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Jenna Habayeb

Chief Marketing Officer
IPSY

Jenna Habayeb is the Chief Marketing Officer of IPSY, the largest beauty membership in the world, home to sample-size beauty subscription Glam Bag, full-size beauty subscription BoxyCharm, celeb-curated collection Icon Box, and personal care brand Refreshments. 

Jenna Habayeb

Chief Marketing Officer
IPSY

Jenna Habayeb

Chief Marketing Officer
IPSY

Jenna Habayeb is the Chief Marketing Officer of IPSY, the largest beauty membership in the world, home to sample-size beauty subscription Glam Bag, full-size beauty subscription BoxyCharm, celeb-curated collection Icon Box, and personal care brand Refreshments. 

Jenna focuses on driving home IPSY’s mission of inspiring everyone to express their unique beauty. She concentrates on uniting three core areas: community, content & commerce, with the goal of creating the ultimate beauty innovation platform that allows people to express themselves freely, get access to personalized beauty that’s right for them and create deep connections with our brands and community.

    Since Jenna joined, she has led some of the key initiatives that have helped IPSY grow immensely including, rebranding IPSY and scaling the portfolio, launching Refreshments personal care brand, managing the acquisition & integration of BoxyCharm, launching IPSY’s corporate social responsibility arm - IPSY Impact. She has also helped supercharge IPSY’s social media and creator initiatives bringing on ambassadors like Ciara, Khloe Kardashian, Alicia Keys, Halsey, Addison Rae and more.

    Jenna has been recognized as one of Forbes Top 50 Entrepreneurial CMOs and one of the Top 100 Women in Business by DiversityFirst in 2022. Her contribution has also led to many other awards and recognitions for BFA including experiential, social impact, personalization and product awards.  

    She has also led marketing initiatives for beloved brands including bareMinerals, bebe, Burger King, TABASCO, 7 for all Mankind, and Splendid over her career. With experience on both the agency and brand side, Jenna brings a deep knowledge on digital first thinking.

     

    Rich Sorkin

    CEO and Co-founder
    Jupiter Intelligence

    Jupiter Intelligence™ is the trusted leader in physical climate risk analytics for resiliency planning, risk management and disclosure. Jupiter’s customers include five percent of the world’s largest enterprises, many companies within the Global 2000, the U.S. Department of Defense, and public sector authorities in jurisdictions around the world. Its analytics have been adopted by at least one of the world’s five largest entities in asset management, banking, chemicals, insurance, oil and gas, minerals and mining, electric utilities, and construction.

    Rich Sorkin

    CEO and Co-founder
    Jupiter Intelligence

    Rich Sorkin

    CEO and Co-founder
    Jupiter Intelligence

    Jupiter Intelligence™ is the trusted leader in physical climate risk analytics for resiliency planning, risk management and disclosure. Jupiter’s customers include five percent of the world’s largest enterprises, many companies within the Global 2000, the U.S. Department of Defense, and public sector authorities in jurisdictions around the world. Its analytics have been adopted by at least one of the world’s five largest entities in asset management, banking, chemicals, insurance, oil and gas, minerals and mining, electric utilities, and construction.

    The company is led by veterans of startups and global corporations, machine learning and satellite pioneers, and a Nobel Prize winner. The team includes scientists from NOAA, the National Science Foundation and the world’s leading universities.  

    In Mr. Sorkin’s three-decade-long career as a Silicon Valley serial entrepreneur, executive, advisor, board member and investor, he has led breakthrough companies in numerous industries. Sorkin focuses on commercializing transformative technologies, with a significant concentration on financial services, energy, media, politics, and the environment.

    A cofounder of multiple startups, Sorkin is the former Chair & CEO of Zip2, an Internet 1.0 company providing analytics and visualization of geospatial data, acquired by HP. He was president of Kaggle prior to its acquisition by Google, leading the introduction of big data predictive analytics into the enterprise market. 

    Sorkin began his career at NASA and Bain & Company. He helped initiate coverage of the supercomputer industry at Goldman Sachs and ran the Sound Blaster business at Creative Labs during the time it gained market dominance, growing revenues from under $100M to close to $1 billion.

