91国产精品 Hosts Facial Recognition and Privacy Workshop March 29
The emergence of 鈥渟mart鈥 or 鈥渃onnected鈥 cities and 鈥渟mart鈥 policing has presented a tangled web of complex technological, social, political and legal issues. As this technology grows more prevalent within society, so does the need to develop policies and standards regarding the use of these new tools and the data they produce. Hosted by the Cleveland-Marshall College of Law, the 鈥淔acial Recognition and Privacy Workshop鈥 will examine the concerns raised by the use of facial recognition and other surveillance technologies.
The workshop will bring together government officials, privacy and civil liberties advocates, and other experts to thoughtfully examine privacy and civil liberty concerns and discuss emerging practices for how the government should best address this new technology.
The all-day event begins at 7:30 a.m. in the Cleveland-Marshall College of Law Moot Court Room. is required but general admission to the workshop is free of charge.
The day will cover numerous topics, including 鈥淔acial Recognition Introduction and Current Applications,鈥 鈥淧rivacy and Civil Liberties Concerns and Responses,鈥 鈥淟egislation and Codes of Conduct鈥 and more.
The wide variety of speakers for the event includes the chief privacy officer of Seattle, a specialist in digital analysis and identification for the Michigan State Police, the senior counsel and director of strategy for the Future of Privacy Forum and the Oakland Privacy Advisory Commission, and a senior researcher for Intel, to only name a few.