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2

Dear participant,

It gives me great pleasure to welcome you to the University of Amsterdam (UvA) for the 2018

Amsterdam Privacy Conference.

This is the third time this conference is taking place at the UvA. As president of the Executive Board, I

am extremely proud that we are again organising what has become one of the world’s leading

interdisciplinary events for critical and active discussion on privacy. And just as in recent years, this

edition has no shortage of issues to discuss. Indeed, since the previous conference in 2015, matters like

microtargeting, algorithmic profiling and the Cambridge Analytica data scandal have thrust privacy

squarely into the public spotlight.

As a participant in these discussions, your role is vital. Recent technological and digital developments

pose major challenges to our offline and online privacy. Challenges many people until recently did not

foresee and which go beyond the political, legal, economic, ethical or social scientific domain. As a

consequence, finding meaningful answers to these multifaceted challenges requires interdisciplinary

research and discussion.

This conference is the perfect platform for such interaction. It is an opportunity for researchers from

various fields to join privacy practitioners, policymakers, journalists and the general public in sharing

perspectives and thoughts on a host of privacy-related matters. It is accessible, informal and engaging.

And it takes place in Amsterdam, a city with a rich tradition of tolerance and respect for personal

liberties and privacy.

I trust that by the end of the conference, you will have gained new knowledge and a fresh perspective,

as well as made new and lasting friendships.

I wish you a productive conference and an enjoyable time in Amsterdam.

Prof. Geert ten Dam

President of the Executive Board of the University of Amsterdam

3

The Amsterdam Privacy Conference 2018 is a four day conference with interdisciplinarity and social

relevance as its spearheads. Topical issues that will take center stage include cloud computing, privacy by

design, cookies, the economic value of personal data, social networks, security and anti-terrorism measures,

privacy and medical data, consumers’ perceptions and appraisal of privacy, privacy regulation and the

redefinition of privacy in a rapidly changing information society.

APC 2018 is organized by the Amsterdam Platform for Privacy Research (APPR), a group consisting of

more than 60 researchers at the University of Amsterdam who are involved with privacy aspects in their

daily activities. They approach this topic from different angles, such as law, philosophy, economics,

computer science, medicine, communication studies, political science, etc. Through an interdisciplinary

approach and joint discussions, the APPR increases both the understanding and awareness of privacy issues.

During the conference, you can always put questions to organizing members of APC. They can be easily

identified by their shirts. A central conference desk will be permanently manned at all locations.

- If no organizing member is around, or if you have questions before or after conference hours, you

can reach the conference staff at: +31630840685

- The emergency telephone number for the police, fire brigade and ambulance service is 112.

- Open Wifi can be accessed via “UvA Open Wi-Fi”.

APC 2018 is held in two locations in Amsterdam; Friday will take place in the Old Lutheran Church

(location 2) and the University Library (location 3) and Saturday, Sunday and Monday will take place at the

Roeterseiland (location 4) and we will have our final event on Monday in Kriterion (location 5). Amsterdam

Central Station is location 1 on the map.

4

Sponsors

Gold Sponsors

Platinum Sponsors

Please find our sponsorship policy online at www.apc2018.com/sponsors

5

We also received support from

Amsterdam Law School

6

Friday 5 October 2018 (Aula & University Library)

09.30-11.30

Doelenzaal

09.30-11.30

Potgieterzaal

09.30-11.30

Vondelzaal

09.30-11.30

Belle van Zuylenzaal

09.30-11.30

Aula

09.30-11.30

Spui25

Privacy enhancing

technologies and

encryption

Session I – Privacy &

Annonimization

Moderator: Demchenko

Tilanus: PbD in

collaborative systems

Winter & Schäfer:

Roadmap to privacy

Schäfer et al.: Introducing

a Hybrid Generalization

Bomprezzi: Blockchain

Technology

Phd Session I

Moderator: Lanzing

Van Haaften & Engers:

Data Protection C-ITS

Uzun: Cloud Computing

as an Investment

Bincoletto: A

comparative perspective

on Privacy by design

Li: A Tale of Two Rights

Phd Session II

Moderator: Borgesius

Klos: Responsibility to

publish

Mahieu et al.:

Responsibility in

networked settings

Vernikov: Data

Portability

Smith: The impact of

divergent

Maharani: Disruptive

innovation

Phd Session III

Moderator: Eskens

Lux: Anonymous Social

Networking

Michalon & Estrada:

Equality before privacy

intrusions

Bholasing: Privacy in the

big data era

Siffels: Relational

Privacy

Phd Session IV

Moderator: Hoofnagle

Mols & Pridmore: Checking

my messages

Chatzinikolaou & Lievens:

Privacy as a prerequisite

Wisman & Tijm: The

Radical Reframing

Pratt: A Reasonable

Expectation of Neural

Privacy

11.30-12.00 Lunch

12.00-14.00

Doelenzaal

12.00-14.00

Potgieterzaal

12.00-14.00

Vondelzaal

12.00-14.00

Belle van Zuylenzaal

12.00-14.00

Aula

12.00-14.00

Spui25

Privacy enhancing

technologies and

encryption

Session II – GDPR

Moderator: Demchenko

Demchenko et al.:

Bootstrapping GDPR

George et al.: GDPR

Bypass by Design?

