Data-Date

Data-Date “Sharing is caring? Bevoegdheidsverdelingen, data en mobiliteit” - kopie

25.01.2022 — 16:00‐18:00

Tijdens de Data-Date “Sharing is niet altijd caring: bevoegdheidsverdelingen, data en mobiliteit” gaan we dieper in op de gemiste opportuniteiten voor data in duurzame mobiliteit.

Via een interactief panelgesprek gaat deze Data-Date op zoek naar mogelijke oplossingen om het delen van data te optimaliseren en efficiënt te laten verlopen om duurzame mobiliteit te bevorderen.

De centrale punten en vragen in deze Data-Date draaien rond:

  • Op dit moment kan de impact van mobiliteit op ons leefmilieu niet worden geëvalueerd of gemodelleerd ondanks het feit dat die gegevens reeds voor andere doeleinde (politionele) worden verzameld.

  • Samenwerking en communicatie tussen verschillende overheden verloopt niet altijd optimaal.

  • Wie is bevoegd om advies te geven bij vragen over datadeling?

  • Wat kan het huidige wetsvoorstel veranderen (cfr. Het wetsvoorstel ingediend door dhr. Franky Demon)? Of wat moet er in een wetsvoorstel staan om vooruit te kunnen gaan?

We nodigen het publiek uit om samen met de experts hierover na te denken om zo duurzame mobiliteit te bevorderen op een privacyvriendelijke manier.


The panel

Roos de Jong is a Senior Consultant within Deloitte's Digital Ethics Team. She focuses on advising clients on ethical considerations in the development and use of digital technologies, such as Internet of Things and Artificial Intelligence. Roos helps organisations with a practical interpretation and embedding of ethical values and has experience in both the public and private sector. Roos translates academic concepts into tangible solutions for organisations, to enable them to use data and digital technologies in a thoughtful way and for the better.

Roos holds a master’s degree in Philosophy of Science, Technology and Society (MSc) from the University of Twente and a bachelor’s degree in Philosophy (BA) from Utrecht University. Before joining Deloitte, Roos worked as a researcher at Rathenau Instituut, the Dutch parliamentary technology assessment organisation. Roos also worked as a programme developer at BioArt Laboratories, as a board-member and trainer for student associations, and contributed to a popular massive open online course on the philosophy of technology at the University of Twente.

Dr Kevin Macnish is Digital Ethics Consulting Manager with Sopra Steria. A former analyst and manager at GCHQ and the US DOD, Kevin gained his PhD in digital ethics from the University of Leeds in 2013 before working at the universities of Leeds and Twente. He has been interviewed widely, including on BBC national television and radio and has spoken at both the House of Commons and the House of Lords in relation to digital ethics. In 2018 Kevin published The Ethics of Surveillance: an introduction (Routledge), in 2020 Big Data and Democracy (Edinburgh University Press) and he is currently working on Surveillance in Times of Emergency (Oxford University Press). Kevin has published more than 40 academic articles and chapters on the ethics of privacy, AI, and cybersecurity, and is a frequent speaker at international trade and academic conferences. He is a visiting Research Fellow at the University of Leeds and a member of the International Association of Privacy Professionals’ Research Advisory Board.

Robin Decoster is an innovation orchestrator at ZInn, short for ZorgInnovatie or Health Innovations. The research group focuses on the implementation of innovations in health care and welfare. Next to these implementation projects, researchers forecast competences of the future care providers. With a background in industrial policy, Robin is curious for innovations and the crosstalk with society. As an intern for parliamentary advisory bodies, he got interested in technical philosophy, post-phenomenology and qualitative research. Still fascinated by the Thinging of the Thing and future studies, he now dives into absorption of innovations in the current postnormal times.

Edwin Borst is independent advisor in the field of ethics and technology. He is involved in the working group 'Mensgerichte AI' (Humane AI) of the Dutch AI Coalition, where they are developing a platform for participative and constructive ethics (PACE). He also works together with ECP on the promotion and execution of the Guidance Ethics methodology.