DIGITAL STEWARDSHIP INITIATIVE - Key Persons


Andrew Hilts

Andrew Hilts' software development and research work focuses on empowering citizens to exercise their digital rights online, with a particular focus on data standards and research accessibility. He is Program Director for the Digital Stewardship Initiative and is its principal software developer, where he conducts applied research and leads the technical implementation of DSI tools. As a research fellow at the Citizen Lab at the University of Toronto's Munk School of Global Affairs, Andrew writes a monthly column called Social Media Watch which is a monthly recap of legal, policy, and technology news stories that impact privacy, security, and free expression on social media. As a facilitator at the annual Cyber Dialogue conference series, Andrew collaborated with global Internet community members to define, plan, and moderate expert working groups on the topics of digital citizenship skills and corporate social responsibility in the digital age. He has a Master of Information degree from the University of Toronto's Faculty of Information, where he completed his thesis on tools and resources to empower designers of e-democracy systems.

Christopher Parsons

Christopher Parson's research, teaching, and consulting interests involve how privacy is affected by digitally mediated surveillance, and the normative implications that such surveillance has in (and on) contemporary Western political systems. He is a post-doctoral fellow at the Citizen Lab, Munk School of Global Affairs, University of Toronto, where he is examining telecommunications companies' data retention and data disclosure policies. He has a Ph.D. in political science from the University of Victoria, where he completed a dissertation that examined the political drivers of Internet service providers' network surveillance practices. He is also a Privacy by Design Ambassador and a principal at Block G Privacy and Security Consulting. He has written policy reports for civil advocacy organizations in Canada, submitted evidence to Parliamentary committees, and been an active member of the Canadian privacy advocacy community. He has been involved in projects examining lawful access legislation in Canada and abroad, identity management systems in Canada, automatic license plate recognition technologies in Canada and the UK, network management and surveillance practices in Western democratic states, and privacy issues linked to social media services. Christopher has published in the Canadian Journal of Law and Society, European Journal of Law and Technology, Canadian Privacy Law Review, CTheory, and has book chapters in a series of academic and popular books and reports. His research has been funded by SSHRC, the New Transparency Project, the Office of the Privacy Commissioner's contributions programs, and by civil advocacy organizations. He regularly presents his research to government, media, the public, and at academic events.