Dwyer & Chen:

Motivating Safer Security

Privacy and Democracy

Session I – Legal &

Government Related I

Moderator: Schiphof

Jozwiak: Development on

the EU approach

Butcher: Open justice and

rehabilitation

Paterson: Government

use of personal data

Coni & Ebert: Privacy

under Limited Rule of

Law

Value of Privacy

Session I – Identity and

the Value of Privacy

Moderator: Sax

Popescu & Baruh:

Privacy as Cultural

Choice

Engelmann et al.: The

Digital Dimensions of

Personal Identity

King: Tyranny of the

minority inferences

Van der Geest: Feigned

indifference

Personalized

Communication and

Behavioural

Engineering

Session I - Enabling

user agency

Moderator: Ozkul

Van Boom et al.:

Regulatory intervention

Pierson: Addressing

privacy and public values

Livingstone et al.: Value

of children’s privacy

Monzer et al.: Who has

control and is responsible

Phd Session V

Moderator: Hoofnagle

Riva: Metadata, Semantic-

data, and their protection

Teutsch et al.: Perceiving the

difference

Vander Maelen: Age

Verification

Quintel: Interoperability of

EU Databases

Workshop: Pseudonymous

data on the blockchain

Alexandra Giannopoulou

7

14.00 – 14.30 Opening Keynote Session (Aula)

14.30 – 14.50 Welcome on behalf of APC2018 (Beate Roessler) & the University of Amsterdam (Geert ten Dam)

14.50 – 15.00 Young Scholars Award (Chris Hoofnagle)

15.00 – 15.30 Guest of honor

15.30 – 16.00 Shoshana Zuboff: Surveillance Capitalism

16.00 – 16.45 Panel: Accountability and Trust

Panelists: Manuel Kohnstamm, Shoshana Zuboff, Khiara Bridges, Marleen Stikker

Moderator: Tracy Metz

16.45 – 18.00 Reception

Shoshana Zuboff (Charles Edward Wilson Professor emerita,

Harvard Business School) is the author of The Age of Surveillance

Capitalism: The Fight for a Human Future at the New Frontier of

Power.

Zuboff: Several lifelong themes

will be integrated in this talk: the

historical emergence of

psychological individuality, the

conditions for human development,

the digital revolution, and the

evolution of capitalism. It begins

with the oldest questions: master or

slave? home or exile? Zuboff

explores the emerging forms of

networked capitalism and their

implications or information

civilization.

8

Saturday – 6 October 2018 (Roeterseiland)

08.30-09.00

Hall

09.00-10.30

A1.01

10.30-10.45

Hall

Coffee & Tea Keynote session I –

Data and Domination

Frank Pasquale: Data Domination in an Era of Concentrated Platform Power

Phillip Pettit: Privacy and Freedom

Moderator: Natali Helberger

Coffee & Tea

Philip Pettit is L.S. Rockefeller University Professor of

Human Values at Princeton University, where he has taught

political theory and philosophy since 2002, and now holds a

joint position as Distinguished Professor of Philosophy at the

Australian National University, Canberra. He works in moral

and political theory and on background issues in the

philosophy of mind and metaphysics. His books include

Republicanism (OUP 1997), The Economy of Esteem (with

G. Brennan, OUP 2004), Group Agency (with C. List, OUP

2011), Just Freedom (Norton 2014) and The Birth of Ethics

(OUP 2018).

Frank Pasquale is an expert on the law of artificial

intelligence, algorithms, and machine learning. He has been

recognized as one of the ten most cited scholars in health law

in the United States. Pasquale frequently presents on the

ethical, legal, and social implications of information

technology for attorneys, physicians, and government

officials. His book, The Black Box Society: The Secret

Algorithms that Control Money and Information (Harvard

University Press, 2015), develops a social theory of

reputation, search, and finance, and offers pragmatic reforms

to improve the information economy.

This keynote session will touch upon the topic of Data and

Domination.

Pasquale: The concentration of media and commerce

functions in a few digital firms gives them extraordinary, oft-

unappreciated power over both individuals and markets. I'll

also use Sabeel Rahman's book to give a definition of

"domination."

Pettit: To be free is not to live under the discretionary power

of others. Privacy is an essential safeguard against

discretionary power. Hence privacy is a requirement of

freedom, not just a distinct ideal.

