Call for Participation for CFP2000 (Toronto, April 2000)



Edited/Distributed by HURINet - The Human Rights Information Network
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## author     : declan@well.com
## date       : 04.08.99
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[Circulate until October 15, 1999]

The Tenth Conference on Computers Freedom and Privacy
CFP2000: CHALLENGING THE ASSUMPTIONS
http://www.cfp2000.org

The Westin Harbour Castle Hotel
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
April 4-7, 2000

CALL FOR PARTICIPATION

The Program Committee of the Tenth Conference on Computers,
Freedom, and Privacy (CFP2000) is seeking proposals for
conference sessions and speakers.

For the past decade, CFP has played a major role in the
public debate on the future of privacy and freedom in the
online world.  The CFP audience is as diverse as the Net
itself, with attendees not only from government, business,
education, and non-profits, but also from the community of
computer professionals, hackers, crackers and engineers who
work the code of cyberspace.  The themes have been broad and
forward-looking. CFP explores what will be. It is the place
where the future is mapped.

The theme of the tenth CFP conference is 'Challenging the
Assumptions'.  After a decade of CFP conferences, it's time
to examine what we have learned. "On the Internet, nobody
knows you're a dog" has become a cliche, but we've learned
that unless we take measures to protect our identities,
people can and do identify us on the Internet. We have
talked about the role of government in cyberspace, and some
have even suggested that the Net needs no government. But
now that increasing numbers of people around the world are
relying on the Internet not just as a marketplace of ideas,
but the market where they conduct their daily business, the
issue of governance has come to the forefront. And even
where no rules have been imposed by governments, some argue
that standards setters and technology implementers have
imposed de facto rules. At CFP2000 we want to re-examine the
assumptions we have been making and consider which ones
still make sense as we move forward.

Proposals are welcomed on all aspects of computers, freedom,
and privacy. We strongly encourage proposals that challenge
the future, tackle the hard questions, look at old issues in
new ways, articulate and analyze key assumptions, and
present complex issues in all their complexity.

We are seeking proposals for tutorials, plenary sessions,
workshops, 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 CFP2000 web site at
http://www.cfp2000.org/submissions/.  All submissions must
be received by October 15, 1999.  The CFP2000 Program
Committee will notify submitters of the status of their
proposals by December 3.

**************************************
Workshop on Freedom and Privacy by Design

On the first day of CFP2000 we will hold a workshop that
explores using -technology- to bring about strong
protections of civil liberties which are guaranteed by the
technology itself---in short, to get hackers, system
architects, and implementors strongly involved in CFP and
its goals.  Our exploration of technology includes (a)
implemented, fielded systems, and (b) what principles and
architectures should be developed, including which open
problems must be solved, to implement and field novel
systems that can be inherently protective of civil
liberties.

We aim to bring together implementors and those who have
studied the social issues of freedom and privacy in one room
to generate ideas for systems that we should field, and
implementation strategies for fielding them.

If you would like to participate, you must submit a short
paper or extended abstract on some issue related to the
workshop by November 12. Complete submission instructions
are available at http://www.cfp2000.org/workshop/

**************************************

CFP Student Competition

Full time college or graduate students may compete for
financial support to attend the conference and for cash
prizes. Three $500 cash prizes will be awarded for the best
paper, the best Web presentation, and the submission that
best makes use of the vast trove of papers, audio, and video
materials from the past ten years of Computers, Freedom, and
Privacy conferences. Free CFP conference registrations and
travel scholarships will be awarded to the top winners as
well as for several honorable mentions. For full submission
information, see http://www.cfp2000.org/students/.

**************************************

CFP2000 PROGRAM COMMITTEE

Chair: Lorrie Cranor, AT&T Labs-Research

Ann Cavoukian, Information and Privacy Commissioner, Ontario, Canada
Roger Clarke, The Australian National University
Karen Coyle, California Digital Library
Chuck Cranor, AT&T Labs-Research
Lenny Foner, MIT Media Lab
Wendy Grossman, Freelance writer and author of net.wars
Bruce R. Koball, Technical Consultant
Susan Landau, Sun Microsystems
Shabbir Safdar, Mindshare Internet Campaigns
Pam Samuelson, University of California Berkeley
Ari Schwartz, Center for Democracy and Technology
David Singer, IBM
Barry Steinhardt, ACLU
Bruce Umbaugh, Webster University

FOR MORE INFORMATION VISIT http://www.cfp2000.org/




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