Tickets

 

Get your ticket now!

 

On 29 & 30 September 2026, privacy experts from data protection authorities, international companies, and innovative startups will gather at Bitkom’s Privacy Conference in Berlin.

The first conference day on 29 September will take place exclusively on-site at the Futurium in Berlin and will focus on the German perspective. This day is chargeable – the Super Early Bird rate is available until 30 May. 

The second day on 30 September will provide international insights and be available via livestream only. Attendance for the second day is free of charge.

 

 

 

 

Cancellation of booked tickets is excluded. 

To apply for accreditation as a representative of the press, please contact Alla Fushtei: a.fushtei@bitkom-service.de

 

Our first premium partners

spacer

#pco26 covers the latest industry topics

spacer

  • Digital Omnibus

    Interaction and practical implications of the GDPR, the Data Act and the AI Act for companies and organisations – current developments, open questions and implementation perspectives.

  • Artificial Intelligence, Data Economy and Innovation 

    Data protection challenges in the use of AI, data-driven business models and cloud technologies – balancing compliance, innovation and competitiveness. 

  • International Data Transfers in Geopolitically Uncertain Times 

    Current frameworks for data transfers to the USA, the United Kingdom and other third countries in light of geopolitical developments and recent case law. 

  • Case Law in Focus 

    Recent decisions of the German Federal Court of Justice (BGH) and the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) and their impact on data protection practice, compliance and risk assessment. 

  • Cookies, Tracking and ePrivacy 

    Current state and outlook of ePrivacy regulation, up-to-date requirements for consent, consent management and tracking technologies. 

  • Updates from Data Protection Supervisory 

    Authorities Priority areas, guidelines, audit approaches and enforcement practices of national and European supervisory authorities. 

  • Data Protection in Corporate Practice 

    Practical challenges faced by companies: data protection governance, processing on behalf of controllers, third-party management and the operational implementation of regulatory requirements. 

  • Data Subject Rights and Transparency 

    Obligations Handling access, erasure and information obligations, efficient processes and practical solution-oriented approaches.