9

10.45-12.45

A1.04

10.45-12.45

A1.05

10.45-12.45

A1.06

10.45-12.45

A1.07

10.45-12.45

A2.10

The Digital Society and

fkateSurveillance

Session I- Theoretical

perspectives

Moderator: Lindgreen

Margaritidis: Can the

Panopticon

Westermeier: Securing the

Cyber

Veliz: The Conflict of privacy

and security

Sloan & Warner: Alien

Intelligence

Üzümcü & Güllüpınar: Rights to

Privacy and Parental Authority

Discrimination, inequality and

immigration

Session I -algorithms and

fairness

Moderator: Borgesius

Naudts: The Articulation of

Fairness

La Fors et al.: Filling

accountability holes

Katell: Algorithmic Reputation

and Marginalization

Jongepier & Keymolen: Right to

Explanation Platform'

Smart healthcare, homes and

cities

Session I - Smart

Environments: From

Blockchain to the Internet of

Toys

Moderator: Lanzing

Ishmaev: Ethics, blockchains

and consumer IoT

Van Dijk et al.: Right

Engineering?

Milkaite & Lievens: The child's

right to privacy in IoT world

Trehan: Is Consent Really Dead?

The regulation of the information

society

Session I – Imitation is better

than innovation?

Moderator: Eskens

Richards & Hartzog: Privacy

colonialism

Singh & Bhatia: Data protection in

India

Chiang: RTBF in Japan, Taiwan,

and China

Panel: Digitalization as a

Game-Changer

Moderator: Keber

Michell: The Aesthetic

Functionalization of Privacy in

Contemporary Art

Kelsch: Representation of the

Family in Contemporary

Online Series

Aldenhoff: Privacy as a Moral

Right

Sobala: Data Minimization

Revisited

10.45-12.45

A2.11

10.45-12.45

A2.12

10.45-12.45

A2.13

10.45-12.45

A2.14

10.45-12.45

A2.15

Privacy and Democracy

Session II - Legal &

Government Related II

Moderator: Schiphof

Thompson & Xin: Social Credit

& Constitutional Imagination

Ekanayake: Living under an E-

government

Avasarala: Indian Interpretation

of Privacy

Value of Privacy

Session II - Socializations and

the Value of Privacy

Moderator: Sax

Morse & Birnhack: The

Posthumous Privacy Paradox

Steinmann: A materialist

interpretation of privacy

Froomkin & Colangelo: Privacy

as Safety

Sharon: Facial recognition and

the ethics of indifference

Personalized Communication

and Behavioural Engineering

Session II - Challenges of

cooperative responsibility

Moderator: Pierson

Presentations by Helberger &

Pierson, Agarwal, Frenken,

Frissen and Valcke

Panel: User responsibility or

responsibility for users?

Moderator: Heyman

Speakers

Claudia Quelle

Ilse Mariën

Eduard Fosch

Panel: The Handbook

Privacy Studies

Moderator: De Groot

Presentations by Priscilla

Regan, Beate Roessler, Sjaak

van der Geest, Robin Pierce,

Marijn Sax, Matthijs Koot, Ine

Zeeland, and many more

12.45-13.45 - Lunch

10

13.45-15.45

A1.04

13.45-15.45

A1.05

13.45-15.45

A1.06

13.45-15.45

A1.07

13.45-15.45

A2.10

Responsibility and Control

Session I – Ethics of AI &

Social Robots

Moderator: De Groot

Barry: Irresponsible and out of

control

Rubel et al.: Algorithms,

Control, and Agency

Bowman & Austin: The Greatest

Data Breach

Lutz et al.: The Privacy

Implications of Social Robots

Data commodification and

business opportunities

Session I – Building a

European Data Economy

Moderator: Klous & Bholasing

Graef et al.: Towards a Holistic

Regulatory Approach

Sivan: A Broken Distribution of

privacy

Van den Boom et al.: Access to

vehicle data

Heyman & Zeeland: Are EU

personal data regulations

Panel: Evaluating the Impact

of Big Data on Privacy

Moderator: Steeves

Steeves: Theorizing Privacy as a

Democratic Value

Cohen: The Emergent Limbic

Media System

Regan: Public Trustee

Regulation and Privacy

Protection

Burkell and Regan: Voting

Public

The regulation of the information

society

Session II - Data protection on the

ground

Moderator: Eskens

Zeeland & Pierson: Skills and

practices of new DPOs

Medzini: DPO’s as regulatory

intermediaries

Martin et al.: Implementing data

protection

Van Beek et al.: Motives for

reporting data breaches

Panel: The role of privacy

theory in legal analysis’

Moderator: Hughes

Hughes: The Absence of

Privacy

O’Callaghan: The Importance

of Privacy Theory

Phillipson: Conceptions of

privacy in case-law:

13.45-15.45

A2.11

13.45-15.45

A2.12

13.45-15.45

A2.13

13.45-15.45

A2.14

13.45-15.45

A2.15

Panel: Critical Legal Theory

of Privacy

Moderator: Lindroos

Lindroos-Hovinheimo: Privacy

against community?

