Privacy-by-Design for the Security Practitioner

Presented at Black Hat Asia 2014, Unknown date/time (Unknown duration)

Privacy-by-Design (PbD) has become the de facto standard, regulatory-approved approach towards addressing privacy concerns with products and services. PbD is a strategy where privacy concerns are brought into the design of products rather than tacked onto the end. Because privacy has a relative lack of experienced specialists and because of its close relationship to security, privacy often becomes the responsibility of the security practitioner.


Presenters:

  • Richard Chow - Intel Corporation
    Richard Chow is a security and privacy researcher and architect at Intel Corporation. In the past, he has held positions as Research Scientist at PARC, Research Scientist at Samsung Electronics R&D, and Security Architect at Yahoo and Motorola. His work concentrates on privacy, big data, mobile, and the cloud. He has over 20 US patents and patent applications and over 25 peer-reviewed journals, conference papers, and book chapters. He was awarded runner-up for the 2010 PET Award for Outstanding Research in Privacy Enhancing Technologies. He has given invited talks at academic conferences and venues such as the RSA Conference and OWASP. He has been invited to serve on numerous Program Committees and has served as Guest Editor of IEEE Security and Privacy Magazine. He has a Ph.D. in mathematics from the University of California at Los Angeles.

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