Le 28 janvier 2020, la CNPD a participé au Data Privacy Day organisé par la Fondation Restena et l'Université du Luxembourg dans le cadre de la Journée de la protection des données.
Data Privacy Day
Le Data Privacy Day est un événement annuel pour les personnes qui s'intéressent à la protection des données et la protection de la vie privée. L'objectif est de sensibiliser et de promouvoir les meilleures pratiques en la matière aux niveaux européen et international.
Monsieur Christophe Buschmann, commissaire de la CNPD, a tenu le discours d'ouverture et a donné une présentation sur les enquêtes sur place et les audits effectués par l'autorité de contrôle.
PROGRAMME:
8.30 | Registration |
09.00 | Welcome speech Christophe Buschmann, Commissioner of the National Commission for Data Protection (Commission Nationale pour la Protection des Données – CNPD) |
09.15 | “Challenges of GDPR implementation in public research sector” Sandrine Munoz, Data Protection Officer at the University of Luxembourg Laurent Prévotat, Data Protection Officer at Luxembourg Institute of Health Chloë Lellinger, Data Protection Officer at Luxembourg Institute of Socio-Economic Research Topic: Three DPOs of Public research institutions will share their experience 20 months following the application of the General Data Protection Regulation and one year before the launch of the Horizon Europe research program on 1st January 2021. Using their experience the DPOs will introduce the specificities of GDPR implementation in public research and especially in their institution having their own particularities. They will focus on the key challenges such as legal qualifications of partners of a research project, Data Protection Impact Assessment, transfer of personal data to third countries and reuse of data. They will provide a few examples and their feed-back about how they handle it in their institutions. |
09.45 | “Feedback on the CNPD governance investigation” Christophe Buschmann, Commissioner at National Commission for Data Protection (CNPD) Topic: On-site inspections and audits |
10.15 | “DPIA and Privacy by Design: 2 different requirements!” Mélanie Gagnon, CEO and Founder MGSI |
10.45 | Coffee Break |
11.15 | “Privacy for everyone: practical tips” Steve Muller, Cybersecurity specialist at BEE SECURE Topic: Cookies, private browsing, app permissions, Internet of things, phishing, password managers, two-factor-authentication |
11.45 | “Maintaining motivation in crowdsourced projects and the implications of GDPR: the case study of Crowdmap-the-Crusades” Emma Goodwin, APDL board member at Association pour la Protection des Données à Luxembourg (APDL) Topic: This presentation will consider the question of motivation in citizen science crowdsourcing projects, specifically in relation to virtual reward systems and the impact of GDPR on this field of research. Crowdsourcing involves the leveraging of public participation in projects and activities. This talk will examine the ways in which crowdsourcing and social engagement interrelate, in the context of a public desirous of the same and more social interactions than they had in ‘pre-digital’ days. Using the case study of Crowdmap-the-Crusades, a digital citizen science project begun six years ago at the University of Oxford by Emma Goodwin, this presentation will explore the results and experience of the public Medieval French Transcription Competition held at the University of Luxembourg in October 2019. It will focus on how participants’ motivation was maintained whilst taking account of GDPR and informed consent requirements. The final part of the talk will address GDPR legislation specific to academic projects in Luxembourg. Possible approaches to project planning in order to incorporate GDPR requirements from project inception, planning, documentation through to execution will be set out, together with suggestions of useful sources of information and advice available to researchers based in Luxembourg. This presentation will be of interest to both academics and those working in or advising university administration in roles linked to data protection, project management and delivery. |
12.15 | Gail Kent, Director Communications Networks, Content & Technology, Data at European Commission |
12.45 | End |
28 Janvier: Journée de la protection des données
Le Conseil de l'Europe, avec le soutien de la Commission européenne, a proclamé solennellement le 28 janvier de chaque année comme « Journée de la protection des données ». Le but est de sensibiliser les citoyens sur l'importance de la protection de leurs données personnelles et du respect de leurs libertés et droits fondamentaux, en particulier de leur vie privée.
Pourquoi le 28 janvier? C'est la date de l'ouverture à la signature de la « Convention 108 » du Conseil de l’Europe (28 janvier 1981). Cette dernière a été le premier instrument international juridiquement contraignant en la matière. Depuis 39 ans, la convention vise à protéger toute personne contre l'utilisation abusive des données qui la concernent et à assurer la transparence quant aux fichiers et traitements des données personnelles.