Vainio: Necessary in a

democratic society

Neuvonen: Layers of Privacy

Value of Privacy

Session III - Culture and the

Value of Privacy

Moderator: Sax

Suárez-Gonzalo: Understanding

republican privacy

Malgieri: Online market

manipulation

Richardson & Witzleb: Cultural

value and personal data’

De Zwart: Neo-republicanism

Panel: It’s the Community,

Stupid!

Moderator: Lamla

Lamla: Introduction to Social

Value Creation

Hagendorff: Types of Values in

Society

Uhlmann/Weiler: Interplay

between Economic & Social

Capital in Social Media

Networks

Büttner & Ochs: Value Creation

& Translation on a 'Fitness

Privacy and Democracy

Session III - Philosophy and

Politics

Moderator: Katell

Hofman & Royal: Stuff and

Nonsense!

Engelmann et al.: Voting on

Facebook privacy

Bloch-Wheba: Global Platform

Governance

O’Hara: Where Shall We Draw the

Line?

Panel: Don’t take it personal

Moderator: Mai

Mai: Introduction: Privacy

and information in an

algorithmic age

Søe: Natural and non-natural

personal information

Jørgensen: Privacy regulation:

To control personal

information

Valtysson: Regulation: Macro,

meso, and micro levels

11

15.45-16.00

Hall

16.00-17.30

A1.01

17.30-22.00

Amsterdam

Coffee & Tea Keynote Session II –

The invisible handshake

Danielle Citron: The State and Sexual Privacy: Protector,

Spy, or Both?

Michael Birnhack: The Spectacular Collapse of Privacy

Legal Categories

Moderator: Marjolein Lanzing

Boat trip & dinner

Michael Birnhack is Associate Dean for Research, and a

Professor of Law. He is the Director of the S. Horowitz

Institute for Intellectual Property in memory of Dr. Amnon

Goldenberg, and the Director of the Parasol Foundation

International LL.M. He researches, teaches and writes about

intellectual property, privacy law, information law, and law

and technology. Birnhack’s privacy-related research

examines various issues, such as privacy by design, school

surveillance, big medical data, and digital remains.

Birnhack was a three-time member of the Israeli Council

for the protection of Privacy.

Danielle Citron is the Morton & Sophia Macht Professor of

Law at the University of Maryland Francis King Carey School

of Law where she teaches and writes about information

privacy, free expression, and civil rights. Professor Citron is an

internationally recognized privacy expert. Her book Hate

Crimes in Cyberspace (Harvard University Press 2014)

explored the phenomenon of cyber stalking and the role of law

and private companies in combating it; the editors of

Cosmopolitan included her book in its “20 Best Moments for

Women in 2014.” Professor Citron has published book

chapters and more than twenty law review articles.

This keynote session will discuss the relationship between citizens,

the private sector and the public sector in the online environment.

Citron: The state plays a crucial role in protecting individuals from

invasions of intimate privacy. At the same time, the state collects

massive amounts of intimate data. Is the balance of interests being

struck with adequate concern for privacy and free speech?

Birnhack: Privacy law is split into three main legal categories,

according to the parties involved and their relationship. Citizen-

state, consumer-corporations, people. But the legal categorization is

less rigid than this depiction with multiple mutual affects.

Moreover, some practices challenge the categorization.

12

Sunday – 7 October 2018 (Roeterseiland)

08.30-09.00

Hall

09.00-10.30

A1.01

10.30-10.45

Hall

Coffee & Tea Keynote session III –

Institutional transformation, and institutional failure

Helen Nissenbaum: Attempted Murder of AdNauseam:

Unfortunate Tale of Love, Loyalty, Trust, and Betrayal

Julie Cohen: Privacy and the Future of Human Rights

Moderator: Bart van der Sloot

Coffee & Tea

Julie E. Cohen is the Mark Claster Mamolen Professor of Law and

Technology at the Georgetown University Law Center. She

teaches and writes about copyright, surveillance, information

privacy regulation, and the governance of information and

communication networks. She is the author of Between Truth and

Power: The Legal Construction of Informational

Capitalism (Oxford University Press, forthcoming); Configuring

the Networked Self: Law, Code, and the Play of Everyday

Practice (Yale University Press, 2012), which was awarded the

2013 Association of Internet Researchers Book Award.

Helen Nissenbaum is Professor of Information Science at

Cornell Tech and currently on leave from New York

University, Media, Culture, and Communication and

Computer Science. Prof. Nissenbaum's work spans societal,

ethical, and political dimensions of information technologies

and digital media. Her books include Obfuscation: A User's

Guide for Privacy and Protest, with Finn Brunton (MIT Press,

2015), Values at Play in Digital Games, with Mary Flanagan

(MIT Press, 2014), and Privacy in Context: Technology,

Policy, and the Integrity of Social Life (Stanford, 2010).

This keynote session will discuss privacy, institutional transformation

and institutional failure.

Nissenbaum: To boost their spoils and support their dominance,

industry incumbents tolerated antidemocratic activity that sullied the

public sphere. Yet, even as they scramble to repair their reputations,

out of the public eye, they squeeze the life out of active dissenters to

the surveillance economy.

