News

For news relations with the Data Privacy Lab, contact Sherice Livingston by email at sherice@andrew.cmu.edu or by phone at (412) 268-4484.

What's new ... (see also in the news)

  • Lab Director named Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of Privacy Technology. Launched $1000 Best Paper Prize Awards. October 2006. (more)

  • In the news: Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, "Bits&Bytes: Wizzard Software scoops up Blast Podcast, Switchpod.com". Includes Ralph Gross and Alessandro Acquisti's work on Facebook. September 30, 2006. (news link, project)

  • In the news: Carnegie Mellon Tartan, "CMU researches Facebook privacy as site goes global". Includes Ralph Gross and Alessandro Acquisti's work on Facebook. September 18, 2006. (news link, project)

  • In the news: New Scientist, "Living online: The end of privacy?". Includes Ralph Gross and Alessandro Acquisti's work on Facebook. September 18, 2006. (news link, project)

  • In the news: Baylor Business Review, "CRM & Privacy: How much do companies need to know about their customers?". Includes Ralph Gross and Alessandro Acquisti's work on Facebook. September 13, 2006. (news link, project)

  • New paper: Risk Assessments of Personal Identification Technologies for Domestic Violence Homeless Shelters. This paper provides a framework for reasoning about and assessing proposed technical solutions that perform a national unduplicated accounting of visit patterns across domestic violence homeless shelters, while respecting the confidentiality of the clients who are the subjects of that accounting. January 2006. Lab Director, Dr. Latanya Sweeney, authored the paper.

  • Privacy Technology course at Carnegie Mellon University, School of Computer Science. Taught by Lab Director, and supported by students and staff in the Data Privacy Lab. (more)

  • In the news: Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, "The Thinkers: Data privacy drives CMU expert's work." An article about Lab Director, Dr. Latanya Sweeney, and some of work in the Lab. December 26, 2005. (text)

  • New paper: "Privacy-Enhanced Linking." This paper introduces a new way for computer scientists to think about providing privacy protection within link analysis (especially for law-enforcement and counter-terrorism purposes) and introduces the notion of "privacy-enhanced linking" as algorithms that perform link analysis with guarantees of privacy protection modeled after the Fair Information Practices. December 2005. Lab Director, Dr. Latanya Sweeney, authored the paper. (more)

  • Invited talk: "De-Identifying Health Data." Health Canada (Federal Department of Health), Ottawa, Ontario Canada. December 1, 2005. Given by Lab Director, Dr. Latanya Sweeney.

  • Invited talk: "Strategies for De-Identifying Patient Data for Research." Electronic Health Information and Privacy Conference, Ottawa, Ontario Canada. November 30, 2005. Given by Lab Director, Dr. Latanya Sweeney.

  • Invited talk: "Risk Assessments of PIN Technologies [identity management] for Domestic Violence Shelters (Updated)." Housing and Urban Development. Washington, DC. November 18, 2005. Given by Lab Director, Dr. Latanya Sweeney.

  • Invited talk: "Identity Management: Dealing with Disclosure." 6th CACR, Toronto, Canada, November 3, 2005. Given by Lab Director, Dr. Latanya Sweeney.

  • Testimony: "Privacy Principles for Ubiquitous Technologies", Testimony before the Eurpoean Commission, Brussels, Belgium, October 25, 2005. Given by Lab Director, Dr. Latanya Sweeney.

  • Invited talk: "Aging with Dignity: Privacy need not be traded for technical assistance." Technology for Life and Living Conference, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, Pittsburgh, PA, October 21, 2005. Given by Lab Director, Dr. Latanya Sweeney.

  • Best Paper of the Year Award: The paper "How (not) to protect genomic data privacy in a distributed network: using trail re-identification to evaluate and design anonymity protection systems," authored by Lab members Bradley Malin and Latanya Sweeney received one of the highest honors possible for a paper in medical informatics --inclusion in the Yearbook of Medical Informatics which selects the "best of the year" among all peer-reviewed published journal papers in the field. Awarded October 2005. (more, paper)

  • In the news: CBS News, Denver, "Angel Protects Those Who Might be Targets for ID Theft," October 20, 2005. Interview about the Identity Angel project at the Lab. (text, video)

  • New paper: "Managing End-of-Life Care in Complex Patients Can Reduce Costs Without Shortening Life or Sacrificing Patient Satisfaction", reports on a prospective cohort study conducted in California in which a comprehensive patient centered collaboration that includes end-of-life and pain management, education, provider coordination, and patient advocacy sharply reduced costs without shortening life or sacrificing patient satisfaction. Lab Director, Dr. Latanya Sweeney, co-authored the paper with Andrew Halpert and Joan Waranoff of Blue Shield California. October 2005. (more)

