U.S. government surveillance bubbled back up in headlines in recent weeks. Portugal's data protection authority, the National Data Protection Commission, halted transfers of data to the U.S. after complaints that census data were being sent back to the U.S. The same week, a U.S. Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court decision was published, in which it renewed a U.S. surveillance program even though it found some Federal Bureau of Investigation employees illegally accessed email data. This comes as the U.S. and EU try to hammer out a renewed data transfer agreement. April Falcon Doss, CIPP/E, CIPP/US, worked at the U.S. National Security Agency for 13 years. In 2017, Doss joined the U.S. Senate Select Committee on Intelligence for the Russia investigation. She also wrote a book, "Cyber Privacy: Who Has Your Data and Why You Should Care," and took a new job at Georgetown University Law Center. Host Jedidiah Bracy, CIPP, recently caught up with Doss to discuss the state of play of U.S. surveillance law, her new book, what she found out while investigating the 2016 presidential election, and what’s on the horizon with her new gig at Georgetown.
30 April 2021
April Doss on US surveillance, global data flows and Big Tech after the Russia investigation
Related stories
ISO updates standard on managing privacy compliance programs
Notes from the IAPP Canada: AI, managing data responsibly is top of mind
A view from DC: Don't mess up your employee privacy notice
Personal data defined? Ulrich Baumgartner on the implications of the CJEU's SRB ruling
Notes from the Asia-Pacific region: China's AI Plus initiative accelerates AI integration
This article is eligible for Continuing Professional Education credits. Please self-submit according to CPE policy guidelines.
