Recognized Privacy Papers to Receive Honor at 15th Annual Privacy Papers for Policymakers Event on our website this year
The Foundation for Privacy and Access (FPF) has announced the winners of its 15th annual Privacy Papers for Policymakers (PPPM) Awards. This prestigious event recognises leading U.S. and international privacy scholarship that is relevant to policymakers.
The PPPM Awards ceremony, scheduled for March 12, 2025, at FPF's offices in Washington, D.C., will showcase the work of the selected authors. This year, six winning papers, two honorable mentions, one student submission, and a student honorable mention were chosen.
Among the winners is "Data Subjects' Reactions to Exercising Their Right of Access," a student paper by Arthur Borem, Elleen Pan, Olufunmilola Obielodan, Aurelie Roubinowitz, Luca Dovichi, Blase Ur from the University of Chicago, and Michelle L. Mazurek from the University of Maryland. Another notable winner is "Authoritarian Privacy" by Mark Jia.
Other winning papers include "The Great Scrape: The Clash between Scraping And Privacy" by Daniel J. Solove and Woodrow Hartzog, "Mirror, Mirror, on the Wall, Who's the Fairest of Them All?" by Alice Xiang, "The Overton Window and Privacy Enforcement" by Alicia Solow-Niederman, "Personhood Credentials: Artificial intelligence and the value of privacy-preserving tools to distinguish who is real online" by Steven Adler, and "Navigating Demographic Measurement for Fairness and Equity" by Miranda Bogen.
FPF's selection was made by a diverse group of leading academics, advocates, and industry privacy professionals from its Advisory Board. The organization believes technology and data can benefit society and improve lives if the right laws, policies, and rules are in place.
In addition to the winners, FPF also selected for Honorable Mentions: "The Law of AI for Good" by Orly Lobel and "Aligning Algorithmic Risk Assessment Values with Criminal Justice Values" by Dennis D. Hirsch, Angie Westover-Munoz, Christopher B. Yaluma, and Jared Ott.
The event is free and registration is open to the public. It will include conversations with discussants, including James Cooper, Jennifer Huddleston, and Brenda Leong. For more information about FPF and the event, please visit their website at FPF's specific URL.
FPF is a global non-profit organization that brings together academics, civil society, government officials, and industry to evaluate the societal, policy, and legal implications of data use, identify the risks, and develop appropriate protections. Its mission is to ensure that technology and data are used in ways that respect privacy, promote fairness, and empower individuals.
- The Foundation for Privacy and Access (FPF) has chosen to feature work from various authors at its 15th annual Privacy Papers for Policymakers (PPPM) Awards ceremony, held on March 12, 2025.
- Among this year's winning papers is a student submission, "Data Subjects' Reactions to Exercising Their Right of Access," written by Arthur Borem, Elleen Pan, Olufunmilola Obielodan, Aurelie Roubinowitz, Luca Dovichi, Blase Ur, and Michelle L. Mazurek.
- Another notable winning paper is "Authoritarian Privacy" by Mark Jia.
- In addition to the winners, FPF has chosen papers for Honorable Mentions, such as "The Law of AI for Good" by Orly Lobel.
- FPF's Advisory Board, a panel consisting of leading academics, advocates, and industry privacy professionals, made the selection for the awards.
- The event is open to the public and will include discussions with guests like James Cooper, Jennifer Huddleston, and Brenda Leong.
- FPF is a global non-profit organization that focuses on evaluating the implications of data use, identifying risks, and developing safeguards to ensure technology and data are used ethically for the benefit of society.
- FPF advocates for policies that foster a culture of lifelong learning, technology education, and self-development in data-and-cloud-computing and online-education environments, all while maintaining trust, privacy, security, and fairness.