~terry
Tue, Nov 10, 1998 (09:52)
seed
CFP 99 ... will it be in DC? Or where?
~terry
Tue, Nov 10, 1998 (10:04)
#1
According to Rotenberg, the conference will be held at the Omni Shoreham
hotel, April 6-8 (and I presume that the 5th would be the traditional
tutorial day); there's apparently an announcement list:
Send SUBSCRIBE to 'cfp99-announce@cfp99.org"
the dramatis personae have been revealed:
Marc Rotenberg
EPIC
Washington, DC
CFP99 Chair
PROGRAM COMMITTEE
Carlos Afonso
Alliance for Progressive Computing
Rio de Janeiro, BRAZIL
Phil Agre
University of California
San Diego, California
Yaman Akdeniz
Centre for Criminal Justice Studies
Leeds University
London, UNITED KINGDOM
Roger Clarke
Australian National University
Canberra, AUSTRALIA
Tracey Cohen
Centre For Applied Legal Studies
SOUTH AFRICA
Lorrie Faith Cranor
AT&T Labs-Research
Florham Park, New Jersey
Simon Davies
London School of Economics
London, UNITED KINGDOM
David Flaherty
Office of the Privacy and Information Commissioner
British Columbia, CANADA
Oscar Gandy
Annenburg School of Communication
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Deborah Hurley
Harvard Information Infrastructure Project
Kennedy School of Government
Cambridge, Massachusetts
Joichi Ito
Digital Garage
Tokyo, JAPAN
Stephen Lau
Privacy Commission
HONG KONG
Paul McMasters
Freedom Forum
Rosslyn, Virginia
Peter Neumann
SRI
Menlo Park. California
Eli Noam
Columbia University
New York, New York
Jonathan Peizer
Open Society Institute
New York, New York
Bruce Schneier
Counterpane Systems
Minneapolis, Minnesota
Keith Sears
Creative Artists
Los Angeles, California
Barbara Simons
USACM
Palo Alto, California
Ross Stapleton-Gray
Electronic Embassy Program
Arlington, Virginia
Barry Steinhardt
Electronic Frontier Foundation
San Francisco, California
Nadine Strossen
American Civil Liberties Union
New York, New York
Frank Tuerkheimer
University of Wisconsin
Madison, Wisconsin
ADMINISTRATIVE COMMITTEE
Dave Banisar
Washington, DC
Kathleen Ellis,
Washington, DC
Lauren Gelman,
Washington, DC
Bruce Koball
Berkeley, California
David Sobel
Washington, DC
Shauna van Dongen
Washington, DC
FUNDRAISING COMMITTEE
Rob Kushen
Open Society Institute
New York, New York
(note - no hackers or activists need apply)
The call for participation is scheduled to go out within the week.
~TIM
Sun, Nov 15, 1998 (16:24)
#2
No hackers, or activists? Why not don't they have a say about computers also?
~terry
Mon, Nov 16, 1998 (07:49)
#3
They sure do, but they seem to be conspicuously absent from the CFP
participant list.
~TIM
Mon, Nov 16, 1998 (08:30)
#4
Are they absent because they are not wanted, or because they choose not to participate?
~terry
Wed, Dec 16, 1998 (10:17)
#6
The Association for Computing Machinery
PRESENTS
Computers,
Freedom +
Privacy 1999
THE GLOBAL
INTERNET
OMNI SHOREHAM HOTEL
WASHINGTON, DC
APRIL 6-8, 1999
CALL FOR PROPOSALS
The Program Committee of the conference on Computers, Freedom, and
Privacy (CFP99) is seeking proposals for the ninth annual CFP, which
will be held in Washington DC between April 6th and April 8th 1999
at the Omni Sheraton Hotel.
CFP is sponsored by the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM).
CFP is the leading Internet policy conference. For almost a decade,
CFP has shaped the public debate on the future of privacy and
freedom in the online world. The CFP audience is diverse
with representatives from government, business, education,
non-profits and the media. The themes are broad and
forward-looking.
CFP explores what will be, not what has been. It is the place where
the future is mapped.
The theme of the 1999 CFP conference is "The Global Internet."
