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The IAPP’s US State Privacy Legislation Tracker consists of proposed and enacted comprehensive state privacy bills from across the U.S.
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Director of the Office for Civil Rights, U.S. Department of Health & Human Services
Former chief business officer Google [X], author, “Solve for Happy: Engineer Your Path to Joy” & and “Scary Smart: The Future of Artificial Intelligence and How You Can Save Our World”
Director, Women’s Law & Public Policy Fellowship; Leadership & Advocacy for Women in Africa Program; Visiting Professor of Law, Georgetown Law
President & CEO, Center for Democracy & Technology
Staff Writer, The New Yorker; Author of “Trick Mirror”
Spotlight Stage
Chair of the Physician Leadership Council, Texas Health Resources, a member of the Texas Health Resources Board of Directors
Editor, Artist, Author of Hieroglyph: Stories and Visions for a Better Future
Vice President & Chief Knowledge Officer, IAPP
General Counsel, Office of the National Cyber Director
Author of Take Us to Your Chief
Managing Partner, Hintze Law
Strategy Advisor for Strategy, Office of the National Cyber Director (ONCD)
Technical Director, National Cyber Security Centre
Group VP, Global CPO, Walgreens Boots Alliance
CPO, Rite Aid Corporation
Partner, Cybersecurity & Data Privacy; Leader, Global Data Innovation & AdTech, Mayer Brown
Chair, Cyber Safety Review Board; Under Secretary for Policy, Department of Homeland Security
Commissioner, U.S. Federal Trade Commission
VP of US Policy, Future of Privacy Forum
Dr. Chhutani is an Obstetrician/Gynecologist in Dallas, Texas. Originally from Chicago, she has been practicing in Dallas since January of 2007. She is currently the Chair of the Physician Leadership Council at Texas Health Resources, a member of the Texas Health Resources Board of Directors, and is the Immediate Past President of the medical staff at Texas Health Dallas. In addition to her administrative roles, she actively practices general obstetrics and gynecology in a single specialty group practice,Gyn/Ob Associates. She is currently working on a Masters of Jurisprudence in Healthcare Law and Policy through Texas A&M School of Law to augment her legal literacy as she advocates for women’s healthcare rights.
Kathryn Cramer is a writer, editor, and artist who lives in Westport, N.Y. She is a graduate student in complex systems and data science at the University of Vermont. During her career as a science fiction anthologist, she won World Fantasy Award and the Most Significant Futures Works Award, given by the Association of Professional Futurists. In 2020, she completed a master of design degree in strategic foresight and innovation at OCAD University in Toronto. Her current research concerns emulating personalities with Open AI’s GPT-3, a large language model AI system.
Caitlin Fennessy is vice president and chief knowledge officer at the International Association of Privacy Professionals. In this role, she guides the strategic development of IAPP research, publications, communications, and programming. Prior to joining the IAPP, Fennessy was the Privacy Shield Director at the U.S. International Trade Administration, where she spent 10 years working on international privacy and cross-border data flow policy issues. She also served as an adjunct professor of international privacy law at the University of Maine School of Law and University of New Hampshire School of Law. She has a master’s degree in public affairs from Princeton University and a bachelor’s degree in social policy from Northwestern University.
Melanie Fontes Rainer serves as director of the Office for Civil Rights at the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services. She leads the Department’s enforcement of federal civil rights and privacy laws and directs related policy and strategic initiatives.
Previously, Rainer served as counselor to Health & Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra, providing strategy guidance to the secretary on issues pertaining to civil rights, patient privacy, reproductive health, the Affordable Care Act (ACA), competition in healthcare, equity, and the private insurance market. In this role, she led the implementation of the bipartisan No Surprises Act, helping to increase transparency in medical billing and save consumers money. She also served as the secretary’s designee on the White House Competition Council leading cross-cutting Department work and a whole-of-Government approach on price transparency, costs, and competition to benefit American consumers.
Before joining the Biden-Harris Administration, Rainer served as the special assistant to the U.S. attorney general and chief health care advisor at the California Department of Justice, where she led a national team to save the Affordable Care Act and protect healthcare coverage for over 133 million Americans. During this time, she facilitated the creation of a new office, Health Care Rights and Access, devoted to proactively advancing laws pertaining to health care civil rights, privacy, competition, and consumer protection. Rainer also worked on multiple groundbreaking settlements, such as the $575 million historic settlement against one of the largest health systems in California to increase competition and consumer choice in the state and multiple bipartisan settlements to address the national opioid epidemic.
