Submitted by: Harshvardhan Pandit --------------------------------- Bio I am a 3rd year PhD researcher with the ADAPT center at Trinity College Dublin. My primary interests like in legal compliance, provenance, and semantic web technologies. I’m quite interested in researching how to demonstrate legal requirements have been met through recorded provenance of activities, agreements, and planned changes to these. As legislations such as the GDPR come up, expressing privacy as a vocabulary becomes important, and a standardised approach for the same must be adopted. I am available online as ‘coolharsh55’ on Twitter and Github, my research (personal) website is https://harshp.com/research/. My PhD work is available online at https://openscience.adaptcentre.ie. --------------------------------- Your goals To participate in a discussion about the generation of standards or agreements or community efforts for expressed interests / use-cases around privacy vocabularies. I would also be keen to understand the overlap between research interests of various participants and the differing approaches towards solving common or related problems. --------------------------------- Workshop Goals * Agree on common problems and areas of interest * Discuss / agree interest in topic of workshop (privacy control / vocabulary) * Discuss / agree creation of resources - sharing / collaboration --------------------------------- Your interests Please select the rank-order (1 to 10) for the options you think are acceptable (i.e. you can live with it), where 1 is the most preferred, 2 the next best and so on... * Vocabularies to model privacy policies, regulations, and involved (business) processes: [ Ranked 3 ] * Identity management vocabularies: [ Don’t mind ] * Modeling personal data usage, processing, sharing, and tracking: [ Ranked 1 ] * Interlinking aspects of privacy and provenance: [ Ranked 1 ] * Modeling consent and making it transportable: [ Ranked 3 ] * New ways to put the user in control benefiting from semantic interoperability of policy information: [ Ranked 7 ] * Modeling permissions, obligations, and their scope: [ Ranked 3 ] * Reasoning about formally declared privacy policies: [ Don’t mind ] * Exploring links and synergies using Linked Data vocabularies in the context of related efforts: [ Don’t mind ] * Visualizations of data and policy information to help data self determination: [ Ranked 3 ] --------------------------------- Other Thoughts