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Privacy by Design – Privacy Enabling Design


   Workshop Report   

May 7-8, 2015

Georgia Tech Hotel and Conference Center
Atlanta, GA, United States



Event Contact

Ann Drobnis
adrobnis@cra.org


Event Type

2015 Events, 2015 Visioning Activities, Visioning Activities, Workshop


Event Category

CCC

Overview

This workshop covered the latest research results in user interface design, usability and human factors including studies of user behavior and recent findings in privacy displays, nudging, privacy preference modeling, to name a few. While regulators attempt to drive privacy-by-design, there is little evidence that the class of professionals who consider themselves designers are engaged in the conversation. Workshops at CHI, and SOUPS continue to generate interesting research and spark conversation, however our efforts to identify designers in industrial innovators who are fluent in privacy—in any form—has come up relatively empty. Surely privacy, like other human values, is a source of norms and expectations that influences how designers approach their work, however, we do not have a good sense of how they approach it, whether they use distinct methodologies or tools to do so, and what concepts guide their inquiries.

Building on workshop #1, this workshop went deeper into design practice. The goal was to map current approaches, tools, motivations, methodologies—looking at practice and research—consider how well they address real-world problems as framed by various stakeholders, and identify areas where new research is needed.

Privacy by Design Workshops

This workshop was one of four aimed at identifying a shared research vision to support the practice of privacy-by-design. They convened both practitioners with direct experience of the challenges in implementing privacy-by-design from a range of fields—software developers, privacy engineers, usability and interaction designers, chief privacy officers—and researchers from an equally broad range of disciplines.

The goals for the four workshops included:

  • To take stock of the methods, tools, and approaches currently used to design for privacy.
  • Broaden the lens through which privacy-by-design is viewed by the research community—positioning technical design along side theoretical/conceptual, organizational, and regulatory design questions.
  • Begin the process of building an interdisciplinary community of researchers to develop broader theoretical foundations, systematic approaches, as well as organizational and regulatory models for supporting the practice of privacy-by-design.

Other Privacy by Design Workshops
Workshop 1- State of Research and Practice
Workshop 3- Engineering Privacy
Workshop 4- Catalyzing Privacy by Design

Agenda

May 7, 2015 (Thursday)

08:00 AM Breakfast (Cafeteria)
09:00 AM Session 1: Opening Remarks

Deirdre Mulligan, UC Berkeley
Annie Antón, Georgia Tech

09:45 AM Session 2: The Big Picture

Beth Mynatt, Georgia Tech
Ilana Westerman, Create with Context

10:45 AM Break
11:15 AM Session 3: Privacy Case Studies and Commentaries

Liana Leahy, MeYouHealth; Kelly Caine, Clemson University
Aislinn Grigas, Mozilla; Patrick Gage Kelley, University of New Mexico
Gabriela Aschenberger, Create With Context; Katie Shilton, University of Maryland

12:45 PM Lunch (Cafeteria)
02:00 PM Session 4: HCI Applied to Privacy

Keith Edwards, Georgia Tech
Alfred Kobsa, UC Irvine
Brian Anderson, IBM

03:00 PM Break
03:30 PM Session 5: Design in Non-Traditional Interfaces

Sunny Consolvo, Google
Katie Skinner, Apple
Clint Rule, Frog

04:45 PM Session 6: Wrap-up of Day 1
06:00 PM Dinner at Arrowhead (Antón/Swire Home)

Meet bus outside hotel lobby

09:00 PM Bus returns to hotel

May 8, 2015 (Friday)

08:00 AM Breakfast (Cafeteria)
09:00 AM Session 7: Values: Creepy vs. Delight

Day 2 Ideas Peter Swire

Batya Friedman, University of Washington
Matt Muller, Inflection
Torrey Podmajersky, Microsoft

10:00 AM Session 8: Designing for the Public’s Privacy

John Yuda, 18F
Jennifer Ehlers, 18F

10:30 AM Break
11:00 AM Session 9: Observations from Designers who have not specialized in Privacy

Nicki Dell, University of Washington
Evinn Quinn, Critical Mass
Elizabeth Goodman, 18F

12:00 PM Session 10: Lessons Learned
12:30 PM Box Lunches Distributed
12:45 PM Session 11: Wrap Up
Participants

Participant Lightning Slides

Organizing Committee:

Deirdre K. Mulligan (Chair) University of California, Berkeley

Annie Antón Georgia Institute of Technology

Ken Bamberger University of California, Berkeley

Travis Breaux Carnegie Mellon University

Nathan Good Good Research

Susan Graham University of California, Berkeley and the Computing Community Consortium

Seda Gürses New York University

Susan Landau Worcester Polytechnic Institute

Helen Nissenbaum New York University

Fred Schneider Cornell University

Peter Swire Georgia Institute of Technology

Ira Rubinstein New York University

Ann Drobnis Computing Community Consortium Director

Logistics

The Computing Community Consortium (CCC) will cover travel expenses for all invited participants who desire it. Participants will be asked to make their own travel arrangements to get to the workshop, including purchasing airline tickets. They will also be asked to make their own hotel reservations (as indicated on your registration). Following the symposium, CCC will circulate a reimbursement form that participants will need to complete and submit, along with copies of receipts for amounts exceeding $75.

In general, standard Federal travel policies apply: CCC will reimburse for non-refundable economy airfare on U.S. Flag carriers; per diem amounts will be enforced; and no alcohol will be covered.

For more information on Federal reimbursement guidelines, please follow the links below:

General Travel
International Travel

Additional questions about the reimbursement policy should be directed to Ann Drobnis, CCC Director (adrobnis [at] cra.org).

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