peer reviewedDue to rapid technological advancements and the growing “datafication” of our societies, individuals’ privacy constitutes an increasingly explored speculative space for regulators, researchers, practitioners, designers and artists. This article reports two experiences at a national and an international data protection authority (i.e., the Commission Nationale de l'Informatique et des Libertés - CNIL - and the European Data Protection Supervisor - EDPS - respectively), where foresight methods and speculative design are employed in policy-making with the goal of anticipating technological trends, their implications for society and their impact on regulations, as well as the effects of existing and upcoming laws on emergin...
The Finnish Government has decided that public services will be primarily digital in the future, sug...
This Little Book tells you what Speculative Design is, what the benefits for policy-making are, and ...
The United Nations confirmed that privacy remains a human right in the digital age, but our daily di...
Due to rapid technological advancements and the growing “datafication” of our societies, individuals...
Connected products and applications increasingly leverage users’ personal data in their core functio...
Key Points The data protection lawyer of the future will be a key intermediary of innovation—or ‘...
The regulatory climate is in a process of change. Design, having been implicated for some time, is n...
The research presented is a collaboration between social scientists, designers and technologists tha...
The paper recalls the process which led to the adoption of the new european Data Protection Regulati...
The European Union’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), in force since 2018, has introduced ...
This paper reports findings from participatory design research aimed at uncovering how technological...
Purpose – To review and critically discuss the current state of privacy in the context of constant t...
This thesis sets out the privacy by design provisions in the draft GDPR, before considering the prim...
Media and communication scholars studying young people's privacy often involve them in research in o...
Many innovative software products are conceived, developed and deployed without any conventional att...
The Finnish Government has decided that public services will be primarily digital in the future, sug...
This Little Book tells you what Speculative Design is, what the benefits for policy-making are, and ...
The United Nations confirmed that privacy remains a human right in the digital age, but our daily di...
Due to rapid technological advancements and the growing “datafication” of our societies, individuals...
Connected products and applications increasingly leverage users’ personal data in their core functio...
Key Points The data protection lawyer of the future will be a key intermediary of innovation—or ‘...
The regulatory climate is in a process of change. Design, having been implicated for some time, is n...
The research presented is a collaboration between social scientists, designers and technologists tha...
The paper recalls the process which led to the adoption of the new european Data Protection Regulati...
The European Union’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), in force since 2018, has introduced ...
This paper reports findings from participatory design research aimed at uncovering how technological...
Purpose – To review and critically discuss the current state of privacy in the context of constant t...
This thesis sets out the privacy by design provisions in the draft GDPR, before considering the prim...
Media and communication scholars studying young people's privacy often involve them in research in o...
Many innovative software products are conceived, developed and deployed without any conventional att...
The Finnish Government has decided that public services will be primarily digital in the future, sug...
This Little Book tells you what Speculative Design is, what the benefits for policy-making are, and ...
The United Nations confirmed that privacy remains a human right in the digital age, but our daily di...