Category Archives: Talks & Conferences

Off to the Internet Identity Workshop

iiw2009a.pngI'm off this afternoon to California, where I'll be at the 8th Internet Identity Workshop, which will take place at the Computer History Museum in Mountain View.

I've never been to one of these before, but people who do this stuff — that is, make the tools that do and use ID — say it's the place to be, and there's an impressive list of attendees, so I'm giving it a try.

This will also be my first out-of-town unconference, I think, in that I don't count the chaos which was the first ever DNS-related meeting I attended almost exactly 10 years ago, the International Forum on the White Paper, in Reston, Virginia. (I've also been to local barcamps, but they're small.)

I'm back late Wednesday. No idea what blogging will be like in the interim.

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ISGIG 2009 – the Internet of the Future

I’ve gotten myself drafted for the organizing committee for ISGIG 2009, which promises to be an interesting conference on governance issues in information technology, to be held in Prague the 15th-17th of September. I invite readers to respond to (and to forward) the call for papers.

We’re also still filling the last few slots on the Program Committee, which will be reviewing the submitted papers. If you know someone who belongs on that committee (that person in the mirror?) please phone or email me.

Call for papers

Second International ICST Symposium on Global Information Governance (ISGIG): Conflict and Collaboration in Compliance, Governance and Risk

ISGIG 2009 – the Internet of the Future: Prague, Czech Republic: 15th, 16th and morning of 17th September 2009

www.isgig.org

The explosion in the use of broadband over the last 5 years has connected people, organizations, commercial firms, and government agencies throughout the world. The large number of devices connected to the networks has changed the Internet to a “network of things and computers”. These trends, plus the rise of collaborative technologies, virtual worlds and tele-presence raise issues of privacy, management, compliance, governance, and risk.

The Internet of the Future is the theme of ISGIG 2009. Specifically, its goal is to improve communication among academics, regulators, compliance officers, business managers and IT managers by exposing problems, and uncovering potential problems, in the areas of privacy, compliance, governance, and risk. Each of these issues creates situations for both conflict and cooperation between different constituencies. This conference is an opportunity to advance models of effective management and collaboration.

The conference will rely on a judicious mix of research papers, invited speakers and structured discussions to extend the communities’ communication and identify opportunities for mutually beneficial outcomes.

Topics of Interest

We invite researchers, academicians, practitioners, and others to submit original papers describing new research, applications, or case studies. Papers covering technical, legal, societal, or other aspects of these areas are solicited. Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:

  • Frameworks and Overarching Issues of Network Governance
    • Privacy – a pervading issue
    • Attribution and identify management; anonymity and ID
  • Physical and policy infrastructure of the Internet, and its role governance:
    • Designing, building, and managing changes to the Internet infrastructure;
    • National and regional frameworks for IT governance
    • Compliance with government regulations for multi-national corporations and networks;
  • Emerging issues, including
    • Cyber-terrorism and cyber-crime;
    • Virtual worlds, and the development of new modes of social and economic interaction that challenge how we translate physical world structures into virtual worlds;
    • Green computing;
    • Collaborative tools, and their use in politics and e-government.
  • Security and anticipating and responding to attacks that cross international boundaries; cyber crime
  • Other emerging areas for conflict and cooperation in the evolving Internet

Important Dates

Abstracts due (optional but encouraged): March 20, 2009
Full Papers due: April 17, 2009
Author notification with reviewer’s comments: May 22, 2009
Final revised papers due in camera-ready format: June 12, 2009
Conference: September 15-17, 2009

How to Submit

Papers should be submitted to www.assyst-online.org by April 17. Papers of any length are encouraged, but a preferred length is 10 pages (not including citations) on letter or A4 with one inch margins and 11 point font.

All submissions will be peer reviewed, and acceptances will be provided by May 22.

Publication

The Proceedings from ISGIG 2009 will be published in LNICST and appear in SpringerLink and ICST’s digital library, the EU-DL.