Cohen: Her talk will explore what privacy and data protection reveal

about the challenges of protecting human rights and designing effective

legal institutions in the global information economy.

13

10.45-12.45

A1.04

10.45-12.45

A1.05

10.45-12.45

A1.06

10.45-12.45

A1.07

10.45-12.45

A2.10

The Digital Society and

Surveillance

Session II - Individuals under

surveillance

Moderator: Lindgreen

Wang: Manipulative transparacy

Edwards et al.: Employee

Surveillance 4.0

Purshouse & Campbell: Privacy

and the Police Use

Lehmuskallio et al.: Banal

surveillance

Data commodification and

business opportunities

Session II – Data

conglomeration and

monopolization

Moderator: Klous & Bholasing

Jonker: Kinds of

commodification of data

Ahmad et al.: Portable Potatoes

Binns & Bietti: Welcome to the

family

Cirucci & Ebersole: Inadvertent

co-ownership

Smart healthcare, homes and

cities

Session II - Smart

Applications: Cases and New

Ideas

Moderator: Lanzing

Veliz: Medical privacy and big

data

Meszaros: De-identification

techniques and public interest

Fialova: Biometric data and

liability

Tilanus: Gaming as an agile tool

for privacy by design

Sponsored session

Microsoft

Cross-Border Data Access

How to deal with the challenges

facing law enforcement in their

efforts to access data across borders,

including a discussion of recent

reform efforts in the US and EU

Personalized

Communication and

Behavioural Engineering

Session III – AI, algorithms

and democracy

Moderator: Van Brakel

Harambam: Democratizing

news recommenders

Eskens: Relationship between

personalised news providers

and audiences

Shiner: Technology and free

thinking

Milioni et al.: Algorithmic

profiling and news

personalization

10.45-12.45

A2.11

10.45-12.45

A2.12

10.45-12.45

A2.13

10.45-12.45

A2.14

10.45-12.45

A2.15

Panel: Technological

foundation of GDPR:

Technologies, practices and

challenges

Moderator: Demchenko

Speakers: Cees de Laat, Matthijs

Koot, Winfried Tilanus &

Christian Winter

Value of Privacy

Session IV - Empirical and

Legal Approaches to the Value

of Privacy

Moderator: Sax

Belfrage: Why and how privacy

is valued by the public

Van Ooijen: Opting opt-in or

out?

Lutz et al.: Powerless and

distrustful, but not resigned

Daskal: Rise of Global

Censorship online

Panel - Algorithmic decisions,

discrimination, and the law

Discussion panel:

Moderator & organizer:

Borgesius

Speakers: Frank Pasquale,

Sandra Wachter, Janneke

Gerards &

Michael Veale

Panel: The Privacy Paradox

revisited

Moderator: Helm

Seubert & Helm: Normative

Paradoxes of Privacy.

Trepte & Dienlin: Privacy Paradox

versus Privacy Calculus

Dienlin & Bräunlich: Popularity

cues and the privacy calculus on

online participation platforms

Eichenhofer: The Privacy Paradox

from a regulatory perspective

Panel: Smartphone

ecosystems. Organised in

cooperation with the

IViR/MIT project

‘transparency bridges’

funded by NWO/NSF

Speakers:

Ilaria Liccardi, Joris van

Hoboken & Ronan Fahy

12.45-13.45 - Lunch

14

13.45-15.45

A1.04

13.45-15.45

A1.05

13.45-15.45

A1.06

13.45-15.45

A1.07

13.45-15.45

A2.10

The Digital Society and

Surveillance

Session III- Approaches to

surveillance

Moderator: Lindgreen

Moore: Privacy and the

Prisoner’s Dilemma

Robbins: Bulk Data Collection

Ethics

Hartzog: The Public Information

Fallacy

Rahman: Risk Management in

Surveillance

Sponsored session

Google

Privacy at Google: GDPR,

Right to be Forgotten and

Machine Learning

Moderator: Chris Hoofnagle

Peter Fleischer, Google's Senior

Privacy Counsel.

Panel: Reconceptualising

Privacy Protection for the

Home in the Digital Age

Moderator: Koops

Newell & Roberts: Sacred

Homes or Glass Houses?

Skorvanek: Police Hacking the

Digital Home

Zhao: Home 2.0 in the Onlife

Age

Walden: Reflections

Discrimination, inequality and

immigration

Session II – Data and inequality

Moderator: Borgesius

Smit & Van Schie: The Dutch

Measure of Liveability

Arora & König: Imagining the

diversity algorithm

Helm: Treating sensitive topics

online

Büchi et al.: Inequality in Online

Privacy

Personalized

Communication and

Behavioural Engineering

Session IV - Construction,

manipulation and protection

of the profiled user

Moderator: Roessler

Ochs: A genealogy of

informational privacies,

ca. 1750-2018

Muhlhoff: Human-aided

artificial intelligence

Leister & Tjostheim: Prudent

Data Sharing

13.45-15.45

A2.11

13.45-15.45

A2.12

13.45-15.45

A2.13

13.45-15.45

A2.14

13.45-15.45

A2.15

Privacy and Democracy

Session IV - Media

Moderator: Schiphof

Stahl: Surveillance as

colonization

Bastian, Harambam &

Makhortykh: Personalizing the

news

Sorensen & Kosta: Public

service Media

Poort & Borgesius: Does

everyone have a price?

