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Speakers Connect:ID Day Three – Wednesday 16 March 2016<br />
Biography<br />
Deep Bhatia has over 18 years of industry experience in bringing new products<br />
to market. Products range from embedded mobile devices, smartphones, IOT,<br />
automotive technologies, biometrics, and base station chipsets.<br />
His visionary strategies and ideas have brought to life the first generation LTE<br />
world mode products, fusion chipset smartphones, and opened the door to<br />
innovative products for the IOT space. He has managed the strategic portfolio<br />
of products in the automotive Infotainment, telematics, and IOT market<br />
segments which are now widely commercially deployed.<br />
In his current role, he is responsible for the product management of biometric<br />
products in Qualcomm’s Cybersecurity Solutions group. He is passionate about<br />
leveraging biometrics in authentication, and creating a secure end to end<br />
platform which improves efficiency and quality in government operations and<br />
commercial markets.<br />
SPECIAL TOPIC: Identity insight – Learning<br />
from ‘digital natives’<br />
Room 207A<br />
Session introduced by Kelli Emerick, Executive Director, Secure ID Coalition, USA<br />
Kimberly Little Sutherland<br />
Sr. Director of Identity Management, LexisNexis Risk<br />
Solutions, USA<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
Time: 2:20pm<br />
Born this way: What ‘Digital Natives’ are teaching<br />
us about digital identity<br />
If the voice of the customer helps smart organizations improve business<br />
processes and deliver better products and services, what are the voices of<br />
digital natives, the generation born fully immersed in digital technologies,<br />
teaching organizations about digital identity and their expectations for<br />
digital interactions?<br />
In this session, learn the top lessons that millennial customers are teaching<br />
commercial organizations and government agencies about digital identity<br />
processes and authentication.<br />
Understand how millennial customers will not just impact, but transform<br />
security processes in your organization, and the role millennials expect<br />
both mobile devices and biometrics to play in the customer experience.<br />
Biography<br />
Kimberly Little Sutherland leads the consumer identity management<br />
strategy at LexisNexis Risk Solutions – identity proofing, authentication and<br />
fraud risk decisioning.<br />
With 20 years of experience leading global business strategy and product<br />
management, Kim is active in a number of broader industry initiatives, including<br />
serving as Plenary Chair of the Identity Ecosystem Steering Group (IDESG), on the<br />
Board of the University of Texas Center for Identity, the Open Identity Exchange<br />
(OIX), and the Greater Alpharetta Technology Network (GATN).<br />
SPECIAL TOPIC: US/EU visions on privacy:<br />
Contrasting approaches. Practical<br />
implications…<br />
Room 207A<br />
Time: 2:45pm<br />
It is said that the United States and Europe are far apart on data protection and<br />
privacy issues, but is that actually the case? Both the US and Europe are faced<br />
with the same challenge – regulating data flows and ensuring the application<br />
of national laws in an Internet that is biased towards borderlessness. The<br />
collapse of Safe Harbor and its replacement with Privacy Shield is one of<br />
several topics we will explore as we survey the international context for privacy<br />
and data protection.<br />
Session moderated by: Gilad Rosner, Founder, Internet of Things Privacy Forum,<br />
Visiting Researcher at Horizon Digital Economy Research Institute, Member of<br />
the UK Cabinet Office Privacy and Consumer Advisory Group, Spain.<br />
Panelists:<br />
Andrea Glorioso<br />
Counsellor, Digital Economy/Cyber Delegation of the European<br />
Union to the USA<br />
Biography<br />
Andrea Glorioso is the Counsellor for the Digital Economy at the Delegation of<br />
the European Union to the USA, in Washington DC. In this role, he acts as the<br />
liaison between the EU and US on policy, regulation and research activities<br />
related to the internet and information and communication technologies.<br />
Mr Glorioso worked for eight years at the European Commission in Brussels<br />
(Belgium) on cyber-security, personal data protection, cloud computing and<br />
Internet governance. He was part of the teams that produced a number of<br />
key strategies of the European Commission, including the Action Plan on the<br />
Internet of Things and the Cloud Computing Strategy.<br />
Before joining the European Commission, he worked at the NEXA Research<br />
Center for Internet and Society of the Politechnic University of Turin, at the Media<br />
Innovation Unit of the Chamber of Commerce of Florence, at the Centro Tempo<br />
Reale Research Centre for Contemporary Music.<br />
A native of Padua (Italy), Mr Glorioso has a MSc (summa cum laude) in Political<br />
Sciences/Sociology from the University of Padua, an LLM (summa cum laude)<br />
in Intellectual Property Law from the University of Turin/WIPO Worldwide<br />
Academy, and post-graduate degrees in IT law (Centro Study Informatica<br />
Giuridica), international diplomatic law (Diplo Foundation/University of Malta)<br />
and global Internet governance (Diplo Foundation).<br />
Cameron F. Kerry<br />
Senior Counsel, Sidley Austin, USA<br />
Biography<br />
Cameron F. Kerry is General Counsel and Acting Secretary of the United States<br />
Department of Commerce, where he played a leadership role in consumer privacy<br />
issues and the flow of information and technology across international borders.<br />
Cam is also the first Ann R. and Andrew H. Tisch Distinguished Visiting Fellow<br />
in Governance Studies at the Center for Technology Innovation at Brookings<br />
Institute, and a visiting scholar with the MIT Media Lab. At Sidley, his broad<br />
practice operates at the intersection of law, technology, and public policy and is<br />
informed by his years of government service and over three decades in private<br />
practice. Cam is the recent co-author of Essentially Equivalent: A Comparison<br />
of the Legal Orders for Privacy and Data Protection in the European Union and<br />
United States (Sidley Austin LLP 2016) and frequent contributor to Data Matters,<br />
Sidley’s Cybersecurity, Privacy, Data Protection, Internet Law and Policy blog.<br />
SPECIAL TOPIC: Homeland security – The<br />
challenge of identifying malevolent actors<br />
Room 207A<br />
Time: 3:30pm<br />
This session focuses on the crucial question of how we collect key intelligence<br />
and evidence for tracking and identifying terrorists, criminals, and refugees.<br />
These efforts are made even more critical today given the large number of<br />
people crossing borders without documents, the use of sophisticated forged<br />
documents, the difficulties of exchanging data, encryption, to name only a few<br />
of the issues complicating this key process.<br />
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