Contracting over Privacy
Last month, we posted a notice about the Contracting over Privacy conference that is upcoming this week at the University of Chicago Law School. The full conference program (reproduced below) is available here. You can download the papers from that same site.
Friday, October 16, 2015
Session 1: Kristen Anderson, Federal Trade Commission, Moderator
9:30 – 10:15: Florencia Marrota-Wurgler, New York University, Understanding Privacy Policies: Self-Regulation, Market Forces, and Enforcement Actions
10: 15 – 11:00: Alessandro Acquisti, Rainer Böhme, Sarah Spiekermann, and Kai-Lung Hui Carnegie Mellon University, How Feasible Are Markets for Personal Data?
Session 2: Susanne Augenhofer, Humboldt University in Berlin, Moderator
11: 15 – 12: 00: Paul Schwartz, U.C. Berkeley, Comparative Contractual Privacy Law: The U.S., Germany, and E.U.
Session 3: Aaron Burstein, Federal Trade Commission, Moderator
1:30 – 2:15: Omri Ben-Shahar and Adam Chilton, University of Chicago, An Experimental Test of How the Formal Properties of Privacy Disclosures Influence Behavior
2:15 – 3:00: Lior Strahilevitz, University of Chicago & Matthew Kugler, U.S. Court of Appeals – 7th Circuit, Is Privacy Policy Language Irrelevant to Consumers?
Session 4: Randy Picker, University of Chicago, Moderator
3:15 – 4:00: Kirsten Martin, George Washington University, Explicit Versus Implicit Privacy Contracts: Comparing the Impact of Privacy Notices and Norms on Consumer Trust
4:00 – 4:45: Ian Ayres, Yale University, A Laffer Curve for Invasions of Privacy
Saturday, October 17, 2015
Session 5: Ariel Feldman, University of Chicago, Moderator
9:30 – 10:15: Joel Reidenberg, Fordham University, Jaspreet Bhatia, Carnegie Mellon University, et al., Automated Measurement and Comparison of Privacy Policy Ambiguity
10: 15 – 11:00: Richard Brooks, Columbia University, The Information Fiduciary: Beyond Contracting over Privacy
Session 6: Sebastien Gay, University of Chicago, Moderator
11: 15 – 12: 00: Oren Bar-Gill, Harvard University, & Omri Ben-Shahar, University of Chicago, Optimal Defaults for Consumer Contracts
This event is free and open to the public, but seating may be limited.