The Value of Privacy

Session V - Conceptual

Approaches to the Value of

Privacy

Moderator: Sax

O’Hara: Privacy and its value

Loh: A practice-theoretical

account of privacy

Jones et al.: Valuing privacy in

higher education

Baruh &Popescu: Being, time,

and big data

Panel organised in cooperation

with the European Agency for

Fundamental Rights (FRA):

What does transparency mean

for detecting and avoiding

discriminatory AI-based

decisions?

Moderator: Reichel

Speakers:

Alessandro Mantelero

Bettina Berendt

Michael Veale

Responsibility and Control

Session II – Monetization

Moderator: Zeeland

Chen: Beyond cookies

Zingales: Roles and responsibilities

Felzmann et al.: How transparent is

your AI

The regulation of the

information society

Session III - Detecting ways

forward in regulation

Moderator: Eskens

Janssen: Fundamental rights

impact assessment

Harbinja: The newish property

Lewinski: Regulatory

approaches

Yakovleva:

Privacy protection(ism)

15

15.45-16.00

Hall

16.00-17.30

A1.01

17.30-20.00

Around the corner

Coffee & Tea Keynote session IV –

Privacy and Poverty

Khiara Bridges: The Poverty of Privacy Rights

Judith Sargentini: Migrants and refugees, does the EU

respect their privacy?

Moderator: Edo Roos Lindgreen

No conference dinner is planned, but we have

negotiated discount for those who would like to stay

around for the evening program. Italian based and

run restaurant Viavai is around the corner and offers

all kinds of foods from salads, to pasta, to pizza.

Don’t forget to bring your APC badge, it will give

you the 10% discount. Reservation via:

https://viavairestaurant.com/contact/

Judith Sargentini is a Dutch politician and Member of the

European Parliament (MEP) from the Netherlands for

GroenLinks, part of the European Green Party. Sargentini has

been leading the Greens in the committee on civil liberties,

justice and home affairs since she joined the Parliament in

2009 and followed files on privacy and data protection ever

since. She is vice-chair to the parliament’s investigation

committee on terrorism and the author of the EP’s report on

the rule of law in Hungary. Sargentini has negotiated various

legislations on the fight against money laundering, European

asylum law, judicial cooperation, conflict minerals and more.

She served as chief observer for the EU mission to elections

in Tanzania and Mozambique. Previously, she was chair of

the GroenLinks in the Amsterdam city council, worked for a

Khiara M. Bridges is Professor or Law and a Professor of

Anthropology at Boston University. She has written many

articles concerning, race, class, reproductive rights, and the

intersection of the three. She is also the author of Reproducing

Race: An Ethnography of Pregnancy as a Site of Racialization

(2011), published by the University of California Press. Her

second book, The Poverty of Privacy Rights, published by

Stanford University Press, was released in June 2017. Her

next book, Critical Race Theory: A Primer, will be released in

November 2018. She also sits on the Academic Advisory

Council of Law Students for Reproductive Justice.

This keynote session will discuss the relationship between privacy

and poverty.

Bridges: This talk will discuss the privacy deprivations that the

government imposes on poor mothers in the U.S. It will analyze

the failure of privacy rights to protect poor mothers against these

intrusions, and it will discuss why this result has been politically

acceptable.

Sargentini: Increasingly, there is criticism to the notion that

databases and datamining can be seen as the solution to nowadays

problems. Yet, in the field of asylum and migration management

databases and datamining are still considered the new panacea.

16

Evening Program Sunday 7 October 2018 (Roeterseiland)

Privacy … other experiences

20.00-22.00

A1.01

20.00-22.00

A1.04

20.00-22.00

A1.05

20.00-22.00

A1.06

Skype lecture Bruce Schneier

Moderator: Joris van Hoboken

Workshop on the Interdisciplinary

nature of privacy (research)

Moderator: Simon Davies

Debate on the acceptability of

(corporate) sponsorship of academic

conferences

Sounds of privacy

17

Monday – 8 October 2018 (Roeterseiland & Kriterion)

08.30-09.00 Coffee & Tea

09.00-10.50

A2.04

09.00-10.50

A2.08

09.00-10.50

A2.12

09.00-10.50

A2.13

Panel: Governing Data Flows and

Data Protection

Moderator: Bartl

Ryngaert: Extra-territoriality and data

protection law?