    Sorkin graduated from Yale University, where he was a research assistant to Nobel Laureate William Nordhaus, and the Stanford Graduate School of Business, where he was a Lockheed Scholar. He has served as a Board Member of public companies, private firms, the Yale University Development Board, and several non-profit organizations.

    This roundtable discussion will explore how organizations can leverage privacy-enhancing technologies to meet the requirements of data protection laws. We will discuss the potential benefits of using encryption, tokenization, pseudonymization, and data minimization to ensure compliance with these regulations. We will also discuss the challenges of implementing such technologies and explore potential solutions. This roundtable aims to identify best practices for organizations to use privacy-enhancing technologies to ensure compliance with data protection laws. 

    Author:

    David Silva

    David William Silva is a Ph.D computer scientist. He is responsible for translating business strategies and objectives into efficient, user-friendly, secure, and privacy-preserving data-centric solutions to enable organizations to extract maximum value from data correctly. David started his career as a Software Engineer focused on web services and agile software development. This experience led him to be involved with several projects, from startups to government and large corporations in many different fields. After 17 years of conducting R&D in Brazil, David moved to the US to engage in scientific research applied to a global industry of security and privacy, which has been his focus for the past nine years.

    David Silva

    David William Silva is a Ph.D computer scientist. He is responsible for translating business strategies and objectives into efficient, user-friendly, secure, and privacy-preserving data-centric solutions to enable organizations to extract maximum value from data correctly. David started his career as a Software Engineer focused on web services and agile software development. This experience led him to be involved with several projects, from startups to government and large corporations in many different fields. After 17 years of conducting R&D in Brazil, David moved to the US to engage in scientific research applied to a global industry of security and privacy, which has been his focus for the past nine years.

    This presentation will focus on how PETs relate to data protection law and identifying potential areas for PETs implementation and how to do so effectively. This will follow into a focus on the future direction of PETs maturity and standardisation efforts.

    Author:

    Clara Clark Nevola

    Group Manager (Technology)
    Information Commissioner's Office (ICO)

    Clara Clark Nevola

    Group Manager (Technology)
    Information Commissioner's Office (ICO)
     

    Nick Patterson

    Senior Policy Advisor
    ICO

    Nick Patterson

    Senior Policy Advisor
    ICO

    Nick Patterson

    Senior Policy Advisor
    ICO
     

    Nick Patterson

    Senior Policy Officer, Innovation Hub - Technology & Innovation Service
    ICO

    Nick Patterson

    Senior Policy Officer, Innovation Hub - Technology & Innovation Service
    ICO

    Nick Patterson

    Senior Policy Officer, Innovation Hub - Technology & Innovation Service
    ICO

    PETs have the potential to unlock trustworthy data-driven innovation across sectors. However, there remain challenges to their adoption including regulatory challenges, technical expertise and how to embed them in good organisational practice. In this session, the Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO), the Royal Society and the Centre for Data Ethics and Innovation (CDEI) invite you to join a discussion on the challenges to lowering barriers to PETs adoption.

    Attendees will be presented with a series of often-faced technical, organisational and cultural challenges that potential PETs adopters may encounter and discuss best practices for mitigating them. We are keen to hear perspectives from attendees about other potential challenges they have faced and suggestions for how the government and regulators can support PETs adoption.

    The ICO, Royal Society and CDEI will also showcase the role of governments and public-private partnerships in this space. They will also look at how the UK government is leveraging PETs in practice, through new international initiatives, and policy and regulatory efforts.

    Author:

    Dave Buckley

    Senior Technology Policy Advisor
    Centre for Data Ethics & Innovation

    Dave Buckley is a senior technology policy advisor at the Centre for Data Ethics and Innovation, which leads the UK Government's work to enable trustworthy innovation using data and AI. He leads the CDEI’s work on privacy enhancing technologies to support responsible data access. He has led the development of CDEI’s PETs Adoption Guide, has conducted research into novel data intermediaries, and has worked with teams across the UK public sector to provide advice and guidance on the responsible use of data-driven technologies in the social care sector and in tackling online harms. Prior to joining the CDEI, he worked in a number of software and data engineering roles in the private sector.

