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California begins country's strictest data privacy law Jan. 1. Host John Thomas Flynn talks what started it, who's affected and will citizens see a "data dividend" in their future?
A new technique to protect the privacy of participants in the 2020 Census could foster distrust between the Census Bureau and researchers if it results in too many inaccuracies, demographers warned officials Wednesday.
In today's Federal Newscast, Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington obtained hundreds of emails showing VA officials questioned the Mar-A-Lago crowd's influence on electronic health record modernization.
Krisztina Pusok, director of policy and research, American Consumer Institute, discusses how data collection works.
With cameras becoming ubiquitous, so are collections of people's faces. What about privacy, or even accuracy?
Census Bureau associate director John Abowd discussed the agencies methodology for maintaining anonymity on Federal Drive with Tom Temin.
Mark Groman, former senior White House advisor for privacy, tells CyberChat he believes incentives for data security have so far been wrong
To affect the most millions of people takes internet companies like Facebook. Yet the Government Accountability Office said the U.S. really doesn't have comprehensive internet privacy laws.
The National Institute of Standards and Technology is spearheading an initiative to help agencies and organizations fill in the holes when it comes to implementation of data privacy protections.
A GAO report found holes in CMS' systems for protecting private health data between entities.
Host John Gilroy will talk cloud computing with Van Risau and David Blakenhorn, executives at DLT Solutions. July 5, 2011
Alex Howard, Washington correspondent for O\'Reilly Media, shares the lessons learned from the International Open Government Data Conference.