Digital Identities and the Role of Privacy Engineering
Designing for privacy is seen many times as designing to minimise the collection of users’ data. In this talk we will discuss that designing for privacy goes beyond minimisation and in most cases it means to limit the ways in which the collected data can be used. We will also discuss what this design philosophy means for the use of (digital) identities when engineering privacy-preserving systems.
About the speaker
Carmela Troncoso
Assistant Professor and Head of SPRING Lab, EPFL
Carmela Troncoso is an Assistant Professor at EPFL (Switzerland) where she heads the SPRING Lab.
Her work focuses on analyzing, building, and deploying secure and privacy-preserving systems.
Troncoso holds a Ph.D.
in engineering from KULeuven.
Her thesis, Design and Analysis Methods for Privacy Technologies, received the European Research Consortium for Informatics and Mathematics Security and Trust Management Best Ph.D.
Thesis Award, and her work on privacy engineering received the CNIL-INRIA Privacy Protection Award in 2017.
She has been named 40 under 40 in technology by Fortune in 2020.
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