Accomplishments and learning to cook (3:30)
Chicago, Illinois - Gary, Indiana - parents valued education (4:50)
Mother’s reading of a book led to initial interest in data privacy issues (5:30)
Personal interest and “hobby” is now a career (6:00)
The Nazi’s practices gave rise to the undergirding principles of the GDPR - General Data Protection Regulation (7:00)
GPDR – EU’s first law that could impose large monetary fines on corporations (7:30)
Privacy as a fundamental right – EU and the US (7:55)
More details about GPDR’s connection to events of World War II (9:00)
High school or college coursework and connections with current events (10:10)
Drama courses and the significant impact on life and career (11:40)
“A right to be forgotten” (13:10)
The GDPR covers individuals when they are in the EU (13:25)
An individual’s GDPR rights travel with their data (13:50)
What should students learn about data privacy? (14:50)
At what age should students learn about data privacy? (16:10)
Any tips for parents? (16:20)
The need for educators to be aware of data privacy issues (17:55)
Avoid the co-mingling of your personal and professional work online (18:45)
Use multiple browsers, avoid clicking on links, keep software up to date, reboot your computer regularly (19:20)
Passwords, password managers (20:30)
FIDO – accessing information without passwords (22:05)
Differentiating awareness, information, and detail based on client knowledge and need (24:10)
Collect only the data you need (24:45)
A teacher who could demystify for their students (26:10)
Attention commands attention (26:25)
Debbie’s journey to become the Data Diva (27:25)
Speaking in the Big Mac room (28:20)
The law follows the technology (29:45)
Apple’s iOS14 – impact on advertising (30:30)
Apps reading your clipboard, including passwords (31:10)
Debbie’s mentors and colleagues - Dawid Jacobs, Pia Tesdorf, Emma Lindley (33:00)
Fake identities, digital twin, bias in algorithms (33:40)
How educational organizations be prepared for the next digital change (35:40)
Temperature data, archived information, schools and businesses, transparency (36:00)
Facial recognition, bias, false positives, mistaken identity (37:00)
Computers only do what the programmers tell the computer to do, industry standards (38:40)
People, not statistics – the ripple effects of error rates (39:40)
Favorite teacher -high school drama (40:10)
Communicate, convey information, and learn how to move through the world (40:30)
The Right to Privacy, by Ellen Alderman and Caroline Kennedy
Music for Lead. Learn. Change. is Sweet Adrenaline by Delicate Beats
Podcast cover art is a view from Brunnkogel (mountaintop) over the mountains of the Salzkammergut in Austria, courtesy of photographer Simon Berger, published on www.unsplash.com.
Professional Association of Georgia Educators
Instagram - lead.learn.change