Wednesday, January 08, 2020


Do you have a tested procedure for investigating reports of security breaches? Here’s a really good bad example.
The Difficulty of Disclosure, Surebet247 and the Streisand Effect




Shouldn’t the court redact any sensitive information?
Valley News Live reports:
North Dakota is now the first state to allow anyone with a computer and internet connection access to court documents from their own home or a remote location, according to state officials.
Yet, there’s disagreement on whether this is a good thing with sensitive information being exposed to millions.
The court records can be viewed and printed for free on publicrecords.ndcourts.gov.
Read more on Valley News Live.
[I think that link should be: https://publicsearch.ndcourts.gov/




Worth reading.
Award-Winning Paper: “Privacy’s Constitutional Moment and the Limits of Data Protection”
Among the papers to be honored at an event at the Hart Senate Office Building on February 6, 2020 is Privacy’s Constitutional Moment and the Limits of Data Protection by Woodrow Hartzog of Northeastern University School of Law and Neil Richards of the Washington University School of Law.
You can view all of this year’s award-winning papers on the FPF website.




I clearly do not understand antitrust.
McConnell Backs Bill to Give News Outlets Leverage Over Big Tech
The legislation would grant publishers a four-year exemption from antitrust laws so they could negotiate financial terms with the tech giants that often serve as a gateway for readers and online advertisers.
The bill, which has seven Senate supporters in total, was introduced by Senators John Kennedy, a Louisiana Republican, and Amy Klobuchar, a Minnesota Democrat. A companion measure in the House was introduced by the chairman of the antitrust subcommittee, Democratic Representative David Cicilline of Rhode Island, and the Judiciary Committee’s top Republican, Representative Doug Collins of Georgia.




Perspective.
8 AI trends we’re watching in 2020
To fully take advantage of AI technologies, you’ll need to retrain your entire organization
Data literacy will be required from employees outside traditional data teams—in fact, Gartner expects that 80% of organizations will start to roll out internal data literacy initiatives to upskill their workforce by 2020.




In case I ever want to recommend a student? I guess it could happen.



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