Rainer previously served in the U.S. Senate as a senior aide and women’s policy director to Sen. Patty Murray on the Health, Education, Labor and Pensions and the Budget Committees. In these roles, she helped pass several transformative health care laws, including the 21st Century Cures Act, Every Student Succeeds Act, and the Justice for Victims of Trafficking Act, among other laws, and led the Senate’s work on the Affordable Care Act, reproductive rights, and gender equity.
Rainer has a law degree from the University of Arizona, a master’s degree in mathematics education from the City University of New York/Brooklyn College, and a bachelor’s degree in managerial economics from the University of Arizona.
Mo Gawdat is the former chief business officer of Google [X], host of the popular podcast “Slo Mo: A Podcast with Mo Gawdat,” author of the international bestselling books “Solve for Happy” and “Scary Smart,” and founder of One Billion Happy.
After a 30-year career in tech and serving as chief business officer at Google [X], Google’s “moonshot factory” of innovation, Gawdat has made happiness his primary topic of research, diving deeply into literature and conversing on the topic with some of the wisest people in the world.
In 2014, motivated by the tragic loss of his son, Ali, Gawdat began pouring his findings into his international bestselling book, “Solve for Happy: Engineer Your Path to Joy.” His mission to help one billion people become happier, #OneBillionHappy, is his moonshot attempt to honor Ali by spreading the message that happiness can be learned and shared to one billion people.
In 2020, Gawdat launched his chart-topping podcast, Slo Mo: A Podcast with Mo Gawdat, a weekly series of extraordinary interviews that explores the profound questions and obstacles we all face in the pursuit of purpose and happiness in our lives. His latest book is “Scary Smart: The Future of Artificial Intelligence and How You Can Save Our World,” a roadmap detailing how humanity can ensure a symbiotic coexistence with AI when it inevitably becomes a billion times smarter than we are.
His upcoming book, “That Little Voice in Your Head,” will release in spring 2022.
Jim Halpert advises clients on compliance and risk management strategies for transactions relating to transnational, federal and state security and privacy regulations, industry best practices and self-regulatory initiatives. He has represented clients in major security and privacy cases in the federal courts and before the Federal Trade Commission.
Halpert represents companies on a broad range of data management issues, including cyber and data security, cloud agreements, managing privacy class action risks, trans-national data flows, navigating difficult conflicts between foreign privacy laws and U.S. compliance obligations, regulation of advertising and marketing practices, healthcare and financial privacy, children’s and student privacy, privacy regulation of communications media, employee data, due diligence in sales of corporate assets, records management and responses to government surveillance requests. He has extensive experience with European, Asian and Latin American privacy regimes, and regularly leads teams across DLA Piper’s global network advising on complex international security and privacy matters.
Drew Hayden Taylor has done many things in his 30-year career – most of which he is proud of. An Ojibway from the Curve Lake First Nations in Ontario, he has worn many hats in his literary career, from performing stand-up comedy at the Kennedy Center in Washington D.C., to being artistic director of Canada’s premiere Native theatre company, Native Earth Performing Arts.
Taylor has been an award-winning playwright, a journalist/columnist (appearing regularly in several Canadian newspapers and magazines), short-story writer, novelist, television scriptwriter, and has worked on numerous documentaries exploring the Native experience. Most notably as a filmmaker, he wrote and directed “Redskins, Trickster and Puppy Stew,” a documentary on Native humor for the National Film Board of Canada, and for CBC, co-created “Searching for Winnitou,” an exploration of Germany’s fascination with North American indigenous culture.
As the author of more than 20 plays, Taylor has been part of what he refers to as the contemporary native literary renascence . He has published 33 books including 2010’s “Motorcycles and Sweetgrass,” a finalist for the Governor General’s Award for Fiction.
Through many of his non-fiction books, from the four-volume set titled “Funny, You Don’t Look Like One” to the “Me Funny, Me Sexy, Me Artsy” series, Taylor has tried to educate and inform the world about issues that reflect, celebrate, and interfere in the lives of Canada’s First Nations.
