BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
METHOD:PUBLISH
PRODID://NDCP//520281
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260531T123521
VTIMEZONE:America/Chicago
DTSTART:20261116T190000Z
DTEND:20261116T210000Z
UID:520281
SUMMARY:Surgent's Privacy, Data Security, and AI: Reasonable Precautions in an Unreasonable World (DSA2)
LOCATION:Webinar
DESCRIPTION:Surgent's Privacy, Data Security, and AI: Reasonable Precautions in an Unreasonable World (DSA2)\n\n11/16/26 01:00 PM CST\n - 11/16/26 03:00 PM CST\Description:\nThis presentation explores modern confidentiality, data security, and AI-related professional obligations in an increasingly hostile and deceptive threat environment. It explains how evolving risks such as AI-generated phishing, account takeovers, deepfakes, and inadvertent data sharing intersect with long-standing ethical duties, emphasizing that competence today includes understanding both the benefits and risks of technology. Through real-world examples and practical guidance, the session reinforces core principles like the strategic pause, high-confidence verification, responsible use of generative AI, proper data storage, and personal accountability, concluding that reasonable precautions remain both expected and achievable even as tactics and technologies change.Objectives:
 Identify modern confidentiality, data security, and technology-competence obligations in today’s professional environment
 Recognize and respond to evolving social engineering threats, including AI-generated phishing, account takeovers, and deepfakes
 Apply verification, judgment, and supervision principles to the responsible use of generative AI tools
 Implement practical safeguards for protecting client and company data across work, travel, and personal technology use
 Presenters:Mark McCreary, CIPP/USField of Study:Information Technology (2)Major Topics:
 Evolving privacy, data security, and professional-responsibility obligations in a rapidly changing threat landscape
 Modern social engineering risks, including AI-generated phishing, account takeovers, QR code scams, and deepfakes
 Responsible use of generative AI, emphasizing supervision, judgment, verification, and client expectations
 Practical safeguards for protecting data, devices, and confidentiality at work, at home, and while traveling
 \Location:\nWebinar\n\n,
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:Surgent's Privacy, Data Security, and AI: Reasonable Precautions in an Unreasonable World (DSA2)<br /><br />11/16/26 01:00 PM CST - 11/16/26 03:00 PM CST<br />Description:<br />This presentation explores modern confidentiality, data security, and AI-related professional obligations in an increasingly hostile and deceptive threat environment. It explains how evolving risks such as AI-generated phishing, account takeovers, deepfakes, and inadvertent data sharing intersect with long-standing ethical duties, emphasizing that competence today includes understanding both the benefits and risks of technology. Through real-world examples and practical guidance, the session reinforces core principles like the strategic pause, high-confidence verification, responsible use of generative AI, proper data storage, and personal accountability, concluding that reasonable precautions remain both expected and achievable even as tactics and technologies change.<br><br><b>Objectives:</b><br><ul>
    <li>Identify modern confidentiality, data security, and technology-competence obligations in today&rsquo;s professional environment</li>
    <li>Recognize and respond to evolving social engineering threats, including AI-generated phishing, account takeovers, and deepfakes</li>
    <li>Apply verification, judgment, and supervision principles to the responsible use of generative AI tools</li>
    <li>Implement practical safeguards for protecting client and company data across work, travel, and personal technology use</li>
</ul><br><b>Presenters:</b><br>Mark McCreary, CIPP/US<br><br><b>Field of Study:</b><br>Information Technology (2)<br><br><b>Major Topics:</b><br><ul>
    <li>Evolving privacy, data security, and professional-responsibility obligations in a rapidly changing threat landscape</li>
    <li>Modern social engineering risks, including AI-generated phishing, account takeovers, QR code scams, and deepfakes</li>
    <li>Responsible use of generative AI, emphasizing supervision, judgment, verification, and client expectations</li>
    <li>Practical safeguards for protecting data, devices, and confidentiality at work, at home, and while traveling</li>
</ul><br />Location:<br />Webinar<br /><br />,  
PRIORITY:3
TRANSP:TRANSPARENT
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DESCRIPTION:Reminder
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