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Christiane Saad

Lawyer & Director of French Law Practice Program
University of Ottawa
Participates in 2 items
Christiane Saad is a lawyer and the Director Law Practice Program in French at the University of Ottawa. She’s multidisciplinary and multilingual professional with 15 years’ experience in project management, cadastral reform, data governance, data structure (descriptive and geospatial), compliance, quality assurance, process re-engineering, procedures development and change management.

She is a graduate from both Common Law and Civil Law at the University of Ottawa and a candidate to the Master of Laws with concentration in Law and Technology. Prior to her legal career, she completed a bachelor in Urban Planning and Project Management from the University of Montreal. She is a member of various not-for-profit Board of directors as well as a member of the Technology Committee of the County of Carleton Law Association.

Her interests include technology law, privacy and cybersecurity, blockchain, artificial intelligence as well as administrative law and legal education.

Sessions in which Christiane Saad participates

martes 18 junio, 2019

Zona horaria: (GMT-05:00) Eastern Time (US & Canada)
11:35
11:35 - 11:55 | 20 minutos
Geospatial Digital Transformation: AI, 5G, AR/VR, Blockchain, IoT, Big Data Analytics, Open Source, Cloud

The future is digital. Big data is an integral part of the digital transformation of a private or public organization. Location and geospatial technologies are at the heart of the digital transformation as enablers, game changers and contribute to the success of big data in many ways. Combined with emerging geospatial artificial intelligence, the possibilities are limitless. Smart cities and autonomous vehicles are examples of this potential. However, this big data revolution raises many lega...

miércoles 19 junio, 2019

Zona horaria: (GMT-05:00) Eastern Time (US & Canada)
8:30
8:30 - 9:30 | 1 hour
Leadership, Innovation, and next-level Technology

Mainstreaming of the geospatial market has created a big demand for geospatial content and solutions across governments, businesses and consumers. The Fourth Industrial Revolution (4IR) has also helped scale up applications and value to much larger markets, amplifying overall impact and contribution of geospatial information in the world economy and society. With every added application and consumer, the return on investments get bigger and better. The panel shall focus...