Privacy Law, Cyber Governance and AI Forum
Privacy obligations and data breach implications are uppermost on the governance concerns of all organisations. This short program will assist. Walk away with crucial practical knowledge for effective compliance strategies and protection which is just what you need. Keep up with the obligations and liabilities of privacy law. WEB248NZA02
Description
Attend and earn 3 CPD hours
Chair: Louisa Joblin, Special Counsel, Duncan Cotterill
2.00pm to 3.00pm Regulatory Framework: From The Privacy Act 2020, Privacy Impact Assessments, and Incident Response and Breach Notifications
- Practical insights into compliance strategies
- Data governance and risk management
- The role of in-house counsel as champion of a culture of cybersecurity resilience within the organisation
- What the board and senior management need to know about privacy
Presented by Dr Maria Pozza, Director and Principal Lawyer, Gravity
3.00pm to 4.00pm Cyber Governance: A Legal Perspective and Best Practices
- Cybersecurity controls
- Incident response
- Digital evidence
- Latest advancements in document analysis and review tools
- Keeping your data secure, lessons from the increasing landscape targeting New Zealand law firms
Presented by Campbell McKenzie, Director, Incident Response Solutions (Digital Forensic Evidence, Cyber Security and Privacy)
4.00pm to 4.15pm Break
4.15pm to 5.15pm AI Governance: How Does the Advent of AI Regulation Impact Your Privacy Program?
- Growth area
- Recent developments
- The future of privacy law
Presented by Campbell Featherstone, Partner, Dentons
Learning Objectives:
- Gain practical insights into compliance strategies under The Privacy Act 2020, including Privacy Impact Assessments and Incident Response/Breach Notifications, to effectively manage data privacy risks within your organization
- Understand the implications of AI regulation on privacy matters and learn how to navigate recent developments in AI governance, enabling you to integrate AI technologies responsibly while ensuring compliance with privacy laws
- Acquire best practices in cybersecurity controls, incident response, and digital evidence handling from a legal perspective, equipping you with the knowledge to enhance your organization's cybersecurity posture and effectively respond to cyber threats
Presenters
Louisa Joblin
Louisa specialises in data protection and privacy law, advising clients on all their privacy concerns. As a privacy specialist, Louisa focuses on privacy protection and compliance, advising clients about the requirements of the Privacy Act 2020, privacy documentation and procedure, and how to respond to actual and suspected privacy breaches. Louisa is regularly engaged to advise clients facing a data incident or privacy breach, and has experience acting for both individuals whose privacy has been interfered with and agencies handling personal information who may not have met their privacy protection obligations. Louisa also specialises in not-for-profit law. As a not-for-profit specialist, Louisa works with a wide variety of not-for-profit organisations, advising about modernisation and restructuring, governance, voting procedures, and complex member rights disputes.
Dr Maria Pozza
Dr Pozza is the Director and Principal lawyer of Gravity Lawyers. Her expertise includes: Commercial international space law, international military space law, domestic legislative frameworks over military and commercial uses in space as well as international law space law dealing with armed conflict and aggressive uses. She provides expertise in legal and technical frameworks concerning cybersecurity and IT, Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs), and technology laws. She has been the course coordinator for the University of Victoria’s Cyber Security and International Relations, as well as a lecturer for the International Relations course. As a prolific publisher, Dr Pozza has edited and published a book on Risk Management in Outer Space Activities – An Australian and New Zealand Perspective, as part of her Book Series titled Space Law and Policy. She has been involved in the development of numerous space law publications that range from academic articles, professional publications, guidance materials, and books. Dr Pozza has supervised at master’s level and is currently supervising at the PhD level with the University of Otago. Her expertise on international and national space law, is often called upon by a wide range of domestic and international clients and institutions.
Campbell McKenzie
Campbell is the Founder and Director of Incident Response Solutions Limited, providing forensic, cyber security and crisis management services. Campbell was previously a Director at PwC New Zealand (12 years) and led PwC's national "forensic technology" practice, and the Auckland "cyber security" practice, a combined team of 11 expert staff. Prior to PwC, Campbell was a founding member of NZ Police's Electronic Crime Laboratory (4.5 years) and as an expert witness, he specialises in electronic investigations, cybercrime incident response and eDiscovery matters. He is recognised by the District and High Courts of New Zealand as a forensic technology expert and has also been appointed as an independent expert by the High Court. Campbell understands how critical it is for law firms to mitigate the cyber risks they face. Therefore in 2020, Incident Response Solutions published the "Cyber Security Guide for NZ Law Firms", a contextual resource to assist lawyers and law firms manage their cyber security risk.
Campbell Featherstone
Campbell is a partner in Dentons Wellington’s corporate and commercial team. He provides advice on all corporate and commercial matters including procurement projects, privacy, IT agreements (including SaaS, agile and waterfall software development, and traditional licensing), IP licensing and consumer and marketing law compliance. In doing so, he is frequently engaged to assist his clients to draft, negotiate and advise on complex commercial arrangements – often with multiple moving parts. He has significant international experience, having previously worked in the UK and the Middle East before returning to New Zealand in 2018, and advises clients based the world over. As a result, he has been exposed to many different drafting and negotiating styles and strategies.