Overview
Friday, January 27, 2023
9am to 3pm
Beckman Institute for Advanced Science and Technology
405 N. Mathews Ave. Urbana, IL
Free | Lunch available for in-person attendees
Decisions about privacy affect our professional, educational, and personal lives. The in-person conference with streaming available will cover the University’s privacy goals of trust, transparency, and consent and how they affect you. Leave with a better understanding of privacy policy including legal, ethical, and industry perspectives. There is an online option for those who are unable to join us in person.
Upon registration you will receive a confirmation email that includes Zoom links for sessions you select to attend.
Schedule at a Glance
TRACK A | |
9AM | Keynote |
10AM | Privacy Research and Practice in Library and Information Science |
11AM | How the University of Illinois Protects Confidential Data Against Cybersecurity Threats [UIUC registrants] |
12PM | Lunch Social |
1PM | Big 10 Privacy Panel |
2PM | Student Panel: Students Take on Privacy |
2:45PM | Closing Remarks |
TRACK B | |
9AM | Keynote |
10AM | Protect Your Privacy Hands-on |
11AM | Sensitive Harms of Location Data |
12PM | Lunch Social |
1PM | Electronic Frontier Foundation Panel Discussion |
2PM | What is China’s Personal Information Protection Law (PIPL) and Why You Should Care |
2:45PM | Closing Remarks |
Session Descriptions
Privacy Research and Practice in Library and Information Science
Lisa Janicke Hinchliffe, Professor, University Library, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; Masooda Bashir, Associate Professor, School of Information Sciences, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; Kyle M.L. Jones, Associate Professor, Department of Library and Information Science, School of Informatics and Computing, Indiana University-Indianapolis
Privacy is a fundamental professional value in library and information science. This session will highlight three current projects that look at how libraries are operationalizing and executing on their commitments: Privacy Protections in Public Libraries, Prioritizing Privacy: Data Ethics Training for Library Professionals, and Licensing Privacy: Academic Libraries and Third-Party Contracts.
Protect Your Privacy Hands-on
Isaac J. Galvan, Cindy McKendall
“Software Update Available.” That pending update is sure to change your favorite app or feature, and along with those changes come some important privacy-related settings. The Cybersecurity Training and Awareness Team has read the owner’s manual, taken a test drive, and we’re ready to show you the privacy settings you should know about. Bring your smartphone to a demonstration of lesser-known settings you and your loved ones can change now to better protect your privacy. We will also explore research and real-world cases showing why these privacy features and settings matter.
How the University Protects Confidential Data Against Cybersecurity Threats
Taylor Judd, Prabha Manda, Glen Shere
The university supports students, faculty, staff… and a power plant! The cybersecurity unit’s goal is to enable student success and research excellence by building and supporting the cybersecurity tools to keep this highly diverse university functioning. Learn about some of the people, processes, and products that help protect the university and all its uniqueness.
Sensitive Harms of Location Data
Sara Geoghegan, Counsel at the Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC)
Sara Geoghegan, Counsel at the Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC), will discuss the unique harms posed from the collection and use of location data, both historically and in real time, because of what it may reveal. This may pose threats to privacy because of the inferences made by someone’s location, such as whether a person goes to an abortion clinic or attends an AA meeting. Bad actors, such as abusers or bounty hunters, may access location data (typically commercially sold for a nominal fee), which can pose significant harms to everyone. Moderated by Aaron Collie, Manager, Privacy Engineering, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Big 10 Privacy Panel
Big Ten Professionals
Privacy professionals from around the Big 10 will discuss our various privacy programs and how we implement privacy principles at our universities. We’ll touch on our available resources and strategies we have used for expanding a culture of privacy awareness, plus where we’re all headed. Audience participation is encouraged. This session will be on Zoom and broadcast live at Beckman.
Digital Surveillance and Exploitation: Examples of How the Law Fails to Protect Us
Dalton Cline, JD, CIPP/US, Hayley Tsukayama, Senior Legislative Activist at Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF)
The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) is a leading nonprofit organization defending civil liberties in the digital world. Attend this session for a panel discussion with EFF staff and UIUC Privacy Analyst, Dalton Cline, on a wide range of privacy issues including advertising, law enforcement, how companies sell data to each other, what privacy looks like in a post Dobbs era, use of data in election campaigns, and anything else we can fit into the 45-minute session, Questions from the audience are encouraged.
