
Benjamin Moore
Ben is a Senior Policy Advisor at the Responsible Technology Adoption Unit (RTA), formerly the Centre for Data, Ethics and Innovation (CDEI), in the Department for Science Innovation & Technology (DSIT). At RTA, Ben leads the Responsible Data Access programme, which aims to drive innovative approaches to tackle data access barriers and includes a range of projects focused on Privacy-Enhancing Technologies (PETs).
Ben has experience working at the intersection of ethics and policy on AI and a wide range of data-driven technologies, including PETs.
The RTA has published an interactive PETs adoption guide and a repository of real-world use-cases, and co-ran the UK-US PETs prize challenges, a world-leading initiative to incentivise novel innovation in PETs.

Claudine Tinsman
Claudine is a Researcher at the Open Data Institute. She is about to complete her DPhil in Cyber Security at the University of Oxford, where she examined how end-users interact with content control features on social media platforms to prevent and mitigate content-related emotional and psychological harm. During her time at Oxford, she contributed to the policy discourse on online harms by submitting evidence to the House of Commons as part of the Online Safety Bill's consultation phase. She also co-created Proving the Negative, a podcast translating cyber security and tech policy research accessible to a general audience.
Claudine also holds a Master of Law from the University of Lausanne, where she researched the legal, philosophical, and societal implications of granting personhood to autonomous AI agents. She is fluent in French and proficient in German.

Vivian Vasquez

Santiago Machado

Rakhee Suchak

Myriah Jaworski
Myriah Jaworski is a Data Privacy partner at Clark Hill. Focusing her practice on the intersection of law and technology, Myriah represents clients in defense of data breach class actions, privacy torts and statutory claims (IRPA/BIPA/VPPA/CIPA), pixel tacking and commercial surveillance matters, internet defamation, technology disputes, and media liability claims. Myriah defends clients in response to regulatory inquiries and investigations arising out of data incidents and privacy practices, including before state Attorney General offices, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and the Department of Human and Health Services – Office of Civil Rights (HHS/OCR). Myriah litigates in many state and federal jurisdictions throughout the United States. Myriah has defended clients in headline-making cyber bullying and data breach class actions, obtained a first-of-its-kind federal trial damages award in a misdirected wire transfer/business email compromise case, and represented the app developer at the center of the Cambridge Analytica matter in federal court proceedings. She is a Certified Information Privacy Professional, United States (CIPP/US) and a Certified Information Privacy Professional, Europe (CIPP/E) as certified by the International Association of Privacy Professionals (IAPP). Myriah began her career as a Trial Attorney with the United States Department of Justice (DOJ).