CFP93 information (fwd)

Yanek Martinson yanek at novavax.nova.edu
Sat Nov 28 12:00:51 PST 1992


 The following message was posted to Extropians by Fred Moulton.  
 
 Forwarded message:
 > Message-Id: <9211281835.AA05819 at geech.gnu.ai.mit.edu>
 > To: Extropians at gnu.ai.mit.edu
 > Date: Sat, 28 Nov 92 10:31:56 -0800
 > From: moulton at netcom.com (Fred C. Moulton)
 > Subject: CFP93 information
 > 
 > 
 > Attached is some information on CFP93 which might be of interest to some
 > persons on this list.  
 > 
 > Fred
 > 
 > 
 > 
 >                          CFP'93
 >    The Third Conference on Computers, Freedom and Privacy
 >          Sponsored by ACM SIGCOMM, SIGCAS & SIGSAC
 >                     9 - 12 March 1993
 >      San Francisco Airport Marriott Hotel, Burlingame, CA
 > 
 > 
 > SCOPE
 > 
 > The advance of computer and telecommunications technologies holds 
 > great promise for individuals and society. From convenience for 
 > consumers and efficiency in commerce to improved public health and 
 > safety and increased participation in democratic institutions, 
 > these technologies can fundamentally transform our lives.
 > 
 > At the same time these technologies pose threats to the ideals of 
 > a free and open society. Personal privacy is increasingly at risk 
 > from invasion by high-tech surveillance and eavesdropping. The 
 > myriad databases containing personal information maintained in the 
 > public and private sectors expose private life to constant scrutiny. 
 > 
 > Technological advances also enable new forms of illegal activity, 
 > posing new problems for legal and law enforcement officials and 
 > challenging the very definitions of crime and civil liberties. But 
 > technologies used to combat these crimes can threaten the 
 > traditional barriers between the individual and the state.
 > 
 > Even such fundamental notions as speech, assembly and property are 
 > being transformed by these technologies, throwing into question 
 > the basic Constitutional protections that have guarded them. 
 > Similarly, information knows no borders; as the scope of economies 
 > becomes global and as networked communities transcend 
 > international boundaries, ways must be found to reconcile 
 > competing political, social and economic interests in the digital 
 > domain.
 > 
 > The Third Conference on Computers, Freedom and Privacy will 
 > assemble experts, advocates and interested people from a broad 
 > spectrum of disciplines and backgrounds in a balanced public forum 
 > to address the impact of computer and telecommunications 
 > technologies on freedom and privacy in society. Participants will 
 > include people from the fields of computer science, law, business, 
 > research, information, library science, health, public policy, 
 > government, law enforcement, public advocacy and many others.
 > 
 > Topics covered in previous CFP conferences include:
 > 
 > Personal Information and Privacy
 > International Perspectives and Impacts
 > Law Enforcement and Civil Liberties
 > Ethics, Morality and Criminality
 > Electronic Speech, Press and Assembly
 > Who Logs On (Computer & Telecom Networks)
 > Free Speech and the Public Telephone Network
 > Access to Government Information
 > Computer-based Surveillance of Individuals
 > Computers in the Workplace
 > Who Holds the Keys? (Cryptography)
 > Who's in Your Genes? (Genetic Information)
 > Ethics and Education
 > Public Policy for the 21st Century
 > 
 > INFORMATION
 > 
 > For more information on the CFP'93 program and advance 
 > registration, as it becomes available, write to:
 > 
 > 	CFP'93 Information
 > 	2210 Sixth Street
 > 	Berkeley, CA 94710
 > 
 > or send email to:    cfp93 at well.sf.ca.us    with the word 
 > "Information" in the subject line.
 > 
 > THE ORGANIZERS
 > 
 > General Chair
 > -------------
 > Bruce R. Koball
 > CFP'93
 > 2210 Sixth Street
 > Berkeley, CA 94710
 > 510-845-1350 (voice)
 > 510-845-3946 (fax)
 > bkoball at well.sf.ca.us
 > 
 > Steering Committee
 > ------------------
 > John Baker                        Mitch Ratcliffe
 > Equifax                           MacWeek Magazine
 > 
 > Mary J. Culnan                    David D. Redell
 > Georgetown University             DEC Systems Research
 >                                    Center
 > Dorothy Denning
 > Georgetown University             Marc Rotenberg
 >                                   Computer Professionals
 > Les Earnest                        for Social Responsibility
 > GeoGroup, Inc.
 >                                   C. James Schmidt
 > Mike Godwin                       San Jose State University
 > Electronic Frontier Foundation
 >                                   Barbara Simons
 > Mark Graham                       IBM
 > Pandora Systems
 >                                   Lee Tien
 > Lance J. Hoffman                  Attorney
 > George Washington University
 >                                   George Trubow
 > Donald G. Ingraham                John Marshall Law School
 > Office of the District Attorney,
 >  Alameda County, CA               Willis Ware
 >                                   Rand Corp.
 > Simona Nass
 > Student - Cardozo Law School      Jim Warren
 >                                   MicroTimes
 > Peter G. Neumann                   & Autodesk, Inc.
 > SRI International
 > 
 > Affiliations are listed for identification only.
 > 
 > 
 > 
 
 

--
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