the Future of Privacy Forum and World Privacy Forum's
Mobile
App Ecosystem webinar is available for download. As soon as the audio
is available, we will be posting the full presentation. Our thanks to
FPF and all of the presenters for a terrific webinar.
Download
the Webinar slide deck
09/10/2012 NTIA Mobile app webinar
Future of Privacy Forum & World Privacy Forum: Mobile App Ecosystem
Webinar
Join us for a Webinar on September 13. Space is limited. Reserve your
Webinar seat now at:
https://www4.gotomeeting.com/register/884798087.
Participants in the NTIA Multistakeholder Process working to create a
code of conduct for App Transparency have expressed strong interest in
holding technical briefings that would provide information about app data
flows and business models.
To help provide a better understanding and transparency of the workings
of the app ecosystem, the Future of Privacy Forum and World Privacy Forum
have arranged a briefing to provide the consumer advocacy, business and
policy stakeholders with an overview of how and why apps access consumer
data and how data may be used for both functional and commercial purposes.
Speakers:
Pam Dixon, Executive Director, World Privacy Forum
Jules Polonetsky, Director and Co-Chair, Future of Privacy Forum
Nathan Good, PhD, Chief Scientist at Good Research
Ron Soffer, Independent App Developer, former app developer for WebMD
Adam Towvim & Matt Tengler, VP of Business Development & Product
Director at Jumptap
Lia Sheena, Legal & Policy Fellow at the Future of Privacy Forum
Title: Future of Privacy Forum & World Privacy Forum: Mobile App Ecosystem
Webinar
Date: Thursday, September 13, 2012
Time: 4:00 PM - 5:45 PM EDT
After registering you will receive a confirmation email containing information
about joining the Webinar.
System Requirements:
PC-based attendees
Required: Windows® 7, Vista, XP or 2003 Server
Macintosh®-based attendees
Required: Mac OS® X 10.5 or newer
Mobile attendees
Required: iPhone®/iPad®/Android™ smartphone or tablet
08/23/2012 NTIA Mobile apps
It's time to talk substance
The World Privacy Forum attended the NTIA meeting yesterday in Washington,
DC to discuss mobile app privacy. We remain optimistic about working with
all stakeholders to arrive at positive solutions for consumer privacy
concerns. We reiterate that the NTIA process offers a real -- and unique
-- opportunity to dialogue with multiple stakeholders from industry, privacy,
consumer, and civil liberties perspectives. WPF supports this open public
dialogue.
Our focus for the next NTIA meeting is to provide a draft with concrete
suggestions that will allow a more detailed conversation about substantive
mobile app transparency and privacy issues. We are working with an array
of stakeholders on this draft and will present it next week with the hope
that a meaningful conversation about substantive ideas will take place.
WPF believes that a robust discussion of ideas is positive; in our experience,
in a competition of ideas, the good ideas tend to win over the bad ones.
But that can only happen when stakeholders are actively engaged in exchanging
ideas about specifics.
In our first blog post about the NTIA process, we wrote that it is time
for the dialogue between privacy stakeholders and industry stakeholders
to mature and move away from a win/lose dynamic and move toward a more
effective and mature challenge/response dynamic. We reiterate the importance
of this. WPF remains optimistic about this process, and we are ready to
discuss substantive matters relating to mobile app consumer privacy. The
next meeting is
August 29, meeting details are available here.
08/22/2012 Social media privacy | Student privacy
The California State Senate unanimously approved a
law that, if signed by the Governor, will provide greater privacy
for students. If the measure is signed into law, educational providers
may not force students to disclose their social media passwords and logon
information. This law also prohibits the practice of "shoulder surfing,"
educational providers would not be able to force students to log on to
social media profiles so the provider could view the profile. Governor
Brown has vetoed privacy laws in the past; September 30 is the deadline
for his signature on this law. The text of the law is available here
(SB 1349).
