From bendrath at zedat.fu-berlin.de Fri Sep 17 13:36:47 2010 From: bendrath at zedat.fu-berlin.de (Ralf Bendrath) Date: Fri, 17 Sep 2010 14:36:47 +0200 Subject: [Privsec] Brussels, 23 Sept: Building a Transatlantic Data Partnership Message-ID: <4C9360DF.3070601@zedat.fu-berlin.de> For those in Brussels or wanting to come next Thursday: This is an interesting and highly relevant event. The Council of Justice and Home Affairs Ministers will probably adopt the negotiation mandate for the transatlantic data protection framework agreement for criminal law enforcement on 3rd December. Then the battle over the next level of SWIFT, PNR, Pr?m etc. will start. AFAIK, Nancy Libin, who will speak at the event, is the US DoJ negotiator for this agreement. Viviane Reding's new DG Justice is in charge on the EU side. My boss, Jan Philipp Albrecht, is the EP's rapporteur. ;-) Ralf ---------- Forwarded message ---------- From: *German Marshall Fund* > Date: 2010/9/17 Subject: INVITATION - Building a Transatlantic Data Partnership - September 23 *_INVITATION_* ****Building a Transatlantic Data Partnership *** **How to protect fundamental privacy rights in times of new threats* Thursday, September 23^rd 16h00 - 17h30 (please join for us for a reception after the panel debate) R?sidence Palace (Polak Room), Rue de la Loi 155, 1040 Brussels Please RSVP to escully at gmfus.org ** *Speakers: **_Mary Ellen Callahan_**,** Chief Privacy Officer and Chief Freedom of Information Act Officer, U.S. Department of Homeland Security _Nancy C. Libin_, Chief Privacy and Civil Liberties Officer, U.S. Department of Justice* * _Marie-H?l?ne Boulanger_, Head of Unit for Data Protection, DG Justice, European Commission A representative of a European NGO* *Moderator: **_John Richardson_**, Senior Advisor, The German Marshall Fund of the U.S.* How far should levels of privacy protection reach? How extensive can the legitimate basis for police and judicial data exchange be? How do we balance security and privacy when using body scanning technology? How do we make sure privacy rights are legally binding and democratically supervised while remaining faithful to our U.S. and EU legal traditions and systems?// The role of personal data has become increasingly important in the digital age. As technology advances, issues of individual freedoms and privacy protection become increasingly relevant. The United States and the European Union share a strong commitment to both security and the rights and liberties of their citizens. They work closely together and wrestle with many of the same issues. The process of identifying common values and principles, the negotiations on PNR data and the recent European support for the TFTP have already paved the way for solid transatlantic cooperation on data transfer and protection in the law enforcement and security context.// This debate on the issues of data protection and privacy will be an opportunity to explore policy answers and the potential for an overarching agreement in order to bridge the differences that remain between Brussels and Washington. Q&A will follow the speakers' remarks. /For questions about the event please contact us on +32 2 238 5292 or by e-mailing //escully at gmfus.org / -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: