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Info Matters

What’s on your mind? Neurotechnology and mental privacy | Qu'est-ce qui vous préoccupe ? Neurotechnologie et protection de la vie privée

Info Matters
Info Matters

Jennifer Chandler is a professor at the University of Ottawa’s Centre for Health Law, Policy and Ethics.

You can learn more about her research at jennniferchandler.ca.

  • A career that combines law, brain sciences and neurotechnology [2:54]
  • Neurotechnology explained [4:29]
  • Examples of how neurotechnology is used in health care [7:17]
  • Applications of neurotechnology in the workplace [10:12]
  • Brain technologies as investigative tools in law enforcement [11:53]
  • Brain fingerprinting as evidence [14:16]
  • Legal, ethical, and privacy concerns related to neurotechnology [16:40]
  • Questions about identity, personality, capacity and freedom [17:30]
  • International efforts to codify neuro rights [21:21]
  • Advice to regulators on the issue of mental privacy [26:27]

Resources:

  • Selvi & Ors vs State of Karnataka & Anr (May 5, 2010)
  • United Nations Human Rights Council, neurotechnology and human rights
  • Chile: Pioneering the protection of neuro rights (UNESCO Courier)
  • IPC Strategic Priorities 2021-2025
  • Trust in Digital Health (IPC resources)

Info Matters is a podcast about people, privacy, and access to information hosted by Patricia Kosseim, Information and Privacy Commissioner of Ontario. We dive into conversations with people from all walks of life and hear stories about the access and privacy issues that matter most to them.

If you enjoyed the podcast, leave us a rating or a review.

Have an access to information or privacy topic you want to learn more about? Interested in being a guest on the show? Send us a tweet @IPCinfoprivacy or email us at podcast@ipc.on.ca.

The information, opinions, and recommendations presented in this podcast are for general information only. It should not be relied upon as a substitute for legal advice. Unless specifically stated otherwise, the IPC does not endorse, approve, recommend, or certify any information, product, process, service, or organization presented or mentioned in this podcast, and information from this podcast should not be used or reproduced in any way to imply such approval or endorsement. None of the information, opinions and recommendations presented in this podcast bind the IPC’s Tribunal that may be called upon to independently investigate and decide upon an individual complaint or appeal based on the specific facts and unique circumstances of a given case.

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