Burri: The Governance of Data Flows

in Trade Agreements

Milanovic: Extraterritorial surveillance

and human rights

Irion: The juncture between EU data

protection and external trade policy

Panel: Crossroads of Data Protection

and Competition Policy

Moderator: Lynskey

Esayas: Market Power in ‘Zero’ Price

Markets

Zingales: Preventing “data spills” in

online markets

Graef: Fairness and Enforcement

Reyna: The Psychology of Privacy

Panel: Data collection, targeting and

manipulation

Moderator: Koene

Edwards: IoT and algorithmic

regulation

Herbrich: Algorithmic discrimination

on travel sites

VandenBoom: Telematics Insurance:

Saucedo: Best practices for business

Koene: The IEEE P7000 series ethics

related standards

The regulation of the information

society

Session IV - New privacy benchmarks

Moderator: Eskens

Malgieri: Right to Explanation and

Algorithm Legibility

Barrett: Model(ing) Privacy

Gil: Lawful basis for the processing of

personal data

09.00-10.50

A2.14

09.00-10.50

A2.15

09.00-10.50

A3.01

09.00-10.50

A3.15

Group privacy: Taking the

discussion further

Moderator: Taylor

Presentations by Sjaak van der Geest,

Payal Arora and many more

Smart healthcare, homes and cities

Session III - Smart Health: From

Privacy Law to the Ethics of

Uncertainty

Moderator: Lanzing

Arora: Expert Accountability

Indrakusuma: Applying the contextual

integrity framework

Mulder & Tudorica: Privacy policies,

cross border health data and the GDPR

Nickel: The ethics of uncertainty for

data subjects

Panel: Measuring the Impact of

Personalized Communication

Moderator: Bol

Van de Velde Toward observational

data of information consumption

Strycharz: Personalized advertising

Möller & Trilling: Personalized news

repertoires

Bol: Personalized health information

Sponsored session

Palantir Technologies, The Ethics

Centre, and Intersticia

Data Ethics Case Competition Final

Presentations

18

11.00-12.50

A2.04

11.00-12.50

A2.08

11.00-12.50

A2.12

11.00-12.50

A2.13

Panel: Production, ownership and

control of location data

Moderator: Ozkul

Gürses: Location privacy and the

phenetic urge in adaptive systems

Özkul: Location data, commodification,

and privacy

Pierson: Location privacy and data

literacy challenges for citizens

Panel: International tax

transparency in a globalized world

Moderator: Douma

Kardachaki: Data and privacy

protection safeguards

De Boer: The importance and use of

(tax) data

Freudenthal: The importance of

privacy and data protection for

taxpayers

Klaassen: The processing and use of tax

data by the tax administration

The Digital Society and Surveillance

Session IV – Regulating surveillance

Moderator: Lindgreen

Celeste: Digital privacy as a Trojan

Vogiatzoglou: Bulk transfers of

personal data

Loideain: AI and Predictive Policing

Lageson: Digital punishment

The regulation of the information

society

Session V - Enriching the GDPR

Moderator: Eskens

Goanta & Mulders: Data brokers

Krijgsman: Data justice

Clifford: Fairness, data ethics and the legal

limits to EU harmonisation

Uhlman et al.: The role of the trust

category

Paun: Legal protection in financial services

11.00-12.50

A2.14

11.00-12.50

A2.15

11.00-12.50

A3.01

11.00-12.50

A3.15

Value

Of Privacy

Session VI – The Flow of Information

and the Value of Privacy

Moderator: Sax

Wackers: Restricted access

Bouchagiar & Bottis: The right to be

forgotten

O’Neill et al.: Friction, seamlessness,

and data flows

Sponsored session

SIDN/SIDN Fund

Blockchain and trust

Moderator: Valerie Frissen

Speakers: Jaap-Henk Hoepman &

Balázs Bodó

Panel: Data and the Global South

Moderator: Arora

Taylor: They don’t care about privacy

there

Arora: Are global privacy rules neo-

imperialistic?

Martin: Global Data Justice

Jameson: Government as a service

Panel: Would you say Facebook is

manipulative?

Moderator: Lanzing

Susser: Online manipulation

Barnhill: What is Manipulation?

Nys: Nudging and Autonomy: Push-in-the-

back or Pushback?

Groen-Reijman: Political Targeting and

Manipulation

19

13.00-14.00 -Lunch (Kriterion)

14.00-16.00

Movie: The Cleaners

&

Panel debate and Q&A with the audience

16.00-17.00 -Drinks

In collaboration with

Founded in March 2006, Movies that Matter followed in

the footsteps of the Amnesty International Film Festival.

It continued and enhanced the festival’s activities, both

in the Netherlands and abroad.

When you post something on

the web, can you be sure it

stays there? Enter a hidden

shadow industry of digital

cleaning where the Internet

rids itself of what it doesn't

like - violence, pornography

and - political content. Who is

controlling what we see and

what we think?

