Exploring Privacy: A FTC Roundtable Series

Federal Trade Commission
University of California, Berkeley, School of Law
Booth Auditorium, Boalt Hall
Berkeley, CA 94720-7200
January 28, 2010
http://ftc.gov/bcp/workshops/privacyroundtables/index.shtml

Agenda
http://www.ftc.gov/bcp/workshops/privacyroundtables/index.shtml

7:45 Conference Open

8:30 Welcome
Deirdre Mulligan, Assistant Professor,
University of California, Berkeley School of Information

8:45 Introductory Remarks
Commissioner Pamela Jones Harbour

8:55 Setting the Stage
David C. Vladeck, Director,
Bureau of Consumer Protection, FTC

9:15 Panel 1 -- Technology and Privacy

MODERATORS
Loretta Garrison and Catherine Harrington-McBride,
Division of Privacy and Identity Protection, FTC

PANELISTS
Pam Dixon
Executive Director,
World Privacy Forum

Peter Eckersley
Staff Technologist,
Electronic Frontier Foundation

Eric Goldman
Associate Professor,
Santa Clara University
School of Law

Chris Jay Hoofnagle
Lecturer,
University of California
Berkeley School of Law

Arvind Narayanan
Postdoctoral Fellow,
Stanford University

10:45 Break

11:00 Panel 2 Privacy Implications of Social Networking and Other Platform Providers

MODERATORS
Peder Magee and Michelle Rosenthal,
Division of Privacy and Identity Protection, FTC

PANELISTS
Lillie Coney
Associate Director,
Electronic Privacy
Information Center

Chris Conley
Technology & Civil
Liberties Fellow,
ACLU of Northern California

Ian Costello
Vice President for
Product Development,
LivingSocial

Mike Shaver
Vice President,
Engineering,
Mozilla Corporation

Scott Taylor
Chief Privacy Officer,
Hewlett-Packard

Anne Toth
Vice President of Policy
and Head of Privacy,
Yahoo!

Erika Rottenberg
Vice President, General
Counsel, and Secretary,
LinkedIn

Tim Sparapani
Director of Public Policy,
Facebook

Nicole Wong
Vice President and
Deputy General Counsel,
Google

Dennis Yu
Chief Executive Officer,
BlitzLocal

12:15 Lunch

1:30 Remarks
Daniel J. Weitzner, Associate Administrator for Policy,
National Telecommunications and Information
Administration, Department of Commerce

1:45 Panel 3 Privacy Implications of Cloud Computing

MODERATORS
Laura Berger and Kathryn Ratté,
Division of Privacy and Identity Protection, FTC

PANELISTS
Lindsey Finch
Global Privacy Counsel,
Salesforce.com

Beth Givens
Founder and Director,
Privacy Rights Clearinghouse

Nicole Ozer
Director,
Technology and Civil
Liberties Policy, ACLU of
Northern California

Harriet Pearson
Chief Privacy Officer,
IBM

Paul Schwartz
Professor of Law,
University of California,
Berkeley

Scott Shipman
Chief Privacy Officer,
eBay

3:00 Break

3:15 Panel 4 -- Privacy Implications of Mobile Computing

MODERATORS
Naomi Lefkovitz and Catherine Harrington-McBride,
Division of Privacy and Identity Protection, FTC

PANELISTS
Michael Altschul
Senior Vice President and General Counsel,
CTIA-The Wireless Association

Kevin Bankston
Senior Staff Attorney,
Electronic Frontier Foundation

Darren Bowie
Legal Director,
North America, Nokia

Alissa Cooper
Chief Computer Scientist,
Center for Democracy & Technology

Amina Fazlullah
Counsel,
U.S. PIRG

Brian Knapp
Chief Privacy Officer
and General Counsel,
Loopt

Kristine van Dillen
Director,
Industry Initiatives & Partnerships,
Mobile
Marketing Association

4:30 Break

4:45 Panel 5 - Technology and Policy

MODERATORS
Jessica Rich
Deputy Director, Bureau of Consumer Protection

Naomi Lefkovitz and Kathryn Ratté,
Division of Privacy and Identity Protection, FTC

PANELISTS

Ellen Blackler
Executive Director of
Public Policy,
AT&T

Fred Cate
Professor, Director of the
Center for Applied
Cybersecurity Research,
Indiana University School Of Law - Bloomington

Peter Cullen
General Manager TwC and Chief Privacy Strategist,
Microsoft

David Hoffman
Director of Security Policy and Global Privacy Officer,
Intel

Joanne McNabb
Chief of the California
Office of Privacy Protection

Hana Pecháčková
Policy Officer,
European Commission,
Directorate-General Justice, Freedom, and Security

Lee Tien
Senior Staff Attorney
Electronic Frontier Foundation

6:00 Closing Remarks

Christopher N. Olsen, Assistant Director,
Division of Privacy and Identity Protection

The Federal Trade Commission will host a series of day-long public roundtable discussions to explore the privacy challenges posed by the vast array of 21st century technology and business practices that collect and use consumer data. Such practices include social networking, cloud computing, online behavioral advertising, mobile marketing, and the collection and use of information by retailers, data brokers, third-party applications, and other diverse businesses. The goal of the roundtables is to determine how best to protect consumer privacy while supporting beneficial uses of the information and technological innovation.