Over the last few years, Taylor has served as writer-in-residence at the Berton House in Dawson City Yukon, the University of Michigan, the University of Western Ontario, University of Luneburg (Germany), Ryerson University, Wilfrid Laurier, as well as a host of Canadian theatre companies i.e. Cahoots theatre, Blyth Theatre etc. He is the winner of several writing awards including the Floyd S. Chalmers Award, Dora Mavor Moore Award and the Canadian Author’s Literary Award. He has also been the recipient of many other varied honors; an honorary doctorate of laws from Mount Allison University, a plaque of honor on the Peterborough Walk of Fame, the Queen Elizabeth Diamond Jubilee Award, Ontario Premier’s Award for Creative Arts and Design, and Victoria Martyn Lynch-Staunton Award for Outstanding Artistic Achievement in Theatre, to name a few.
Oddly enough, the thing his mother was most proud of was his ability to make spaghetti from scratch.
Susan Lyon-Hintze is partner and founder of Hintze Law PLLC, a law firm focused exclusively on privacy and security law matters. Ms. Lyon-Hintze counsels clients from startups to large tech and e-commerce companies on international data protection issues. Her work includes defending companies on matters before the FTC and other regulators, providing strategic counsel to companies and trade associations on industry standards and regulatory and legislative policy, conducting privacy due diligence in corporate transactions, helping clients build and maintain their privacy and security programs, conducting privacy reviews, and leading breach response.
Lyon-Hintze formerly served as in-house privacy counsel with Microsoft Corp. Prior to Microsoft, she was lead privacy counsel at Dell, Inc. Her last big law job was co-chair of Cooley’s privacy and security group. Ms. Lyon-Hintze is a long-time member of the International Association of Privacy Professionals, a member of IAPP’s Training Advisory Board, and an active Advisory Board Member to the American Law Institute’s Restatement Third on Information Privacy Principles.
Samantha Jones serves as Strategy Advisor for Strategy at the Office of the National Cyber Director (ONCD), supporting the office’s work on strategic planning, critical infrastructure cybersecurity, and emerging technologies.
Ms. Jones joins the ONCD on detail from the Department of Homeland Security as a cyber program manager for the US Coast Guard, where she led the development and maturation of the Service’s cyber mission forces. She developed the Coast Guard’s current Cyber Strategic Outlook for Commandant signature, published in August, 2021, and acted as the implementation lead for the third line of effort in the strategy – “Operate In and Through Cyberspace”. Ms. Jones brings management consulting experience working with DHS and DOD clients to support strategy development, cyber capability deployment and program management, training and workforce management, organizational transformation, and process improvement.
Ms. Jones grew up in Bethesda, Maryland and studied Logistics and Supply Chain Management at the University of Maryland.
Ian Levy took up the post of technical director of the National Cyber Security Centre on October 3, 2016, prior to which he was technical director of Cyber Security and Resilience at GCHQ.
As the U.K. government’s “chief cyber security geek,” Ian leads on developing defenses to manage cyber threats and fostering technical innovation to find undiscovered solutions to protect the U.K. from large-scale cyberattacks and day-to-day malicious cyber activity.
Levy has been instrumental in crafting fundamental changes to the U.K.’s strategy on cyber security. His national scale approach to combating cyber threats is borne out of a deep understanding of the unique challenges posed by global interconnectivity and the opportunities to do things differently. Levy was awarded a doctorate in computer science from Warwick University.
Lara Liss, CIPP/US, is group vice president, global chief privacy officer at Walgreens Boots Alliance, is an integrated healthcare, pharmacy and retail company serving millions of customers and patients every day. She is a seasoned in-house attorney and compliance professional with experience in privacy, data security and health care. She has led global privacy compliance and legal teams at two Fortune 100 companies and a domestic health care system. Liss’ practice includes new and emerging areas of privacy law such artificial intelligence, biometrics, clinical trials, pharmacogenomics and developing technologies such as drones for retail. She earned a law degree and a master’s degree in public policy from the University of Michigan, a bachelor’s degree in American studies from Northwestern University, and is a Certified Information Privacy Professional-US. She is a currently completing her executive MBA at Northwestern University’s Kellogg School of Management.
Jill C. Morrison is the executive director of the Women’s Law and Public Policy Fellowship Program (WLPPFP), and Leadership and Advocacy for Women in Africa (LAWA) Program. She also teaches the LAWA seminar, where each of the Master of Laws candidates develops a thesis focusing on a particular woman’s human rights issue. She also works with law students, supervising the writing requirement and teaching a seminar on reproductive justice. Additionally, Morrison co-teaches “The First Thousand Days,” a global health law course focusing on laws and policies impacting the developmental period from a fetus’s conception through birth until the age of two. She also worked with a group of students to develop a reproductive justice curriculum for Georgetown’s Street Law program.
