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PRODID:-//Columba Systems Ltd//NONSGML CPNG/SpringViewer/ICal Output/3.3-
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VERSION:2.0
CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
METHOD:PUBLISH
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20230605T102732Z
DTSTART:20230622T143000Z
DTEND:20230622T153000Z
SUMMARY: Mobile Apps and Sensors in Surveys (MASS) Workshop Keynote: Cont
 extual Integrity in Theory and Empirical Application
UID:{http://www.columbasystems.com/customers/uom/gpp/eventid/}e1kt-liiobp
 7i-djwg8v
DESCRIPTION:The Mobile Apps and Sensors in Surveys (MASS) workshop togeth
 er with the Centre for Digital Trust and Society is very excited to host
  a keynote by Helen Nissenbaum (Cornell Tech). You can join the event in
  person at the University of Manchester or online for free but registrat
 ion is required.\n\nNissenbaum: "The theory of contextual integrity (CI)
  defines privacy as appropriate flow of personal information\, answering
  the need for a conception of privacy that is meaningful to ordinary peo
 ple\, explains privacy's ethical claim\, and underscores why privacy des
 erves protection through regulation and technology. In the 2010 book\, I
  argued that CI meets all three benchmarks\, while releasing privacy fro
 m the grips of one-dimensional definitions -- control over information a
 bout ourselves\, stoppage of flow (secrecy)\, and fetishization of speci
 fic\, “sensitive” attributes (e.g. identity\, health.) Since then\, our 
 understanding of CI has been further shaped and informed by studies base
 d on social scientific methods and\, in turn\, has informed and shaped t
 hem. My talk briefly describes key ideas defining contextual integrity\,
  focusing on its interconnections with empirical social scientific studi
 es of privacy."\n\nHelen Nissenbaum is a professor of Information Scienc
 e and founding director of the Digital Life Initiative at Cornell Tech\,
  NYC. Her work on ethical and political dimensions of digital technologi
 es spans issues of privacy\, bias\, trust online\, design\, and accounta
 bility in computational and algorithmic systems. Prof. Nissenbaum’s publ
 ications\, which include the books\, Obfuscation: A User's Guide for Pri
 vacy 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 (Stan
 ford\, 2010)\, have been translated into seven languages\, including Pol
 ish\, Chinese\, and Portuguese. Recipient of the 2014 Barwise Prize of t
 he American Philosophical Association and the IACAP Covey Award for comp
 uting\, ethics\, and philosophy\, Prof. Nissenbaum has contributed to pr
 ivacy-enhancing free software\, TrackMeNot (against profiling of Web sea
 rch histories) and AdNauseam (against profiling based on ad clicks). She
  holds a Ph.D. in philosophy from Stanford University and a B.A. (Hons) 
 in Philosophy and Mathematics from the University of the Witwatersrand\,
  South Africa. Prior to joining Cornell Tech\, she directed NYU’s Inform
 ation Law Institute.\n\nAttendance:\n\nIn person: This will take place i
 n AMBS which is building number 29 on the interactive map\n\nOnline: You
  will be sent the joining instructions 24 hours before the event.
STATUS:TENTATIVE
TRANSP:TRANSPARENT
CLASS:PUBLIC
LOCATION:Room 3.006 a/b\, Aliiance Manchester Business School\, Booth Str
 eet West\, Manchester\, M15 6PB
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