Student Panel: Students Take on Privacy
Courtney Daugerdas, Jihan Dubose, Bilal Karim, Christopher Muhawe, moderated by the Privacy Office
Join us for our first ever Privacy Everywhere student panel. This session will feature four students, ranging from undergraduate to graduate level, with a diverse background in privacy. The students will discuss their experience pursuing privacy education at the University, talk about their research and work in the privacy field, and share where they see the future of privacy heading. Questions from the audience are encouraged.
What is China’s Personal Information Protection Law (PIPL) and Why You Should Care
Dave Grogan, JD, CPA, LLM, CCEP, and Megan Stoll, Associate University Counsel
Whether you are admissions staff, a researcher, or an administrator, if you work with personal information from persons in Mainland China, PIPL may affect what you do. During this session, we will provide basic information on PIPL and its requirements, explain the efforts the University has taken to address PIPL, and discuss the possible civil and criminal penalties for noncompliance.
Presenter Biographies
Mairéad Martin
Chief Information Officer (CIO), Technology Services
Lisa Hinchcliffe
Isaac J. Galvan is a developer and cybersecurity educator with Technology Services, focused on raising awareness of privacy and cybersecurity issues we face daily through interactive training events and workshops. He has been central to the rollout of several major privacy-related technologies on campus. Galvan previously was the product owner of the university’s innovative COVID-19 smartphone app, Safer Illinois.
Cindy McKendall brings 20 years of experience to the world of cybersecurity training and awareness. A certified SANS Security Awareness Professional (SSAP), she helps run employee cybersecurity training for 17,000 faculty and staff at the University of Illinois System. McKendall has presented at the CEO Close-Up Conference, IT Pro Forum, TechTeach, and the Faculty Summer Institute.
Taylor Judd is a cybersecurity professional (CISSP) with 10 years of cybersecurity experience and 20 years of IT experience. He is currently the Acting Director of Information Security and the manager of the cybersecurity engineering team. He has degrees in English Literature and Instructional Technology. Proving if you break and fix enough computers you too can work in cybersecurity. In this field he focuses on the human element of cybersecurity both in technical controls and building high functioning teams.
Prabha Manda is the Manager of the Cybersecurity Operations Center. She has over 13 years of experience in the Information Technology area, including 9 years as a Cybersecurity analyst in higher education. She holds a Master’s in Computer Science and holds GIAC certifications for GSEC, GCIH and GCFA. She finds the dynamic aspect of cybersecurity and cybercrime exciting and intriguing.
Glen Shere celebrates 28 years leading the design and construction of technology infrastructure for faculty and students, disappointing most of his friends and family. He lives in downtown Champaign.
Sara Geoghegan is Counsel at the Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC), a non-profit public interest research and advocacy center located in Washington, D.C. focused on emerging privacy and civil liberties issues. Sara focuses on consumer privacy, including commercial surveillance and ad tech issues. Sara is a proud graduate of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and UIC Law School.
Dalton Cline, JD, CIPP/US, is a Privacy Analyst at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign within the Office of the CIO Technology Services – Identity, Privacy, and Cybersecurity. He graduated from the University of Louisville Brandeis School of Law and currently serves as the Young Privacy Professional for the Louisville, KY IAPP KnowledgeNet.
Hayley Tsukayama is Senior Legislative Activist at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, focusing on state legislation. Prior to joining EFF, she spent nearly eight years as a consumer technology reporter at The Washington Post writing stories on the industry’s largest companies. Hayley, who is CIPP/US certified by the International Association of Privacy Professionals, has an MA in journalism from the University of Missouri and a BA in history from Vassar College.
Dave Grogan is the Associate Director of University Compliance for the University of Illinois. In that position, Dave serves as the liaison between the University Ethics and Compliance Office and campus compliance partners, facilitating University and campus compliance with federal, state and local laws and regulations and University policies. In coordination with the Executive Director of Ethics and Compliance and campus compliance partners, Dave is responsible for developing an effective institutional compliance program. Privacy has been a major focus of Dave’s work, including FERPA, HIPAA, GLBA, GDPR, and most recently, China’s Personal Information Protection Law (PIPL).
Megan Stoll is an associate university counsel in the University of Illinois Office of University Counsel. She is the System’s lead attorney advising on international privacy laws including the EU General Data Protection Regulation (EU GDPR), the UK GDPR, and the Chinese Personal Information Protection Law (PIPL). She presents to professionals from colleges and universities across the country on the ways international privacy laws affect various aspects of higher education. In addition to international privacy laws, Megan provides advice on a broad range of topics including international agreements, procurement policy, contract negotiation, FERPA, the First Amendment, and Title IX.