Proposals are welcomed on all aspects of privacy and freedom. The
1999 Program Committee is particularly interested in
receiving proposals that deal with:
ACCESS TO THE INTERNET, particularly those relating to
globalization and governance. Of particular interest are issues
of privacy, censorship, free speech and access.
INTERNATIONAL ISSUES, especially the emerging issues of global
privacy protection, encryption policy, international principles
of human rights, regulation, legislation, and copyright.
ELECTRONIC COMMERCE, including the impact of payment systems,
regulations, and technical standards on personal freedom and
privacy.
CULTURE AND LANGUAGE ON THE INTERNET, such as the
significance of diversity, multilingualism, and cultural
representation
We strongly encourage proposals that involve leading experts,
innovators, policymakers, and thinkers.
The CFP99 Program Committee will finalize the selection of proposals
by February 1, 1999, and all proposals must be received by January
15, 1999 Please follow the submission guidelines below.
CFP99 PROPOSAL SUBMISSION GUIDELINES
Proposals should be sent by email to proposals@cfp99.org before
January 15, 1999.
Proposals should include the following information:
1. Presentation Title
2. Presentation Type (Panel discussion, Luncheon meeting,
Tutorial, "BOF" Session)
3. Proposed Length of Presentation (typical CFP sessions are 1
hour)
4. Name(s) of Speaker(s), plus brief background description for
each speaker.
5. A one to two paragraph description of the Topic and Format,
suitable for conference brochure and press release.
6. Complete contact information (email, phone, and mailing
address). For presentations with more than one speaker,
please provide contact information for all of the proposed
speakers.
For more information on the Computers, Freedom, and Privacy
Conferences, please visit the conference Web page
http://www.cfp99.org. If your have further questions about CFP,
please feel free to contact a member of the Program Committee.
PROGRAM COMMITTEE
Marc Rotenberg, EPIC and ACM, Washington, DC, CFP99 Chair
Carlos Afonso, Alliance for Progressive Computing, Rio de Janeiro,
BRAZIL
Phil Agre, University of California, San Diego, California
Yaman Akdeniz, Centre for Criminal Justice Studies, Leeds
University,
London, UNITED KINGDOM
Roger Clarke, Australian National University, Canberra, AUSTRALIA
Tracey Cohen, Centre For Applied Legal Studies, SOUTH AFRICA
Lorrie Faith Cranor, AT&T Labs-Research, Florham Park, New Jersey
Simon Davies, London School of Economics, London, UNITED KINGDOM
David Flaherty, Office of the Privacy and Information Commissioner,
British Columbia, CANADA
Oscar Gandy, Annenburg School of Communication, Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania
Deborah Hurley, Harvard Information Infrastructure Project, Kennedy
School of Government, Cambridge, Massachusetts
Joichi Ito, Digital Garage, Tokyo, JAPAN
Stephen Lau, Privacy Commission, HONG KONG
Paul McMasters, Freedom Forum, Rosslyn, Virginia
Peter Neumann, SRI, Menlo Park. California
Eli Noam, Columbia University, New York, New York
Jonathan Peizer, Open Society Institute, New York, New York
Bruce Schneier, Counterpane Systems, Minneapolis, Minnesota
Keith Sears, Creative Artists, Los Angeles, California
Barbara Simon, ACM, Palo Alto, California
Ross Stapleton-Gray, Electronic Embassy Program, Arlington, Virginia
Barry Steinhardt, American Civil Liberties Union, New York
Nadine Strossen, American Civil Liberties Union, New York, New York
Frank Tuerkheimer, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin
FUNDRAISING COMMITTEE
Rob Kushen, Open Society Institute, New York, New York
PREVIOUS CFP CHAIRS
Jim Warren, Woodside, California (CFP91)
Lance Hoffman, George Washington University, Washington, DC (CFP92)
Bruce Koball, Berkeley, California (CFP93)
George Trubow, John Marshall School of Law, Chicago, Illinois
(CFP94)
Carey Heckman, Stanford Law School, Stanford, California (CFP95)
Hal Abelson, MIT, Cambridge, Massachusetts (CFP96)
Kent Walker, Netscape Communication, Mountain View, California
(CFP97)
Mark Lemley, University of Texas School of Law, Austin, Texas
(CFP98)