Morrison returned to WLPPFP in 2012 after 13 years at the National Women’s Law Center, where she was a 1998-1999 fellow. At the center, she developed legal theories to protect and advance access to comprehensive reproductive health services, and to protect the rights of vulnerable pregnant and parenting women.
Prior to joining the center, Morrison served as a judicial clerk to the Honorable Sterling Johnson Jr., Eastern District of New York. She also spent a year at the Women’s Law Project as a Philadelphia Bar Foundation Fellow, and in private practice with Ballard, Spahr, Andrews & Ingersoll. At Yale Law School, Jill was an editor of the Yale Journal of Law and Feminism, Director of the Green Haven Prison Project, and President of the Black Law Students’ Association. She received her undergraduate degree in Journalism from Rutgers University, and also holds a master of laws degree in global health law from Georgetown University Law Center.
Morrison previously served on the National Board of If/When/How: Lawyering for Reproductive Justice. She is currently on the steering committee of the District of Columbia Bar Association’s International Law Community, and co-chairs the immigration and human rights subcommittee.
A pharmacist licensed in three states Palmer has spent over 35 years working in Retail Pharmacy in a variety of positions including store, field, and corporate leadership roles. Throughout his Rite Aid career Palmer has worked in corporate roles in the accounting department, loss prevention, and compliance. Currently the chief privacy officer for Rite Aid Corporation he has also held previous leadership roles that included compliance and internal audit. A 1989 graduate of the University of Cincinnati College of Pharmacy, Palmer is passionate about the Pharmacy profession and the value pharmacy brings to healthcare. He is a member of the American Society for Pharmacy Law, The Society for Corporate Compliance and Ethics, The Healthcare Compliance Association, and the International Association of Privacy Professionals. He holds certifications in Compliance and Ethics as well as being a Certified Information Privacy Professional (CIPP-US).
Alexandra Reeve Givens is president and CEO of the Center for Democracy and Technology and an advocate for using technology to increase equality, amplify voices, and promote human rights. At CDT, she leads a diverse team that is putting democracy and individual rights at the center of the digital revolution.
Prior to joining CDT, Givens served as the founding executive director of the Institute for Technology Law & Policy at Georgetown Law, where she set the institute’s research agenda, and directed its public convenings, curricular activities, strategic development, and stakeholder engagement. While at Georgetown, Givens also taught the two foundation seminars for Georgetown Law’s Tech Law Scholars Program, inviting law students to develop a concentration in technology law and policy, and was a founding leader of the university’s Initiative on Tech & Society.
Givens previously served as chief counsel for IP and antitrust on the Senate Judiciary Committee. She developed legislative and oversight strategy on matters including patent reform, federal trade secrets legislation, net neutrality, First Amendment issues surrounding online speech, access to medicines, and oversight of mergers and antitrust policy. Givens began her career as a litigator at Cravath, Swaine & Moore in New York City, and taught for five years as an adjunct professor at Columbia University School of Law.
Givens serves on the board of the Christopher & Dana Reeve Foundation and is a mayoral appointee on D.C.’s Innovation and Technology Inclusion Council. She holds a bachelor’s degree from Yale University and a law degree. from Columbia University School of Law. You can find her on Twitter and LinkedIn.
Dominique Shelton Leipzig, CIPP/US, is a partner in Mayer Brown’s Los Angeles office and a member of the cybersecurity and data privacy practice. She serves as the lead for the global data innovation and adtech privacy and data management practices. She is one of the country’s top privacy and data lawyers, and her considerable experience helps clients navigate the evolving legal compliance issues related to privacy and data security for their digital data initiatives.
With more than 30 years of experience, she provides strategic privacy and cyber-preparedness compliance advice, and defends, counsels and represents companies on privacy, global data security compliance, data breaches and investigations. Her experience includes defending companies under investigation by the Federal Trade Commission, attorneys general offices and other regulatory and government authorities. She advises companies on best practices in privacy, cybersecurity, data, mobile, cloud storage, adtech privacy, Internet of Things and other areas of regulatory compliance.
Leipzig frequently conducts trainings for senior leadership, corporate boards and audit committees regarding risk identification and mitigation in the areas of privacy and cyber.