07/21/2012 Medical privacy - California
WPF
filed comments today on an initiative being undertaken by the state
of California to "harmonize" California's stronger state privacy
laws with the national US health privacy regulations, HIPAA. Our analysis
of California's proposal is that it is deeply flawed and is designed to
weaken state level privacy protections for California patients. WPF also
has procedural concerns about the proposal; it was crafted without a participatory
public process, and the presence of consumer and patient representatives
in this process was below de minimus standards. CalOHII, the office that
released the harmonization proposal, plans to turn its proposal into legislation
for the state. WPF opposes this plan unless the proposal is substantially
improved. Our comments,
jointly filed with EFF and others, are available here.
Read
the comments. | Press
release: California, Don't Weaken Californian's Health Privacy Laws
07/20/2012 New California privacy enforcement office
California Attorney General Kamala Harris has created a new
privacy protection and enforcement unit. The unit will be housed in
the Department of Justice and will focus on protecting consumer and individual
privacy through civil prosecution of state and federal privacy laws, a
news release said. "The Privacy Unit’s mission to enforce and
protect privacy is broad. It will enforce laws regulating the collection,
retention, disclosure, and destruction of private or sensitive information
by individuals, organizations, and the government. This includes laws
relating to cyber privacy, health privacy, financial privacy, identity
theft, government records and data breaches. By combining the various
privacy functions of the Department of Justice into a single enforcement
and education unit with privacy expertise, California will be better equipped
to enforce state privacy laws and protect citizens’ privacy rights.
" Joanne McNabb, who ran the now de-funded California Office of Privacy
Protection, will serve as director of privacy education and policy for
the unit. See
the full press release.
07/11/2012 Essay: online privacy, multistakeholder process
What is Important in the Privacy Dialogue
WPF Essay, by Executive Director Pam Dixon
For decades, privacy advocates have been loathe to engage in the self-regulatory
process, and with good reason. Self-regulation in the privacy sector has
a grimy history, replete with spectacular failures. Also, most past privacy
self-regulatory processes have been controlled by industry participants
with the largest stake in the outcome, with advocates either left entirely
out of the process, or brought in after the fact. To date this process
has been a fairly polite public policy version of the Hatfields and the
McCoys, where not much gets done in the public interest, and the dialogue
is polarized to the point where there are only winners or losers.
It's time for this debate to mature into something better. From industry
participants to privacy advocates to consumers, we need to find a better
outcome. I believe that in order to do this, we must do three things.
We must put the consumer first, focus on what is important, and assign
appropriate responsibilities across the hierarchy of privacy chokepoints.
For mobile app privacy, the topic that has been chosen for the multistakeholder
process, that means starting with the wireless carriers, and moving on
through the chain to publishers, app portals, and developers.
A fourth item would also be helpful -- and that is to reform the self-regulatory
process itself. Because previous efforts have lacked any meaningful tension
or dialogue between industry interests and consumer and privacy interests,
the resulting policies have typically been imbalanced. To cure this, bringing
in the right amounts of tension and robust dialogue will go far. With
the Department of Commerce convening the multistakeholder process, there
is at least an outside chance that there will be some form of dialogue
between industry and privacy stakeholders. That's a start. The next step
will be to bring a meaningful tension to the proceedings. That means that
instead of the Hatfield-McCoy model where everyone withdraws to their
well-worn positions, something more along the lines of a challenge-response,
challenge-response, and repeat until the parties have all given up some
ground model takes its place.
In the environmental sector, industry interests realized after several
decades that the environmental activists were not going to go away. Industry
wisely began to shift its approach in that sector, and now, a significant
green transformation has occurred. While there are some notable irresponsible
actors and terrible incidents such as the BP oil spill, many more companies
are environmentally responsible now, with some even leading the charge.
The dialogue changed, and it changed for the better. It is possible. Whether
or not the multistakeholder process will achieve something more mature
than has been realized in the past is an unknown. I am viewing it as a
possible first step in moving to a more mature approach to the very real
consumer privacy concerns today, but to achieve that all stakeholders
will need to at least agree to one thing, and that is, to put the consumer
first. There will be many points of disagreement among stakeholders, but
perhaps, just perhaps, we can find this one point of agreement of putting
the consumer first, and then moving millimeter by millimeter from there.
