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[ecrea] International Workshop on the Fate of Post-Mortem Personal Data
Wed Jan 04 08:29:47 GMT 2017
International Workshop on the Fate of Post-Mortem Personal Data
(Friday the 13th of January, 2017)
Introduction
Profiles compiled from scattered digital footprints left by the user on
the Internet shape the outline of digital identities. While the Internet
user is alive, he remains in charge of managing these identities, with
the help of digital privacy law. Yet as civil rights befall the living,
these data protection rights, as such, fall as his death occurs. It
therefore comes as no surprise that the recently adopted General Data
Protection Regulation (GDPR) explicitly states it is not going to apply
to data linked to dead data subjects. Therefore, there is lack of
supranationally harmonised post- mortem personal data protection rules.
Profiles and digital footprints survive deceased Internet users. For
example, in social networks, it is not rare to see the profile of a dead
person that keeps interacting with those of living users. Such cases are
to become increasingly frequent as Internet users grow old, explaining
why several initiatives took place in various countries to tackle this
issue.
A federal legal framework was recently adopted in the United States of
America, in the form of the Uniform Fiduciary Access to Digital Assets
Act, which gives fiduciaries access to certain categories of data such
as files, domain names, virtual money, while at the same time limiting
access to electronic communications and social network accounts in order
to protect the dead person’s privacy. In Bulgaria, the Law recognises
that heirs may exercise data protection related rights on the deceased
person’s data. In Hungary, the National Authority for Data Protection
and Freedom of Information has recently published a recommendation
advising the Parliament to adopt legislation on the matter. In France,
the recently adopted Digital Republic Act comprises a provision aiming
at inscribing a new paragraph in section 40 of the Data Protection Act,
stating that : “Any person can define one’s directives regarding the
preservation, erasure and disclosure of one’s personal data after one’s
death”.
Some social networks, like Facebook, have set up procedures to transform
accounts into memorial pages. The difficulty for such operators lies not
only in getting the right perception of emerging customs and social
norms related to digital death in order to offer socially adequate and
acceptable solutions, but also in the scattered and potentially
contradictory nature of regulation on this specific issue.
The aim of the ENEID project <http://eneid.univ-paris3.fr> is to study
these issues. It is financed by the National Research Agency, and is
composed by the MCPN team of the CIM research unit of the University
Sorbonne Nouvelle Paris-III, and the EPIN team of the COSTECH research
unit of the University of Technology of Compiègne, as well as some
individual researchers from the University of Paris 13.
This workshop is structured around the ENEID project. Its primary goal
is to discuss the various issues surrounding digital eternity, and to
provide space for a dialogue between the project’s research results and
that of other academics and professionnals like Data Protection
Officers. It is our hope that such a discussion will help the
establishment of a multidisciplinary and European community of academics
and professionals studying the issue of post-mortem personal data privacy.
Provisional program
9h00 : Registration
9h30-9h45 : Opening speech
9h45 : Presentations by members of the ENEID research project
<http://eneid.univ-paris3.fr> on post-mortem digital identities
(moderated by Dr. Cléo Collomb)
* Dr. Fanny Georges : Introduction
* Dr. Nelly Quenemer : Exhibiting privacy. The media coverage of
celebrities’ death in France
* Dr. Virginie Julliard : The production of post mortem digital
identities on Facebook
* Dr. Hélène Bourdeloie : The future of one’s on-line digital traces.
On the results of a study on on-line behaviours and digital eternities
11h15 : The legal aspects of post-mortem privacy
* Dr. Lucien Castex : The protection of post-mortem data : from
identity to property rights
* Edina Harbinja : Post-mortem Privacy 2.0 : (Re)conceptualising the
phenomenon
* Pr. Dr. Lilian Edwards : Against Digital Post Mortem Privacy ?
12h45-14h : Lunch break
14h-14h45 : Dr. Attila Péterfalvi : Post-Mortem Data Privacy in the
Experience of the Hungarian National Authority for Data Protection and
Freedom of Information
14h45-15h15 : Sophie Nerbonne, Head of Compliance at the CNIL (time of
presentation subject to possible change)
15h20-16h00 : Data Protection Officers Panel, in partnership with the
French National DPO Association (AFCDP) : Amandine Delsuc and Garance
Mathias
16h-16h15 : Conclusions on the legal aspects of post-mortem data privacy
16h15-16h30 : Coffee break
16h30 - 18h : Concluding workshop
Practical information
*Location*
The conference will be held at the Institute for Communication Sciences
<http://www.iscc.cnrs.fr/spip.php?article1435> (ISCC) in Paris, on
Friday the 13th of January, 2017.
*Free registration*
To register: (virginie.julliard /at/ utc.fr) <mailto:(virginie.julliard /at/ utc.fr)>
or http://www.costech.utc.fr/spip.php?article111
More informations: http://www.costech.utc.fr/spip.php?article111
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