From the Future of Privacy Forum:
Today, FPF announced the winners of the 10th Annual Privacy Papers for Policymakers (PPPM) Award. This Award recognizes leading privacy scholarship that is relevant to policymakers in the United States Congress, at U.S. federal agencies and for data protection authorities abroad. The winners of the 2019 PPPM Award are:
- Antidiscriminatory Privacy by Ignacio N. Cofone, McGill University Faculty of Law
- Algorithmic Impact Assessments under the GDPR: Producing Multi-layered Explanations by Margot E. Kaminski, University of Colorado Law and Gianclaudio Malgieri, Vrije Universiteit Brussel (VUB) – Faculty of Law
- Dark Patterns at Scale: Findings from a Crawl of 11K Shopping Websites by Arunesh Mathur, Princeton University; Gunes Acar, Princeton University; Michael Friedman, Princeton University; Elena Lucherini, Princeton University; Jonathan Mayer, Princeton University; Marshini Chetty, University of Chicago; and Arvind Narayanan, Princeton University
- The Many Revolutions of Carpenter by Paul Ohm, Georgetown University Law Center
- Privacy’s Constitutional Moment and the Limits of Data Protection by Neil M. Richards, Washington University, School of Law and the Cordell Institute for Policy in Medicine & Law and Woodrow Hartzog, Northeastern University, School of Law and Khoury College of Computer Sciences
Read more about the papers and others who garnered recognition for their work on FPF.