-Pam Dixon, Mysore India
July 11, 2012
Press
Release: Put the Consumer First
07/10/2012 Drones
A recent item about drones in the GWU
CyberSecurity Policy Newsletter revealed that drones can be hacked
via spoofing the drone GPS systems. Government drones in US airspace are
poised to become a privacy issue of increasing concern. Here is an excerpt
from the newsletter, which is available here.
........."A group of researchers at the University of Texas at Austin
Radionavigation Laboratory recently succeeded in hijacking a drone by
spoofing the global positioning system (GPS) on board the aircraft. With
just around $1,000 in parts, the team took control of an unmanned aerial
vehicle owned by the college, all in front of the US Department of Homeland
Security. Domestic drones are already being used by the DHS and other
governmental agencies, and several small- time law enforcement groups
have accumulated UAVs of their own as they await clearance from the Federal
Aviation Administration, Reuters reports. Indeed, by 2020 there may be
tens of thousands of drones diving and dipping through US airspace. With
that futuristic reality only a few years away, this action suggests that
the FAA may have their work cut out for them if they think it’s
as easy as just approving domestic use anytime soon." CyberSecurity
Policy News, July 2, 2012.
07/09/2012 Mobile privacy
WPF urges stakeholders to put the consumer first, focus on what is important
Mobile app privacy is the topic of the multistakeholder
process to be undertaken this week under the direction of the US Department
of Commerce. Over the weekend, a NYT
article revealed that mobile carriers received more than 1.3 million
requests by law enforcement for mobile data, including requests for text
messages. This article is a focusing event. It is a reminder that in mobile
privacy we need to put the consumer first, focus
on what is important, and apply responsibility for privacy
and transparency throughout the hierarchy of mobile players,
from carriers to platforms to app stores to publishers to developers.
It is unclear yet what segments of the hierarchy require what amounts
of the burden, but what is clear is that carriers will certainly need
to do a lot. It is also clear that the idea of just an icon on a screen
to communicate the idea of mobile privacy to consumers is a band-aid approach
at best when faced with the truth of where some of the real risks are
for consumers.
Multistakeholder
meeting info | NYT
article on mobile privacy issues
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Privacy
in the Clouds examines the privacy and confidentiality issues of cloud
computing. 
Digital Signage examines the new forms of sophisticated digital signage networks.
WHAT'S NEW
FINANCIAL PRIVACY
JOB SEARCH PRIVACY
MEDICAL PRIVACY
SEARCH ENGINE & INTERNET PRIVACY
WPF EVENTS
FTC - IAPP Workshop on Privacy in Developing Countries,
March 3, 2013, Washington DC. Panel.
Biederman Institute Online Privacy Conference, Southwestern
Law School, Los Angeles, Feb. 22, 2013. California. Program committee,
panelist.
ASU Law School Privacy Conference, Phoenix, Feb. 1,
2013. Conference participant/discussant.
Churchill Club, San Francisco, The Privayc Gap, January
23, 2013, panel.
CES, Facial Recognition, Jan. 9, 2013, Las Vegas, Panel
discussion.
WPF India Privacy Forum, July 2012, Mysore, India.
Privacy Summit, June
5, Los Angeles, June 6 San Diego. WPF will be speaking.
FTC Hearing on Mobile Disclosures, March 30, 2012, Washington,
DC. WPF will be on a panel.
Medical ID Theft training, Denver Health Medical Center,
April 11, 2012, Denver, Colorado.
2012 International Consumer Electronics Show, Las Vegas.
Jan. 10.
FTC Hearing on Facial Recognition, Dec.
8, 2011, Washington, DC.
Consumer Dialogue, Nov. 2, 2011, New York City.
Congressional Testimony: Pam Dixon, October
13, 2011.
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