CPDP is a world-leading multidisciplinary conference and offers the cutting edge in legal, regulatory, academic and technological development in privacy and data protection. Within an atmosphere of independence and mutual respect, CPDP gathers academics, lawyers, practitioners, policy-makers, industry and civil society from all over the world in Brussels, offering them an arena to exchange ideas and discuss the latest emerging issues and trends. This unique multidisciplinary formula has served to make CPDP one of the leading data protection and privacy conferences in Europe and around the world.
OUR PANEL: Multi-party data sharing and data subjects as beneficiaries: how to accelerate accountable data sharing?
Organised by: Computer Law and Security Review
Attempts to set up repeatable mechanisms or institutions to support accountable multi-party data sharing have not yet succeeded, although different models are now emerging. The extraordinary situation of the global pandemic makes it crystal clear that there is an urgent need to accelerate the re-use of personal data among different types of stakeholders, e.g. healthcare providers, social care providers, researchers and public health authorities. However, giving assurances to data subjects who should ultimately be seen as direct or indirect beneficiaries of such initiatives, including making the case that such data sharing will not feed mass surveillance and irremediably undermine fundamental rights and liberties of data subjects, remains a challenge.
The purpose of this panel is to discuss barriers to the sharing of personal data as well as necessary safeguards, and explore a variety of emerging multi-party data sharing models across jurisdictions.
* How can we accelerate data sharing between multi parties without watering down data subject rights?
* What are the emerging multi-party data sharing models?
* How do these models compare with each other?
* To what extent arrangements that have been built for health data in the context of the Covid crisis can be repeated and generalised?