  • Testimony: "Recommendations to Identify and Combat Privacy Problems in the Commonwealth", Testimony before the Pennsylvania House Select Committee on Information Security (HR351), Given by Lab Director, Latanya Sweeney. Pittsburgh, PA, October 5, 2005. (Testimony and Appendices)

  • In the news: CBS News, New York, "Why A Resume Could Bring A Job, But Also ID Theft: Identity Theft From Online Resumes On The Rise," Septmber 28, 2005. Interview about the Identity Angel project at the Lab. (text, video)

  • Finalist in student paper competition at AMIA! Bradley Malin, a PhD student in the Data Privacy Lab, is a finalist in the 2005 student paper competition of the American Medical Informatics Association. His paper is entitled, "A Secure Protocol to Distribute Unlinkable Health Data".

  • Invited talk: "Privacy Technologies for Large Research Databases" Spectrum Health and Michigan State University, Grand Rapids, MI, September 23, 2005. Given by Lab Director, Latanya Sweeney. (Slides and Abstract)

  • Invited talk: "Biometrics Alone Won't Do: Developing Holistic Identity Management Solutions" Biometrics Symposium 2005, Arlington, VA, September 19, 2005. Given by Lab Director, Latanya Sweeney. (Slides and Abstract)

  • Invited talk: "Risk Assessments of PIN Technologies [unique personal identifiers] for Domestic Violence Shelters," National HMIS Conference, St. Louis, Missouri, September 13, 2005. Given by Lab Director, Latanya Sweeney. (Slides and Abstract)

  • Paper in IEEE Intelligent Systems about privacy and homeland security, entitled: Privacy-Preserving Surveillance using Selective Revelation. This paper describes an approach for sharing data for surveillance purposes while maintaining privacy. July 2005. Authored by Lab Director, Latanya Sweeney. (more)

  • Testimony: "Privacy Technologies for Homeland Security", Testimony before the Privacy and Integrity Advisory Committee of the Department of Homeland Security (“DHS”), Boston, MA, June 15, 2005. Testimony by Lab Director, Latanya Sweeney. (Testimony and Appendices)

  • Invited talk: "HIPAA Strategies for De-Identifying Patient Data for Research," American Association of Medical Colleges (AAMC), National Conference, Group on Information Resources, Philadelphia, PA. April 12, 2005. Given by Lab Director, Latanya Sweeney. (Slides and Abstract)

  • Invited talk: "Privacy Technology in the Face of Information Warfare", Guest Lecture in Course 19-601, Information Warfare, Carnegie Mellon University. Pittsburgh, PA. March 29, 2005. Given by Lab Director, Latanya Sweeney. (Slides and Abstract)

  • Invited talk: "Privacy Technology: Artificial Intelligence to Save the World", AAAI Spring Symposium. Stanford. Palo Alto, CA. March 23, 2005. Given by Lab Director, Latanya Sweeney. (Slides, References and Abstract).

  • Invited talk: "Beyond Ickiness is Risk: The Exasperation of Data Privacy Problems by Implanted RFIDs", The Concealed I Conference, University of Ottawa, Ontario Canada. March 4, 2005. Given by Lab Director, Latanya Sweeney. (Slides, References and Abstract).

  • Lab Director, Latanya Sweeney, becomes member of the Program Committee for the Workshop on Privacy Enhancing Technologies (PET) 2005. (more).

  • Thesis completed by Ralf Holzer entitled, "Email Alias Detection Using Network Analysis." March 2005. (more)

  • Invited talk: "Privacy Technology: Computer Scientists Help Save the World", Intel Privacy Forum. Intel. Hillsboro, OR. March 2, 2005. Given by Lab Director, Latanya Sweeney. (Slides, References and Abstract).

  • Paper in AAAI Spring Symposium entitled AI Technologies to Defeat Identity Theft Vulnerabilities. This paper demonstrates how information from on-line resumes can be automatically harvested in order to acquire fraudulent new credit cards. February 2005. Authored by Lab Director, Latanya Sweeney. (more)

  • Paper in AAAI Spring Symposium entitled Mining Images in Publicly-Available Cameras for Homeland Security. This paper describes a technology that tracks the number of people appearing in publicly-available webcams. February 2005. Authored by Lab Members: Latanya Sweeney and Ralph Gross. (more)

