Apple will have a presence at this year’s Consumer Electronics Show (CES) that’s set to take place in January, but the company won’t be showing off new products.
Apple will instead be discussing consumer privacy, as Bloomberg points out. Jane Horvath, Apple’s senior director of privacy, will be attending a “Chief Privacy Officer Roundtable” alongside privacy executives from Facebook, Procter & Gamble, and the FTC.
The roundtable will focus on “what consumers want” when it comes to privacy. It will be held on Tuesday, January 7 at 1:00 p.m. at the Las Vegas Convention Center’s North Hall, room N257. Attendance is included with CES registration.
Privacy is now a strategic imperative for all consumer businesses. “The future is private” (Facebook); “Privacy is a human right” (Apple); and “a more private web” (Google). How do companies build privacy at scale? Will regulation be a fragmented patchwork? Most importantly, what do consumers want?
Apple stopped attending CES in the 90s, and Apple’s last official appearance took place in 1992 at the Chicago show, where then CEO John Sculley introduced the Apple Newton.
While Apple doesn’t officially attend CES, it does send its employees to the show for meetings and to check out emerging technology. Last year, Apple also touted its privacy policies through a huge privacy-focused billboard right near the Las Vegas Convention Center that read “What Happens on your iPhone, stays on your iPhone.”
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