RRE: crime and technology
From: IN%"rre@weber.ucsd.edu" 20-FEB-1997 07:55:48.58 From: Phil Agre <pagre@weber.ucsd.edu> =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= This message was forwarded through the Red Rock Eater News Service (RRE). Send any replies to the original author, listed in the From: field below. You are welcome to send the message along to others but please do not use the "redirect" command. For information on RRE, including instructions for (un)subscribing, send an empty message to rre-help@weber.ucsd.edu =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= Date: Wed, 19 Feb 1997 18:51:34 -0500 From: Belinda Juran <juran@law.harvard.edu> [...] Harvard Journal of Law & Technology Symposium: Crime & Technology Law Enforcement Technology - Cybercrime - Electronic Commerce Saturday, March 15, 1997 Ames Courtroom, Austin Hall at Harvard Law School in Cambridge, MA. Registration: 9:30 A.M. Tentative Schedule, including Confirmed and Tentative Panelists: 9:30-9:45 Registration & coffee 9:45-10 Introduction 10-12 Panel: "Search, Seizure, and Surveillance Technology" (searching of technology & the technology of searching) Moderator: Stephen Heymann assistant United States attorney in Boston who teaches at HLS and was involved with the first wiretap laid on the Internet. Panelists: o Tony West AUSA in San Jose who helped investigate the creator of PGP and is now prosecuting the "Orchid Club" cases against an international child pornography ring that distributed through the Internet. o Chris Slobogin UFlorida professor who is the reporter for the ABA Task Force on Technology and Law Enforcement o Andy Good a Boston defense attorney who has defended computer searches including US v. Steve Jackson Games o Marc Goodman a Los Angeles Police Department sargeant who has investigated computer crimes and has pursued the impact of technology on police departments during his year at the Kennedy School of Government o Elizabeth Marsh a Quinnipiac Law School professor who has done work on encryption and the danger of the federal government's "key" proposal 12 Lunch: box lunch provided 12:45-1:15 Keynote: invited (tentative) keynote speaker: Bob Kahn Corporation for National Research Initiatives 1:15-3:15 Panel: "The Risks of Electronic Banking &Commerce" (content security & payment/banking security) Moderator: Charles Nesson professor at Harvard Law School specializing in legal implications of digital technologies o Marc Rotenberg EPIC (Electronic Privacy & Information Center) o Kelly Frey Copyright Clearance Center o David Byer partner, Testa Hurwitz & Thibeault, Boston, MA o Philip Bane counsel, First Virtual 3:15 end Admission to the Symposium is free to all Harvard affiliates (with valid Harvard ID), $15 for all other students, $30 for public sector professionals, and $100 for private sector professionals. ADVANCE REGISTRATION IS STRONGLY SUGGESTED. - ------------------------Registration Form------------------------------- Harvard Journal of Law & Technology Symposium on Crime & Technology; March 15, 1997; registration begins at 9:30 a.m.; program begins at 10:00 a.m. Ames Courtroom, Austin Hall, Harvard Law School, Cambridge MA Name:____________________________________________________ Affiliation _________________________________________________ Address __________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ Telephone:________________________________________________ Email:____________________________________________________ Check One: _____ Private Sector Professional: $100 _____ Public Sector Professional: $ 30 _____ Student: $ 15 _____ Harvard student (valid ID must be presented at the door): free Make checks payable to: Harvard Journal of Law & Technology Mail the completed registration form with check to: Symposium Registration Harvard Journal of Law & Technology Publications Center Harvard Law School Cambridge, MA 02138 - ------------------------------Cut Here-------------------------------------- The Symposium is sponsored by Hale and Dorr L.L.P., Boston, MA. The Spring Issue of the Journal will include articles covering the broad topic of "Crime and Technology." For additional information about the Symposium, contact Symposium Editor Belinda Juran, by e-mail at juran@law.harvard.edu, or by phone at the Harvard Journal of Law & Technology offices at 617-495-3606 or 617-493-7949. ABOUT THE JOURNAL: The Harvard Journal of Law & Technology is a leading scholarly publication for articles addressing the many diverse interstices of science and technology with law and society. We have published articles by law professors, practitioners, business leaders, and politicians on varied topics including biotechnology, computers, international trade, technology transfer, intellectual property, medical technologies, and telecommunications. These and other subjects are some of the most exciting and rapidly developing areas of the law, and we believe that the dialogue provided by the Harvard Journal of Law & Technology will help to shape the future of this important field. We welcome submissions of articles, case comments, or book reviews addressing the relationship of law and technology. SUBSCRIPTION INFORMATION: For additional information, please contact the Journal at the address below. The Journal publishes three issues each year. To subscribe to the Journal's upcoming issues in Volume 10, please send the Journal a check for U.S. $45.00 (foreign orders $50.00) to the address below. To obtain the issue discussed above or back issues, please send the Journal a check for $35.00 with a note indicating the desired issue (i.e., "Vol. 9 No. 2"). ************************************************************************* Harvard Journal of Law & Technology Publications Center Harvard Law School Cambridge, MA 02138 Telephone: (617) 495-3606 Fax: (617) 495-8828 E-Mail: jolt@law.harvard.edu WWW: http://www.law.harvard.edu/home/jolt/ *************************************************************************
participants (1)
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E. Allen Smith