Organizing Committee

Jeffrey Hunker, General Chair, Carnegie Mellon University, USA
Michael Froomkin, Co-chair, University of Miami, USA
Matt Bishop, Co-chair, University of California Davis, USA

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Berkeley Security Breach Conference on Friday

(Too) Early Thursday morning I'll start my journey towards Berkeley CA, where Friday I'm going to attend what looks a really useful and interesting seminar on BCLT – Security Breach Notification Laws.

Most folks who work in this area concentrate on private data collectors. I'm writing about government data holders, so I'm on the panel that probably should be called “other” but is in fact called Comparative Approaches to Security Breaches.

As I think about it, one thing I've often tried to do is identify issues that other people are not working on and think about them. This is good in many ways, and it has been good to me, but it does turn out to have some costs — fewer folks to talk to, and they don't always know where to put you in conferences.

Oh well, I guess as long as they're still inviting me I shouldn't worry too much.

Posted in Talks & Conferences | 2 Comments

Off to New Haven

I'm off to New Haven for a conference in honor of the 10th anniversary of the Yale Information Society Project. I was very involved in the early days — I think I spoke at the first three or four conferences, but have been less involved recently.

The folks at the Yale ISP were kind enough to recently to make me an 'Affiliated Fellow' of the Yale ISP, so I hope to be involved more in the future.

I like to going to Yale events, as they are both substantive and nostalgic for me (Yale '82, Yale Law '87)…but I HATE the journey. Flying into New Haven is expensive and usually involves a long layover in Philly followed by a wind-up plane. Flying into Hartford gets you an easy drive…but the two direct planes a day are too early and too late, and why change planes just to drive afterward?

Flying into New York is quickest and cheapest…but then there's the land portion. CT Limo is so appalling that I vowed never to use it again after last time. And the time before. And the time before that. So this time I'm going to drive.

The trouble with driving is that I get lost. Easily. I was never the most directionally intuitive driver, and I've gotten softer from years of being married to a very reliable navigator. I don't own a GPS, although I'm thinking about it. I've asked for one in the rental car as a sort of, well, test drive, to see how I like it. (The other trouble is that I'm landing at 3pm, and will hit the Friday afternoon rush more than likely, but there's not a lot I can do about that.)

Posted in Talks & Conferences | 7 Comments

Obama to Visit UM

Barack Obama will be visiting the campus on Friday.

I'm going to miss it, because I will be in New York. On Friday I'll be at Fordham Law for a seminar; on Monday I'll be at Brooklyn Law giving a paper. Over the weekend, TKTS willing, I hope to catch a play. Suggestions for other cultural highlights welcomed.

Posted in Talks & Conferences, U.Miami | 6 Comments

Pelosi Faces the Netroots

Speaker Pelosi came and faced the angry netroots — after we were given a strong lecture by the moderator that if we weren't nice to her, we'd be escorted out of the hall and have our credentials taken.

Pelosi was a mix of good ol' fashioned Democrat — we'd like some good programs, more investment, help veterans etc. and infuriating good ol' fashioned Democrat — prevarications at best, falsehoods more likely. [Update: I've decided that was a little harsh. I think she believes the stuff about FISA. The mystery is why.]

Pelosi tried to suggest that the House had done all it could to stop the war, which she in effect defined as one bill without war funding. That was pretty unconvincing.

Worse was the line on FISA in which (hiding behind a column by Mort Halperin) the Speaker told us that we had a better chance of getting the truth about illegal wiretapping from the telcos by relying on the Bush administration Inspector Generals in a post-immunity world than we would have from discovery in court.

At the receiving line after the talk, I shouted out that we couldn't rely in the IG's. Pelosi made a face and said, “then we'll have to force the issue.”

But that wasn't the big story of the event.

The big story was the “surprise guest”: Vice President Al Gore. He gave a superb speech. Look for it on YouTube: Al Gore at Netroots Nation 2008, Part 1; Al Gore at Netroots Nation 2008, Part 2.

AlNancy.jpg

He was great. She was good enough to come, and I still have my credentials.

Posted in Talks & Conferences | 3 Comments