IAPP Global Privacy Summit 2022

IAPP Global Privacy Summit 2022

The IAPP Global Privacy Summit kicks off with a great opening session.

According to Apple CEO Tim Cook, “Tech is neither inherently good or bad. It’s what we make of it. It’s a mirror that reflects the people who make it, use it, regulate it”. He added that “People can’t escape their moral responsibility by saying that the machine made them do it. Those who make the tools have a responsibility towards the people they service. Privacy cannot and will not become a relic of the past.”

EU Commissioner Didier Reynders said that “tech and innovation will not come at the cost of values and fundamental rights.” The US and the EU have been working on a new data transfer framework agreement for a year. It will provide safeguards to limit the access of data by governmental authorities in the US. He added: “The work continues: the details need to be finalised and translated into legal text. This could be finalised by the end of the year. This confirms once more how much the US and the EU can achieve with their shared values.”

And Brad Smith from Microsoft led a great closing session of the successful IAPP Global Privacy Summit.

“We enter a new era of technology”, he said. “We need a large community and a new mindset to manage tech through the decade ahead.” We can look at tech through two lenses: the present where data can help us solve global issues around the world; and the past where we see that similar rapidly developing technologies were regulated by governments because it had such a big impact on life and law (see the development of the railroad in the US for example).

“However, no industry has ever had to adapt so quickly on a global basis. We’ll need to mature and lean in, to coordinate within governments and across borders, and we need people who think creatively. Progress in a democracy always requires compromise and that’s difficult to find. Comprehensive legislation in the US is not just needed but long overdue. The lack of legislation doesn’t stop global regulation; it just makes the US less influential. This will not be easy, this will not be beautiful. But the future can be bright.”

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About the author

Diego Mommaerts

Diego studied Law at the University catholique de Louvain in Belgium where he focused on Data Protection and IP Law, including a thesis on the subject of Privacy by Design and Privacy by Default. He’s CIPP/E certified. During his academic years, Diego worked as a consultant, a treasurer and a board member of a student association which provides legal advice to SMEs and individuals. He also developed and launched the local branch of a non-profit organisation and managed it for two years. Diego has been closely involved in his family’s business for many years, an experience which enabled him to develop strong entrepreneurial skills. He is also a computer buff who is passionate about new technologies. Diego speaks French, English and Dutch.

Diego Mommaerts

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