Recognized as a “Woman Leader in Tech Law” by The Recorder and as one of the most influential lawyers in digital media and e-commerce law by the Los Angeles Business Journal, she has deep experience advising publicly traded and privately held companies in healthcare and med tech, media, entertainment, e-commerce, financial services and other industries. She leads companies in legal assessments of data security, cyber preparedness and compliance with such regulations as the California Confidentiality of Medical Information Act (CMIA), HIPAA, the Video Privacy Protection Act (VPPA), the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA), California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) and the NIST Cybersecurity Framework.
Robert Silvers was confirmed by the Senate as the undersecretary for policy on August 5, 2021. He is responsible for driving policy and implementation plans across all of DHS’s missions, including counterterrorism; cybersecurity, infrastructure security, and resilience; border security and immigration; international affairs; and trade and economic security.
Silvers previously served in the Department of Homeland Security during the Obama-Biden Administration as assistant secretary for cyber policy. In that role he oversaw private sector engagement, federal government incident response, and diplomatic outreach pertaining to cybersecurity and emerging technology. Silvers also previously served as DHS’s deputy chief of staff, managing execution of policy and operational priorities across the entire department.
Prior to his appointment, Silvers was a partner at the law firm Paul Hastings LLP, where his practice focused on cybersecurity and data privacy, government security review of foreign investments, and investigations and litigation at the intersection of law and national security. After graduating law school, he clerked for Judge Kim McLane Wardlaw of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit.
Mr. Silvers holds a law degree from New York University School of Law and a bachelor’s degree from the University of Pennsylvania. He taught as an adjunct professor in the master’s in cybersecurity risk and strategy program co-offered by the NYU Law School and NYU Tandon School of Engineering. A New York City native, he lives in Washington, D.C. with his wife and their two children.
Rebecca Kelly Slaughter was sworn in as a Federal Trade Commissioner on May 2, 2018.
Slaughter brings to the commission more than a decade of experience in competition, privacy, and consumer protection. Her role is to build consensus for a progressive vision and advocate for consumers and workers. Slaughter believes that the FTC’s dual missions of promoting competition and protecting consumers are complementary, and she is mindful that enforcement of rulemaking in one arena can have far-reaching implications for the other.
A proponent of greater resources, transparency, and comprehensive use of the FTC’s authorities, Slaughter is outspoken about the growing threats to competition and the broad abuse of consumers’ data. Targeted merger retrospectives, corrective enforcement, and expansion of the commission’s rulemaking authorities are among the approaches that she has championed during her time at the FTC. Along with advocating for consumers, particularly those traditionally underrepresented and marginalized, Slaughter strongly supports working families and work-life balance.
Before joining the FTC, Slaughter served as chief counsel to Senator Charles Schumer of New York, the current Senate majority leader. She was an associate in the Washington D.C. office of Sidley Austin LLP before entering federal service.
Ms. Slaughter received her bachelor’s in anthropology magna cum laude from Yale University and her J.D. from Yale Law School, where she served as an editor on the Yale Law Journal. She lives in Maryland with her husband and their four children.
Amie Stepanovich is a nationally recognized expert in domestic surveillance, cybersecurity, and privacy law. She was most recently the executive director for the Silicon Flatirons Center for Law, Technology, and Entrepreneurship at Colorado Law.
Stepanovich previously served as U.S. policy manager and global policy counsel at Access Now in Washington, D.C., where she worked to protect human rights through law and policy involving technologies and their use. Prior to that, she was the director of the Domestic Surveillance Project at the Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC). She has testified in both the U.S. Senate and the House of Representatives, and before the German and Australian Parliaments.
She serves as a board member to the Internet Education Foundation and as an advisory board member to the Electronic Privacy Information Center. She is also on the curriculum council for Data Protocol. In 2014, Stepanovich was named in Forbes Magazine’s 30 Under 30 Leaders in Law and Policy.
Jia Tolentino is a staff writer at the New Yorker and the author of the essay collection “Trick Mirror,” an instant New York Times bestseller that has since been translated into twelve languages. Formerly, she was the deputy editor at Jezebel and a contributing editor at the Hairpin. She grew up in Texas, received her undergraduate degree at the University of Virginia, and got her MFA in fiction from the University of Michigan. Her work has also appeared in the New York Times Magazine and Pitchfork, among other places.
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