Privacy
Reports
2021
Jul
23
Past Event
Trans-Atlantic data flows: What’s next after the EU-U.S. Privacy Shield?
-
Online only
2020
Oct
6
Past Policy 2020 Event
What to expect on tech policy in the next presidential administration
-
Online-only
2020
Sep
10
Past Event
Advancing the transatlantic dialogue in the aftermath of Schrems II
-
Online-only
Mark MacCarthy
Nonresident Senior Fellow - Governance Studies, Center for Technology Innovation
It was the first time that a president of the United States said we should have comprehensive commercial privacy legislation, and it started the process of framing how we should respond to data privacy in the digital era. Specifically, it created the “no surprises” rule, which is the notion that data collection, use, and sharing should be consistent with context and user expectations.