FPF Founder Christopher Wolf wins Vanguard Award
The entire FPF team is thrilled to congratulate Chris Wolf, FPF founder and Co-chair and cherished mentor, on winning the IAPP Vanguard Award. The following remarks were delivered today at IAPP by Brenda Leong, FPF Senior Counsel and Director of Operations.
Welcome everyone and thank you for joining us this morning. I am honored to present the IAPP Privacy Vanguard Award. This annual award recognizes outstanding leadership, knowledge, and creativity in the field of privacy and data protection.
The recipient of the IAPP Privacy Vanguard Award is someone who has positively impacted the privacy industry through personal and communal achievements throughout their career.
This year’s award winner is known as the “Dean of the Industry” or, as The Washingtonian Magazine deemed him, the “Tech Titan”. He is not only a well-respected lawyer in privacy and data protection, and an accomplished and long-time respected leader in the field, but also a treasured friend, colleague, mentor or role model for those who have had the privilege to know and work with him.
He helped break the path for privacy law in the early days of its modern application when the Internet and related technologies made clear that existing laws were no longer sufficient. He has had a hand in advising and shaping thinking on many leading-edge issues including Internet free speech, Internet hate speech and the parameters of government access to stored information. In doing so, he led the development of a top-ranked privacy law practice, Hogan Lovells US, where he now helps lead a team of 27 full time privacy lawyers.
His influence on the global privacy agenda led to co-founding of the Future of Privacy Forum, DC-based a think tank dedicated to advancing responsible data use in commercial and consumer privacy. Working with great vision as part of the FPF team, he helped build it into a thriving community of business, academic and advocacy thought leaders, that has been influential in shaping public policy on many privacy issues.
As a “pioneer in privacy law”, he originated and edited the first privacy law treatise published by the prestigious Practising Law Institute and has written and lectured widely on the subject of privacy law. He is the co-editor of the PLI book, “A Practical Guide to the Red Flag Rules”, those identity-theft-prevention regulations issued by the FTC and financial regulators. He has testified in Congress and before the Privacy and Civil Liberties Board, participated in the 2014 White House Big Data Workshops, and served as a panelist at numerous FTC privacy-related workshops.
While playing this industry-leading role in the development of privacy and tech policy, he also managed to dedicate a major portion of his time and focus to such worthy charitable and philanthropic causes as the Anti-Defamation League – where he serves as the National Civil Rights Chair – and Food and Friends, a Washington-based nonprofit that provides home-delivered meals and nutrition counseling for people with life-challenging illnesses, and several other such organizations.
Finally, he has played all these roles while prioritizing time for family and friends – he manages to be there as a friend and colleague for an incredible swath of people – with grace and warmth – with diplomacy when required – and always with great class.
Jules Polonetsky – his cofounder at FPF – was very disappointed he couldn’t be here today, but he told me that there was a classic Jewish word that sums up today’s winner – he is a “mensch”…and for those like me whose yiddish might be a bit rusty – this simply means: a “fine human being”.
It gives me great pleasure to announce, and welcome to the stage, the winner of this year’s Privacy Vanguard Award, Christopher Wolf.