The 10th Annual BCLT Privacy Lecture
Open Data, Trust, and Stewardship: Universities at the Privacy Frontier
November 16, 2017
3:30 P.M.
The Faculty Club
Berkeley, CA
Professor Christine L. Borgman
Distinguished Professor and Presidential Chair in Information Studies at UCLA
Respondents:
Erwin Chemerinsky, Dean and Jesse H. Choper Distinguished Professor of Law,
UC Berkeley School of Law
Katie Shilton, Associate Professor, College of Information Studies,
University of Maryland
UC Berkeley School of Law
Katie Shilton, Associate Professor, College of Information Studies,
University of Maryland
Moderator:
Paul Schwartz, Jefferson E. Peyser Professor of Law and Co-director,
Berkeley Center For Law & Technology, UC Berkeley School of Law
Paul Schwartz, Jefferson E. Peyser Professor of Law and Co-director,
Berkeley Center For Law & Technology, UC Berkeley School of Law
The 10th Annual Privacy Lecture was presented by Christine L. Borgman, Distinguished Professor and Presidential Chair in Information Studies at UCLA, and Director of the UCLA Center for Knowledge Infrastructures. Prof. Borgman explored the clash between two trends: one is for academic researchers to provide open access to their data in connection with grants and publications; the other is for universities to accumulate vast amounts of data about the activities of their communities.
A complete video of the privacy lecture and comments is online at: https://youtu.be/TO5tgaAiXnw
Borgman is the author of more than 250 publications in information studies, computer science, and communication. Her most recent book is Big Data, Little Data, No Data: Scholarship in the Networked World (MIT, 2015).