Privacy

Privacy & AI at HOPE 2025 by Robert Stribley

A man presents at a podium with a slide from his presentation appearing beside him. The slide contains information about an AI listening device called the Limitless Pendant.

I enjoyed presenting on the topic of how AI is affecting our privacy at the Hackers on Planet Earth (HOPE_16) on Sunday, the 17th of August. The issues associated with AI and privacy are evolving at such a whirlwind pace, that I’m continuously having to update this presentation. I included a chapter on the topic in my forthcoming book, Design for Privacy, too, and there’s already much I’d add now if I could. Just yesterday, news broke that thousand of X’s user chats with Grok could be surface via a Google search. That would’ve gone in the presentation and the book, as well!

Link to the PDF version of my presentation, “AI Is Undermining Our Privacy: What Can We Do About It?”

More information about my forthcoming book, Design for Privacy.

Poster Presentation & Mentoring: Information Architecture Conference 2024 by Robert Stribley

I was very happy to attend the Information Architecture Conference in Seattle, WA for the first time this year, where I presented my poster on “Designing for Privacy in an Increasingly Public World” on the evening of April 11th. A large PDF version of this poster is available on my Technique website. It’s free to use with attribution. I also enjoyed mentoring some of the attendees and meeting many smart and talented IAs there. I only wime sh I hadn’t taken so long to get around to attending!

Pamphlet: Designing for Privacy in an Increasingly Public World by Robert Stribley

I've been presenting on the topic of privacy by design to companies and organizations, as well as my students at SVA for several years now. I just took an Illustrator class, and, for my final project, thought it'd be fun to boil that presentation down to fit into a tri-fold pamphlet, which I could distribute or folks could download if they'd like. The pamphlet version of “Designing for Privacy in an Increasingly Public World” highlights 7 best practices for privacy by design, as well as some high-level reasons our clients will want to pay attention to their customers' privacy concerns.

🔗 https://shorturl.at/syDOQ (PDF)

Update: You can also read an article version of this topic over on both UX Collective and UX Magazine.

I hope to use Technique to develop and distribute artifacts like this in the future, too. And I'm trying to determine whether this topic can be translated into a book, which would allow me to address the topic much more comprehensively, accompanying each point with case studies, illustrations, and even suggested redesigns for problem examples.

Reach out if you're interested in a presentation to your company or organization on the topic.