Privacy-enhancing technologies (PETs) hold considerable promise for the public good. I learned this over a decade ago when I started building them into scrappy, high-stakes data collaborations where getting it wrong wasn’t an option. Here’s what I’ve learned since then: PETs are great tools for specific problems, not for every problem. Privacy-enhancing technologies (PETs): Technologies […]
“Most data is not entirely good nor entirely bad, and it can take an incredible amount of work to transform disorganized facts and figures into something useful. The goal is to align your capabilities with your data-informed objectives and create actionable plans to achieve them.”