MIT Stata Center (Building 32)
32 Vassar St.Cambridge, MA USA
Held in Classroom 144
This workshop will bring together computer scientists, technology
developers, lawyers, and other researchers interested in the general issues
of accountability for and enforcement of rules for handling sensitive data.
The main workshop goals are exchange of information about the state of the
art in accountability and enforcement and formulation of research-agenda
items, both short- and long-term, in this burgeoning area.
From the CFP: Increasing use of computers and networks in business, government, recreation, and almost all aspects of daily life has led to a proliferation of sensitive data about people and organizations. Concern about the ownership, control, privacy, and accuracy of these data has become a top priority legally, socially, and technologically. Diverse technologies have been developed to enable anonymous or pseudonymous transactions, thus protecting stakeholders from abuse of their sensitive databy preventing the linkage of their data to their identities. Web standards have been set out to enable better communication of policies and preferences between data collectors and data subjects.
Despite all of this, policies, anonymizers, and pseudonymizers and even laws cannot be effective without enforcement and accountability.