  • Paper in AAAI Spring Symposium entitled Technologies to Defeat Fraudulent Schemes Related to Email Requests. This paper describes a technology for tracking criminal relations behind scam spam. February 2005. Authored by Lab Members: Edoardo Airoldi, Bradley Malin, and Latanya Sweeney and Ralph Gross. (more)

  • Paper/Poster in AAAI Spring Symposium entitled Privacy-Preserving Bio-Terrorism Surveillance. This paper/poster describes a real-world application in which surveillance is performed with data that are provably sufficiently anonymized under HIPAA. More generally, data are provided on a sliding scale of identifiability termed "selective revelation." February 2005. Authored by Lab Director, Latanya Sweeney. (more)

  • Paper/Poster in AAAI Spring Symposium entitled Towards a Privacy-Preserving Watchlist. This paper/poster describes a key problem in homeland surveillance ("the watchlist problem") and examines two challenges that continue to make it an unsolved problem. February 2005. Authored by Lab Director, Latanya Sweeney. (more)

  • Lab Director, Latanya Sweeney, becomes member of the Program Committee for Modeling Decisions for Artificial Intelligence (MDAI) 2005. (more).

  • Paper in IEEE Transactions on Knowledge and Data Engineering (with Elaine Newton and Bradley Malin) appeared, entitled Preserving Privacy by De-identifying Facial Images. This paper provides an algorithm for provably de-identifying faces appearing in video while retaining many facial details. Uses k-anonymity. February 2005. Authored by Lab members: Elaine Newton, Latanya Sweeney, and Bradley Malin. (more)

    ...

  • Co-sponsor of a 2-day workshop, Privacy in D.A.T.A., held March 27-28, 2003 at CMU. The goal of the workshop is to introduce computer scientists to key problems in privacy in surveillance.

  • Latanya Sweeney, as Director of the Laboratory for International Data Privacy at Carnegie Mellon University, submitted public comments to HHS on the proposed modifications to the Privacy Rule (HTML, PDF). Submitted to HHS on 4/26/2002. For related links, see LIDAP's HIPPA page.


  • Data Privacy Lab in the news ... (see also what's new)

  • The Post-Gazette September 30, 2006. "Bits&Bytes: Wizzard Software scoops up Blast Podcast, Switchpod.com". (news link, project)
  • The Tartan September 18, 2006. "CMU researches Facebook privacy as site goes global". (news link, project)
  • New Scientist September 18, 2006. "Living online: The end of privacy?". (news link, project)
  • Baylor Business Review September 13, 2006. "CRM & Privacy: How much do companies need to know about their customers?". (news link, project)
  • Boston Phoenix and various affiliates around the USA, February 15, 2005, "Spying Eyes: America's Most Popular Search Engine Is Keeping Tabs On Us" (text)
  • ABC News, June 13, 2004, "University Web Site Watches Public Spies". (text)
  • CBS News, Associated Press, March 15, 2004, "Privacy Safeguards Quietly Killed". (text)
  • CNN, October 11, 2003, "Privacy researcher: Public Web cams troublesome". (text)
  • USA Today, August 25, 2003, "CameraWatch, Who watches the watchmen?". (text)
  • CBS News, Associated Press, November 4, 2002, "Germ Patrol: Like Never Before". (text)
  • Computer World, October 14, 2002, "Privacy Algorithms." (text)
  • Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, August 15, 2002, "Seeing profits in privacy, recent transplant launches firm to protect individual identities." (more)
  • Wall Street Journal, February 2001. Author Glen Simpson. Privacy of Census Data.
  • Newsday, November 21, 2000 Section: Health & Discovery, "When Medical Data Goes Public", pages C8-C10, Author Earl Lane (Washington Bureau), http://library.newsday.com/
  • Newsweek, October 16, 2000. "It Doesn't Take Much to Make You Stand Out".
  • Consumer Reports, August 2000, Section: Consumer Interest: Health and Medical Records Privacy. "Who knows your medical secrets?" pages 22-26. http://www.consumerreports.org
  • Federal Register, March and December 2000, Health Insurance Privacy and Portability Act (HIPPA).
  • Privacy Commissioner of Canada, Annual Report, 2000.
  • 20/20 Television News Magazine [20 second clip regarding pharmacy data]
  • National Journal's Technology Daily, July 14, 2000, "Senator predicts three-pronged medical privacy plan." (text)
  • New York Times, Feburary 16, 2000.
  • ZDNet, April 7, 1999, "Free speech and privacy forever." (text)
  • Los Angeles Times, February 8, 1999, "A new push is on for Patients Privacy Law." (text)


  • Related links



    Summer 2005 Data Privacy Lab [LIDAP@privacy.cs.cmu.edu]