London
London – details to be confirmed
Data Protection & Security Conference 2017 – 7th July 2017
Introduction
This conference, chaired by Robert Bond, examines a wide range of current and future developments in this highly complex and often technical area of work. Topics covered will range from the proposed powers of regulators and likely penalties under a new ePrivacy regime to data security.
Conference Agenda
This Conference will cover the following topics:
9.30am – 10.15am: Privacy & Electronic Communications
Rosemary Jay, Hunton & Williams
The current ePrivacy Directive which covers privacy and electronic communications is under review by the European Commission to bring it into line with the new General Data Protection Regulation. The preliminary indications are that it will be replaced by a directly applicable regulation and impose more stringent requirements than the current law.
This session will cover:
10.15am – 11.00am: Data Security & Exposure
Dr Stephen Hill
The rapid pace of technological change and globalisation have profoundly transformed the scale and way personal data is collected, accessed, used and transferred. Social networks, data sharing websites, cloud computing and new portable devices including tablets and smart phones pose new challenges for our data security and governance culture.
11.15am – 12.00: GDPR & Technology: Friends or Foes?
Robert Bond, Bristows
The GDPR was introduced, in part, to address the fact that Europe’s existing data protection regime pre-dated technologies such as cloud computing, social networking, apps and big data. Even the world-wide web was only in its infancy when the existing regime was introduced. In this session, the impact of the GDPR on these and other technologies will be addressed.
Have the authors of the GDPR done a good job when it comes to regulating the processing of personal data in the super-connected world in which we live or not? And what does the GDPR mean for:
12.00 – 12.45pm: Biometrics and Data Protection
Rosemary Jay, Hunton & Williams
Biometrics are being hailed as the new frontier of technology, bringing together the speed and certainty of personally identifiable information and new technologies. However there are also big questions about the effects of these technologies and whether the data protection regime, even as amended by the GDPR, is sufficient to safeguard against the inherent risks.
This session will cover:
12.45 – 1.00pm: Questions on Morning Session
2.00pm – 2.50pm: Surveillance and Corporate Intelligence
Lorna Skinner, Matrix Chambers
In What Price Privacy? and What Price Privacy Now? The Information Commissioner exposed the lucrative illegal trade in personal information. This session will cover:
2.50pm – 3.40pm: Data Protection in Employment Disputes: Current and Future
Simon Cheetham and Lance Harris, Old Square Chambers
This session provides an update on the current and future developments in law and practice in the context of employment disputes. Amongst the topics to be covered are:
3.55pm – 4.45pm: The Expense of Compliance
Rory Dunlop, 39 Essex Street
As more and more people exercise their right to request data under the Data Protection Act and other legislation, the costs of complying continues to grow. Requesters and data controllers need to know when a request can be refused on the grounds that it would be disproportionately expensive to comply with it.
This session will cover:
4.45pm – Close
Questions & Answers
If you would like to book a place for this event, please follow this link: Data Protection & Security Conference 2017 .