Privacy Masterclass - Data and Privacy
NSW Privacy Summit Lead Up Series
About this event
Privacy Masterclass - Data and Privacy
with Lyria Bennett Jones & Malcolm Crompton
Why is there so much debate about the trustworthiness of government uses of data? What can governments do to reassure citizens that they are using data appropriately and fairly, and in ways that respect citizens’ individuality while remaining accountable to the community?
This session will explore the ways in which existing law and its implementation are not meeting the needs of citizens or the needs of government seeking to retain citizen trust.
Speakers
Lyria is Director of the Allens Hub for Technology, Law and Innovation and a Professor in the Faculty of Law at UNSW Sydney. Lyria's research explores issues around the relationship between technology and law, including the types of legal issues that arise as technology changes, how these issues are addressed in Australia and other jurisdictions, and the problems of treating “technology” as an object of regulation. Recently, she has been working on legal issues associated with the use of “artificial intelligence” technologies, the appropriate legal framework for enhancing cyber security and oversight for law enforcement intelligence. Lyria is a member of the editorial boards for Technology and Regulation, Law, Technology and Humans and Law in Context. She is on the Executive Committee of the IEEE’s Society for the Social Implications of Technology.
Malcolm Crompton is the Lead Privacy Advisor and was the founder and first Managing Director of Information Integrity Solutions Pty Ltd (IIS), a global consultancy based in Asia Pacific, specialising in data protection and privacy strategies. IIS assists companies increase business value and customer trust, and assists governments meet the high standards expected of them in the handling of personal information.
As Australia’s Privacy Commissioner from 1999 to 2004, Malcolm led the implementation of the nation’s private sector privacy law. He hosted the 25th International Conference of Data Protection and Privacy Commissioners in Sydney in 2003.
Malcolm was the founding President of the International Association of Privacy Professionals Australia New Zealand (iappANZ), an affiliate of the International Association of Privacy Professionals (IAPP). He served as a Director of iappANZ until 2016. He was a Director of IAPP from 2007 to 2011 and is an IAPP Certified Information Privacy Professional.
Through IIS, Malcolm has advised a wide range of industry sectors. He has also consulted to the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum (APEC) regularly on implementation of the APEC privacy framework and to the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD).
Malcolm is a Director of Bellberry Limited, a private not-for-profit company which provides privacy and health ethics advisory services. Malcolm is a member of the NSW Data Analytics Centre Advisory Board. He is also a Fellow of the Australian Institute of Company Directors and member of the International Association of Privacy Professionals (IAPP). He chaired the board of PRAXIS Australia Ltd, a private not-for-profit company that promotes the conduct of ethical research involving human participants, for the first five years through its start-up phase until 2019.
Between 1996 and 1999, Malcolm was Manager of Government Affairs for AMP Ltd. In the previous 20 years, he held senior executive positions in the Federal Department of Finance, served as both a superannuation scheme trustee and scheme founder and worked in the Transport and Health portfolios. He has degrees in Chemistry and Economics.
Malcolm was made a Member of the Order of Australia in the 2016 Queen’s Birthday Honours for significant service to public administration, particularly to data protection, privacy, and identity management, and to the community. Malcolm received the 2012 Privacy Leadership Award in Washington DC from the IAPP in recognition of his global reputation and expertise in privacy. He received the inaugural Chancellor’s Medal for distinguished contribution to the Australian National University in 2004.
Malcolm is a co-author of The New Governance of Data and Privacy: Moving from compliance to performance, Australian Institute of Company Directors, November 2018.
Event Terms & Conditions
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Disclaimer
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