REMINDER: SAFE Forum Cybercast - Monday July 1, 12 noon - 6 pm EDT

SECURITY AND FREEDOM THROUGH ENCRYPTION FORUM MONDAY JULY 1, 1996 STANFORD, CA 9:00 am - 3:00 pm PDT / 12:00 noon - 6:00 pm EDT / 1600 - 2000 GMT On July 1, 1996 in the heart of California's Silicon Valley, members of Congress and prominent computer industry leaders and privacy advocates will meet to discuss the need to reform U.S. encryption policy. The SAFE Forum will bring together members of Congress, privacy advocates, cryptographers, and industry leaders for a discussion on the need to reform U.S. encryption policy. If you can't attend the SAFE Forum in person, you can still participate by attending the cybercast of the event. The cybercast will include still photos of the conference, a RealAudio broadcast of the forum, and a telnet chat room for netizens to discuss the event and cryptography issues. Just visit the SAFE Forum web site on Monday for the necessary links: http://www.crypto.com/safe/ (You will need to be a copy of RealAudio installed on your computer. Visit http://www.realaudio.com/ for a FREE copy of Real Audio). The SAFE Forum Cybercast is brought to you with the help and support of: MediaCast (http://www.mediacast.com/) and AudioNet (http://www.audionet.com/) --------------------------------------------------------------------------- Event Information * Location: Kresge Auditorium at Stanford University, Stanford, California * Date: July 1, 1996, 9:00 am - 3:00 pm Program: 9:00 - 9:15 Welcome Rep. Anna Eshoo (D-Ca), co-host Rep. Tom Campbell (R-Ca), co-host Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vt) (by satellite) Jerry Berman, Center for Democracy and Technology 9:15 - 10:15 The Need for Locks and Keys on the GII: An Encryption Overview Marc Andreessen, Netscape Communications Lori Fena, Electronic Frontier Foundation Eric Schmidt, Sun Microsystems Craig Mundie, Microsoft Corporation 10:15 - 10:30 Technology Demo: The Need for Locks & Keys -- Packet Sniffing on the Internet (Cylink Corporation) 10:30 - 10:45 Break 10:45 - 11:45 How U.S. Encryption Policy Fails to Meet User Needs Herbert Lin, National Research Council Jim Omura, Cylink Corporation Tim Oren, CompuServe Incorporated Phil Zimmermann, PGP, Inc. Todd Lappin, Wired Magazine -- Introducing "Stories of Real-Life Encryption Users" 11:45 - 1:00 Lunch 1:00 - 1:45 The Cryptographers' Report: "Forty Bits Is Not Enough" Matt Blaze, AT&T Whitfield Diffie, Sun Microsystems Bruce Schneier, Counterpane Systems Eric Thompson, Access Data Tom Parenty, Sybase Technology Demo: The Genie is Out of the Bottle -- A World Wide Web Tour of Good Cryptography Available Outside of the United States 1:45 - 2:45 Addressing Law Enforcement Concerns in a Constitutional Framework Ken Bass, Venabel, Baetjer, Howard and Civiletti Cindy Cohn, McGlashan & Sarrail Michael Froomkin, University of Miami Law School John Gilmore, Electronic Frontier Foundation Grover Norquist, Americans for Tax Reform Nadine Strossen, American Civil Liberties Union Daniel Weitzner, Center for Democracy and Technology 2:45 - 3:00 Conclusion Members of Congress expected to participate include: * Rep. Anna Eshoo (D-CA) * Rep. Tom Campbell (R-CA) * Rep. Zoe Lofgren (D-CA) * Sen. Conrad Burns (R-MT) * Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-VT) (by satellite) --------------------------------------------------------------------------- Sponsors Of The SAFE Forum: America Online American Civil Liberties Union Americans for Tax Reform AT&T Audionet Business Software Alliance Center for Democracy and Technology Center for National Security Studies Commercial Internet eXchange CompuServe Incorporated Computer and Communications Industry Association Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility Cylink Corporation Digital Secured Networks Technology EDS Electronic Frontier Foundation Electronic Messaging Association Electronic Privacy Information Center Information Technology Association of America IEEE - USA ManyMedia MediaCast Media Institute Microsoft Corporation National Association of Manufacturers Netcom Online Communication Services Netscape Communications Corporation Novell, Inc. Oracle Corporation Pacific Telesis Group Pretty Good Privacy, Inc. Prodigy, Inc. Progress and Freedom Foundation Rent-a-Computer Securities Industry Association Software Publishers Association Sun Microsystems, Inc. Sybase, Inc. Voters Telecommunications Watch Wired Magazine --------------------------------------------------------------------------- CORRECTION An earlier Policy Post listed Matt Blaze with Lucent Technologies. That information was incorrect; he is with AT&T Research. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
participants (1)
-
Bob Palacios