[IP] CFP2006 Call for Participation
I think I will be there for a change. djf
Begin forwarded message:
From: Bruce R Koball <bkoball@xxxxxxxx>
Date: December 29, 2005 3:51:09 PM EST
To: David Farber <dave@xxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: CFP2006 Call for Participation
Dave,
If possible, could you share the following announcement with IP.
thanks,
-brk-
Bruce R. Koball Motion West (direct) 510 845-1350
bkoball@xxxxxxxx 2210 Sixth St (office) 510 548-2450
bkoball@xxxxxxxxxx Berkeley, CA 94710 (studio) 510 845-3946
"As nightfall does not come at once, neither does oppression. In both
instances there is a twilight where everything remains seemingly
unchanged, and it is in such a twilight that we must be aware of the
change in the air, however slight, lest we become unwitting victims
of the darkness." --Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas
=====================================================================
CFP2006: The Sixteenth Conference on Computers, Freedom & Privacy
L'Enfant Plaza Hotel Washington, DC, USA
May 2-5, 2006
CALL FOR PROPOSALS
The Program Committee of the Sixteenth Conference on Computers, Freedom,
and Privacy (CFP2006) seeks your proposals for innovative conference
sessions and speakers.
The Computers, Freedom & Privacy Conference has been a leading venue for
public debate on the future of privacy and freedom in the online
world for
a decade and a half. Each year, key representatives from government,
business, education, and non-profits including the legal, law
enforcement,
security, media, consumer, and individual hobbyist communities have
gathered together to anticipate policy trends and issues and to help map
the future of society in the online world. Attendees will meet again
this
coming May to address cutting edge questions and issues in computing,
freedom and privacy.
CFP has been held in different cities over the years, from San Francisco
to Toronto to Chicago to Austin. This year the conference once again
will
be held in Washington, D.C., which continues to offer an unusual mix of
policy and legal experts and resources to draw upon. This conference
will
not be limited to discussions of United States-based parties and
interests, however -- consistent with its history, CFP expects to draw
participants and events from around the world, addressing the forces
that
continue to shape the global Internet as well as well as other issues
raised by our increasingly pervasive technological environment. As
always,
the conference hopes to examine the role the Internet is playing in
democratic activism at all levels: local, national, and global.
We welcome proposals on all aspects of computers, freedom, and
privacy. We
strongly encourage proposals that explore some of the most important
issues facing the Internet and freedom, including: intellectual
property
and intellectual freedom; copyright versus technologies that make
copying
cheap or free; global activism; technology and monopoly; voting
technology
and democracy; technology and weapons; ICANN and Internet governance;
borders and censorship; digital divide; biometric systems; consumer
privacy; wireless privacy and security; hacktivism; digital rights
management and privacy; public records and private lives.
We are seeking proposals for tutorials, plenary sessions, workshops,
technical demonstrations, and birds-of-a-feather sessions. We are also
seeking suggestions for speakers and topics. Sessions should present a
wide range of thinking on a topic by including speakers from different
viewpoints. Complete submission instructions appear on the CFP2006 web
site at:
http://www.cfp2006.org
All submissions must be received by January 31, 2006. Proposals will be
reviewed by the CFP2006 Program Committee and Advisory Board. The
Program
Committee will notify submitters of the status of proposals no later
than
March 1, 2006.
-------------------------------------
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