20

Theme coordinators

Jeffrey Bholasing graduated in

both Information Technology

and Law. By combining the

in-depth knowledge from both

fields, Jeffrey has built up an

international profile in the

field of data protection and

data governance.

Sarah Eskens is a legal scholar

interested in the right to

receive information and

privacy and data protection

rights, in relation to news

media and electronic

surveillance. She is a PhD

candidate at the Institute for

Information Law, University

of Amsterdam.

Natali Helberger is professor

in Information Law at the

Institute for Information Law.

She studied Law at the Freie

Universität Berlin. She

received her doctarate from

the University of Amsterdam.

Her thesis, Controlling Access

to Content: Regulating

Conditional Access in Digital

Broadcasting (2005).

Yuri Demchenko is a Senior

Researcher at the System and

Network Engineering Research

Group University of Amsterdam,

Amsterdam Main research areas:

Big Data Architecture, Big Data

Security, Cloud and Intercloud

Architecture, AAA architecture,

Security and Trust in dynamically

provisioned services.

Aviva de Groot is a Phd candidate at

Tilburg Institute for Law,

Technology, and Society (TILT),

Tilburg University. She is

passionate about human rights and

technology and specialize in the

fields of privacy, data protection

and robotics.

Joris van Hoboken is a Professor of

Law at the Vrije Universiteit

Brussels (VUB) and a Senior

Researcher at the Institute for

Information Law , University of

Amsterdam. He works on the

intersection of fundamental rights

protection (data privacy, freedom of

expression, non-discrimination) and

the governance of platforms and

internet-based services.

21

Chris Jay Hoofnagle holds dual

appointments as adjunct

professor in the School of Law

and the School of Information

(where he is resident). He is the

author of Federal Trade

Commission Privacy Law and

Policy (Cambridge University

Press) and an elected member

of the American Law Institute.

Matthijs Koot works as a

technical security consultant at

Secura B.V. (formerly known

as Madison Gurkha). He is also

a guest researcher at University

of Amsterdam. MSc in OS3

System & Network Engineering

(2005-2006) and PhD in data

anonymity (2007-2011) from

University of Amsterdam.

Jo Pierson is ssociate Professor

in the Department of Media and

Communication Studies at the

Vrije Universiteit Brussel,

Belgium. He is also staff

member at SMIT (Studies on

Media, Innovation and

Technology) since 1996 and

Principal Investigator at imec

(R&D and innovation hub in

nanoelectronics and digital

technology).

Sander Klous is professor in Big

Data Ecosystems at the Univeristy

of Amsterdam. Hehas over 15 years

of experience in large scale

distributed computing, real-time

systems and data processing

technologies. He has been

responsible for designing,

implementing and managing a range

of distributed computing services.

Marjolein Lanzing is a PhD student

at the Department of Philosophy and

Ethics at the Eindhoven University

of Technology. Her research ‘The

Transparent Self: Identity and

Relationships in a Digital Age’ will

contain a normative interpretation of

the changing norms of privacy.

Thomas Poell is assistant professor

of New Media and Digital Culture at

the Department of Media Studies at

the University of Amsterdam. He

studied political science at the

University of Amsterdam (NL) and

The New School for Social Research

(US). Currently, his research is

focused on social media and the

transformation of public

communication in different parts of

the world.

22

Marijn Sax is a PhD candidate

at the Institute for Information

Law. He has a background in

Political Science (BSc.) and

Philosophy (BA., MA., both

cum laude) and is mainly

interested in questions

concerning ethics, privacy and

technology.

Hans Waalwijk is researcher at

the department of Media

studies, University of

Amsterdam. He is an expert in

archival legislation, archival

appraisal and early modern

German archival systems.

Frederik Zuiderveen Borgesius

is a researcher (Marie Curie

fellow) at the LSTS Research

Group on Law, Science,

Technology & Society, at the

Vrije Universiteit Brussel His

research interests include

profiling, privacy, data

protection law, freedom of

expression, and discrimination.

Tjeerd Schiphof is a researcher at

Faculty of Humanities, University of

Amsterdam. His research interesters

are in the field of archival sciences.

Ine van Zeeland is a researcher at

Studies in Media, Innovation and

Technology, Free Univerity of

Brussels. Her fascination for privacy

was sparked by the self-censorship

people display on the internet.

23

Organizing Committee

Nico van Eijk is Professor of

Media and Telecommunica-

tions Law and Director of the

Institute for Information Law

(IViR, Faculty of Law,

University of Amsterdam).

Beate Roessler is professor of

ethics at the University of

Amsterdam and chair of the

Capacity group of Philosophy and

Public Affairs.

Edo Roos Lindgreen has been

appointed professor of Data

Science in Auditing at the

Faculty of Economics and

Business of the University of

Amsterdam.

Bart van der Sloot is a senior

researcher at the Tilburg Institute

for Law, Technology, and Society

of the University of Tilburg.

Bart is the general coordinator of

the Amsterdam Privacy Conference.