    He holds a Masters in Physics from Oxford University, and a Masters in Digital Culture from King’s College London, where he conducted quantitative research into hate speech on social media.

    Dave Buckley

    Senior Technology Policy Advisor
    Centre for Data Ethics & Innovation

    Dave Buckley is a senior technology policy advisor at the Centre for Data Ethics and Innovation, which leads the UK Government's work to enable trustworthy innovation using data and AI. He leads the CDEI’s work on privacy enhancing technologies to support responsible data access. He has led the development of CDEI’s PETs Adoption Guide, has conducted research into novel data intermediaries, and has worked with teams across the UK public sector to provide advice and guidance on the responsible use of data-driven technologies in the social care sector and in tackling online harms. Prior to joining the CDEI, he worked in a number of software and data engineering roles in the private sector.

    He holds a Masters in Physics from Oxford University, and a Masters in Digital Culture from King’s College London, where he conducted quantitative research into hate speech on social media.

    Author:

    Dr Mahi Hardalupas

    Policy Advisor
    CDEI

    Dr Mahi Hardalupas

    Policy Advisor
    CDEI

    Author:

    Paul Comerford

    Principal Technology Policy Advisor
    ICO

    Paul Comerford is a Principal Technology Adviser within the Technology and Innovation directorate at the ICO. Paul previously worked in academia as a lecturer, holding Computer Networks and Cyber security positions at several universities. Since joining the ICO in 2018, Paul is a lead on the development of UK GDPR guidance on anonymisation, pseudonymisation and also ICO PETs guidance published in September 2023.

    Paul Comerford

    Principal Technology Policy Advisor
    ICO

    Paul Comerford is a Principal Technology Adviser within the Technology and Innovation directorate at the ICO. Paul previously worked in academia as a lecturer, holding Computer Networks and Cyber security positions at several universities. Since joining the ICO in 2018, Paul is a lead on the development of UK GDPR guidance on anonymisation, pseudonymisation and also ICO PETs guidance published in September 2023.

    Author:

    Dr. June Brawner

    Senior Policy Adviser for Data and Digital Technologies
    The Royal Society

    Dr. June Brawner is a policy advisor at The Royal Society, the UK’s national academy of sciences. She leads the Society’s work on Privacy Enhancing Technologies (PETs) within the Data and AI policy team, which is developing policy and promoting debate that helps the UK safely and rapidly realise the growing benefits of data science and digital technologies.

    June’s career in academic and policy research spans the US, UK, and Central / Eastern Europe, with a focus on environmental data for policymaking.  Prior to her current role she worked as a research consultant and has previously completed fellowships with the Fulbright Commission and Columbia University’s Council for European Studies.

    As an anthropologist, June is especially interested in the ‘social life’ of data: the cultural and political factors that hinder or promote the equitable use of data for research, innovation, and decision-making. To this end, she sees upholding the right to privacy as a key technical and social challenge in using data for societal benefit.

    Dr. June Brawner

    Senior Policy Adviser for Data and Digital Technologies
    The Royal Society

    Dr. June Brawner is a policy advisor at The Royal Society, the UK’s national academy of sciences. She leads the Society’s work on Privacy Enhancing Technologies (PETs) within the Data and AI policy team, which is developing policy and promoting debate that helps the UK safely and rapidly realise the growing benefits of data science and digital technologies.

    June’s career in academic and policy research spans the US, UK, and Central / Eastern Europe, with a focus on environmental data for policymaking.  Prior to her current role she worked as a research consultant and has previously completed fellowships with the Fulbright Commission and Columbia University’s Council for European Studies.

    As an anthropologist, June is especially interested in the ‘social life’ of data: the cultural and political factors that hinder or promote the equitable use of data for research, innovation, and decision-making. To this end, she sees upholding the right to privacy as a key technical and social challenge in using data for societal benefit.

    Author:

    Nick Patterson

    Senior Policy Advisor
    ICO

    Nick Patterson

    Senior Policy Advisor
    ICO
     

    Alastair Williams

    Head of Client Solutions
    Anonos

    Alastair Williams

    Head of Client Solutions
    Anonos

    Alastair Williams

    Head of Client Solutions
    Anonos