Submitted by: Martin Kaltenboeck (CFO & Managing Partner SWC) --------------------------------- Bio I am from the the consortium of the the H2020 project Lynx - Building the Legal Knowledge Graph for Smart Compliance Services in Multilingual Europe (1). The main objective of Lynx is to create an ecosystem of smart cloud services to better manage compliance, based on a legal knowledge graph (LKG) which integrates and links heterogeneous compliance data sources including legislation, case law, standards, directives and regulations and other aspects. (1) http://lynx-project.eu (https://delicias.dia.fi.upm.es/lynx/) My name is Martin Kaltenböck, CFO and Managing Partner of Semantic Web Company, SWC (2) providing software and services for semantic data- and information management and linked (open) data by mainly using its core product PoolParty Semantic Suite (3) that - beside others - allows to model and publish controlled vocabularies (taxonomies, thesauri, ontologies...) as Linked (Open) Data. (1) http://lynx-project.eu (https://delicias.dia.fi.upm.es/lynx/) (2) https://www.semantic-web.com (4) https://www.poolparty.biz --------------------------------- Your goals Presenting Lynx and mainly learning about vocabularies in legal domain and privacy, but also to learn to know others working on this topic. --------------------------------- Workshop Goals Clear specified next steps for a community or even working group on the topic; committed people that would like to follow up and work on this; overview on existing vocabs and/or trends for these in legal domain. --------------------------------- 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 1 ] * Identity management vocabularies: [ Ranked 3 ] * Modeling personal data usage, processing, sharing, and tracking: [ Ranked 3 ] * Interlinking aspects of privacy and provenance: [ Ranked 2 ] * Modeling consent and making it transportable: [ Ranked 3 ] * New ways to put the user in control benefiting from semantic interoperability of policy information: [ Ranked 2 ] * Modeling permissions, obligations, and their scope: [ Ranked 2 ] * Reasoning about formally declared privacy policies: [ Ranked 4 ] * Exploring links and synergies using Linked Data vocabularies in the context of related efforts: [ Ranked 2 ] * Visualizations of data and policy information to help data self determination: [ Ranked 4 ] --------------------------------- Other Thoughts n/a