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Announcing Money, Privacy, and Power Conference

moneyprivacypowerMoney, Privacy, and Power — September 10, 2013

How should we react to Snowden’s revelations about NSA surveillance? There were immediate demands for explanation, accountability, and privacy protection, but so far we have seen little reasoned discussion of the risks and benefits of modern surveillance techniques. The conference Money, Privacy, and Power changes that on September 10, 2013 at Chicago-Kent College of Law. The conference focuses on money laundering and financial crime. This is a critical nexus at which concerns about terrorism, organized crime, and domestic crime combine in ways that call for international cooperation. Approximately thirty European regulators, policy makers, financial experts, and surveillance experts will attend. The aim is to point the way to facilitate international cooperation in ways that balance effective crime prevention with effective privacy protection.

A key participant and sponsor is the European Commission funded project, HEMOLIA (Hybrid Enhanced Anti-Money Laundering Intelligence, Investigation, Incrimination and Alerts). HEMOLIA “is a new generation Anti-Money Laundering… investigation system which in addition to the traditional financial data makes extensive use of modern society’s huge telecom data source, thereby opening up a new dimension of capabilities to all Money Laundering fighters… and Financial Institutes.” (http://www.hemolia.eu). In a post-Snowden era, “extensive use” of telecommunications data raises acute privacy concerns. The HEMOLIA system incorporates privacy protective technology, and the description of that technology will initiate the discussion of privacy.

US and European experts will discuss the pros and cons of such surveillance efforts in panels titled “The Detection and Control of Money Laundering” and “Beyond Money Laundering.” Chicago-Kent’s own Lori Andrews will moderate the final multi-national panel, “Money, Privacy, Power, and the Law,” which will focus exclusively on finding ways to promote international cooperation for effective crime prevention and privacy protection. See the full conference agenda here.

Register for the free conference here.

1 Comment

  1. Lennon Ruggier

    I find it hard to find any justification to diminish or negate human rights as is the case with PRISM and the Snowden revelations. Governments should be increasing our rights to online privacy, not destroying it.

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