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Programme
Final Version
Wednesday 1 November 2006
| 1pm to 7pm
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Delegate registration in the hotel foyer
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| 7pm to 9pm
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Opening reception at the British Museum, hosted by Linklaters.
Welcome speech by Rt Hon the Lord Falconer of Thoroton QC
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Thursday 2 November 2006
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7.30 - 8.30
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Delegate registration outside the Thames Room
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8.30 - 9
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Welcome coffee and pastries
Thames Room
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9.15 - 9.25
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Introduction and welcome
Richard Thomas
UK Information Commissioner
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9.25 - 9.35
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Ministerial welcome
Rt. Hon. Baroness Ashton
Department for Constitutional Affairs
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9.35 - 10
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Liberty - the first casualty of surveillance
Baroness Helena Kennedy QC
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10 - 10.45
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'The surveillance society' - key themes and findings of the specially
commissioned report
Dr David Murakami Wood
Surveillance Studies Network
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10.45 - 11.15
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The future of surveillance
Professor Nigel Gilbert
University of Surrey, Chair of the Royal Academy of Engineering Group on
Privacy and Surveillance
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11.15 - 11.45
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coffee
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11.45 - 12.20
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Surveillance - the threat to our rights
Shami Chakrabarti
Director of Liberty
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12.20 - 12.55
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Learning from the past - living in a surveillance state
Hans Altendorf
Director General of the Federal Office for the Records of the National Security
Services of the former DDR
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12.55 - 13.30
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Can we learn from the past? The relationship between privacy and identity in
totalitarian regimes
Dr Benjamin Goold
Lecturer in law and criminology
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13.30 - 14.30
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buffet lunch
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14.30 - 15.05
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Law enforcement - privacy and crime
Sir Stephen Lander
Chair of the Serious Organised Crime Agency (SOCA)
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15.05 - 15.40
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The state - using information to provide benefits for citizens and improve
services
Ian Watmore
Head of Prime Minister's Delivery Unit
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15.40 - 16.15
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Human rights in a surveillance society - what are the boundaries?
Judge András Baka
European Court of Human Rights (ECHR)
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16.15 - 16.45
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coffee
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16.45 - 17.20
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Knowing your customer - an advantage for business and individuals?
John Peace
Chairman of Experian
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17.20 - 17.30
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Close
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19.00 - 19.40
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Pre-dinner drinks in the foyer outside the Thames Room, hosted by Bird &
Bird
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19.45 - 22.00
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Conference dinner in the Thames Room
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Friday 3 November 2006
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8 - 8.15
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Delegate
registration outside the Thames Room
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9 - 9.45
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Recap of first day and key issues to consider
David Flaherty
Privacy Consultant, Victoria, Canada and Professor emeritus,
University of Western Ontario
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9.45 - 11.10
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Panel session 1 - How has the balance shifted and what are the boundaries for
data protection and privacy?
Chaired by Sara Coburn
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11.10 - 11.40
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coffee
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11.40 - 13.05
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Panel session 2 - What we can do to preserve privacy? What is the role of data
protection authorities, regulators and others?
Chaired by Sara Coburn
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13.05 - 13.15
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Closing comments on debate
Richard Thomas
UK Information Commissioner
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13.15 - 13.25
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Presentation by Canada for the 29th International Conference of Data Protection
and Privacy Commissioners
Jennifer Stoddart
Privacy Commissioner of Canada
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13.25 - 13.30
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Close
Richard Thomas
UK Information Commissioner
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13.30 - 14.30
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buffet lunch
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14.30 - 18.00
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Commissioners' closed session
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14.30 - 16.30
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Privacy Implications of User-Centric Identity Management Systems – organised by
Microsoft, please see below for details
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Other related events
Wednesday 1 November
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9 - 17.30
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Data Protection Law Roundtable on Russia, Greece and Portugal
Privacy Laws & Business's European Privacy Officers Network (EPON) is
organising a Roundtable for Chief Privacy Officers to meet privacy regulators
and experts from Russia, Greece and Portugal.
The expert from each country is being invited to speak on issues of greatest
interest to multinational companies doing business there. There will be
questions and answers on each country before moving to discuss the next
country. This Roundtable is the fifteenth organised by EPON since 2001 and is
being hosted by Deloitte in central London.
Click
here for more information and to register for this EPON meeting.
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14.00 - 17.30
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The database state? Privacy workshop at University College
London
The UK government is pushing ahead with an ambitious programme to re-engineer
the processes of public administration, based on wide-spread sharing of
personal data between previously isolated departments and agencies. This is
being backed up by proposals for the weakening of data protection law and the
building of massive national databases on both adults and children.
Is widespread data sharing a panacea for effective 21st century government? Is
it legal within the European privacy framework? Or, as Tony Blair has claimed,
are we living in entirely new world in which we should leave behind "outdated"
notions of human rights?
This workshop will bring together lawyers, technologists, regulators and
activists with a shared interest in the development of effective and
privacy-friendly government. It will feature expert speakers on two major UK
databases: the children's Information Sharing Index (which will hold details on
every UK child) and the NHS Care Records Service (which will eventually hold
all medical records electronically within the National Health Service). But
most importantly, it will give all participants the chance to discuss their
views on the privacy principles that should lie behind public administration in
the information age.
Places are limited, so please RSVP to
I.Brown@cs.ucl.ac.uk if you wish to attend.
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Friday 3 November
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14.30 - 16.30
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Privacy Implications of User-Centric Identity Management Systems – Plaza Suites 1 and 2, Riverbank Park Plaza Hotel
Presentations:
Caspar Bowden
Mary Rundle
Jan Camenisch
Related Links:
http://www.identityblog.com/
http://www.identityblog.com/
http://www.identityblog.com/wp-content/resources/Identity_Metasystem_EU_Privacy.pdf
www.prime-project.eu
www.zurich.ibm.com/security/idemix
http://www.eclipse.org/higgins/
The ability of Internet users to manage identity
relationships with diverse organisations is a prerequisite to further
development of e-commerce and efficient delivery of government services
online. However a rising tide of information security threats, from
“phishing” and “spoofing” attacks on the user, to large scale breaches of
centralised repositories of identity information, suggests that new
approaches are needed which can empower the individual to take more
control of how their personal information is used online.
For a number of years there has been growing interest in industry and research
communities in the concept of "user-centric" identity management systems. The
EU PRIME research project has been exploring how advanced cryptographic
techniques can be holistically integrated to achieve practical and usable
improvements in privacy protection. Liberty Alliance has developed a set of
specifications for federated identity-based Web services. Microsoft has
proposed architectural principles ("7 Laws of Identity") to support convergence
towards an inter-operable, secure, and privacy-enhancing "Identity Metasystem".
What are the regulatory implications of user-centric models of identity and
what is the impact of such architectures on privacy?
This panel will explore these issues with contributions from major industry
players and independent experts, providing a technical perspective on some of
the policy issues raised. The session will be open to all attending the 28th
International Privacy Commissioner's conference.
Chair: Malcolm Crompton (IIS Partners, and former Privacy Commissioner of
Australia)
Panel:
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Caspar Bowden (Chief Privacy Adviser, Microsoft EMEA)
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Robin Wilton (Corporate Architect, Sun Microsystems)
Mary Rundle (Berkman Center for Internet and Society, visiting fellow Oxford
Internet Institute) Jan Camenisch (IBM Zurich, technical leader of the EU PRIME
project)
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Please also see the 'Social events' page for details of evening events.
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