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VERSION:2.0
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CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
X-WR-CALNAME:Info Seminar: Emilee Rader on Implications of Beliefs about De
 rived Personal Data
X-WR-TIMEZONE:Mountain Time (US & Canada)
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260609T213028Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_4089992
DTSTART:20181114T200000Z
DTEND:20181114T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Department of Information Science presents:\n\nEmilee Rader
 \nAssociate Professor and AT&T Scholar\nDepartment of Media and Informatio
 n\nMichigan State University\n\nTitle\nImplications of Beliefs about Deriv
 ed Personal Data for Negotiating Digital Privacy Norms\n\nAbstract\nNew in
 ferences about users\, derived by machine learning algorithms\, can create
  uses for personal data that people might not be able to anticipate or ima
 gine in advance. In this talk I will present early findings from two quali
 tative studies focusing on the extent to which people are already aware of
  the inferences systems are making about them\, what they believe systems 
 are able to infer\, and what they feel systems should be allowed to know a
 bout them. I will also describe how people's perceptions of what others al
 low systems to know about them may be influencing what kind of inferences 
 each individual deems acceptable. Finally\, I will argue that there is an 
 inherent social dilemma in systems that rely on machine learning and aggre
 gation of large datasets to derive inferences about people. However\, this
  social dilemma is invisible\, which makes negotiating norms for digital p
 rivacy much more difficult.\n\nBiography\nEmilee Rader is an Associate Pro
 fessor and AT&T Scholar in the Department of Media and Information at Mich
 igan State University. Her research addresses problems that arise at the i
 ntersection of people\, technology\, and information in socio-technical sy
 stems. Dr. Rader earned her PhD from the University of Michigan School of 
 Information and spent two years at Northwestern University as a postdoc in
  the Center for Technology and Social Behavior\, where she was a recipient
  of the highly competitive Computing Innovation post-doctoral fellowship a
 ward from the Computing Research Association. She also earned a profession
 al Master’s degree from the Human Computer Interaction Institute at Carn
 egie Mellon University\, and worked with an interdisciplinary team of rese
 archers at Motorola Labs in the early 2000’s designing and evaluating ap
 plications for mobile technologies. Her work has been funded by several gr
 ants from the National Science Foundation\, and she primarily publishes in
  human-computer interaction and usable privacy and security venues.\n\nAbo
 ut\nThe Information Science seminar is a weekly talk series and gathering 
 for the Information Science department and its extended community. Any fac
 ulty\, students\, and interested parties regardless of affiliation are wel
 come. Keep an eye out for future announcements!
GEO:40.007435;-105.269921
LOCATION:Roser ATLAS Center\, Room 102
SUMMARY:Info Seminar: Emilee Rader on Implications of Beliefs about Derived
  Personal Data
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.colorado.edu/event/info_seminar_emilee_rader
 _implications_of_beliefs_about_derived_personal_data
CATEGORIES:Colloquium/Seminar
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