[Announcement] Nov 1-2, The Human Face of Privacy Technology

Robert Guerra rguerra at yahoo.com
Sat Jul 14 18:50:54 PDT 2001


I believe this announcement might be of interest to the folks on here.


<http://www.ipc.on.ca/english/pubpres/speeches/novcon01.htm>
http://www.cacr.math.uwaterloo.ca/conferences/2001/isw-eighth/announcement.html
>



2001 Conferences

8th CACR Information Security Workshop
2nd Annual Privacy and Security Workshop
The Human Face of Privacy Technology
November 1 & 2, 2001

Centre for Applied Cryptographic Research (CACR)
University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada

This is the first announcement. Please pass this announcement to any 
colleagues who might be interested in attending.

Updates, including the abstracts of talks and speaker bios, workshop 
program, and hotel information, will be posted to this web-site as 
the information becomes available. This information will also be 
included in the second announcement to be mailed on July 16, 2001.

INTRODUCTION
The 8th CACR Information Security Workshop: The Human Face of Privacy 
Technology will be held November 1 & 2, 2001, at the University of 
Toronto, Canada (exact location to be announced). This is the second 
annual conference jointly organized by the Information Privacy 
Commission of Ontario and the Center for Applied Cryptographic 
Research, University of Waterloo.

WORKSHOP THEME:
Cell phone users were recently outraged when their private 
conversations were streamed live over the Internet. Digital cell 
phone users became equally stressed when the wireless encryption 
standard - 802.11 they had been using to protect their conversations 
was cracked. Even more disconcerting, places such as Guatemala see 
human rights workers, using privacy technologies to protect other 
civil rights groups' identities and the information they report on 
civil rights abuses, experience daily threats of information theft as 
well as kidnappings.

Within the last year those involved in developing and implementing 
technology have experienced a growing awareness of privacy risks 
within those technologies and a better understanding of privacy 
averse environments. This awareness has brought to the fore the need 
to further develop and implement technologies that are privacy 
protective. Parallel to this, around the globe, economic crime units 
and law enforcement agencies, governments, businesses and lawyers 
wrestle with the tools to combat the international specter of cyber 
crime, while often sidelining key privacy issues. The exploration of 
privacy and security issues is fundamental to understanding how the 
construction and implementation of privacy policies and technologies 
can be improved for the real world.

This year's workshop will explore these and other privacy and 
security issues through a mix of traditional panel discussions and 
presentations as well as a Mock Cyber Crime Trial with audience 
participation and an interactive subject rights counter-surveillance 
event lead by Dr. Steve Mann, U of Toronto.

The workshop builds on the comments and suggestions provided by last 
year's delegates and speakers who suggested a further exploration 
into both leading edge privacy and security technologies and an 
exploration of the context that these technologies work within. As a 
result, the conference has been expanded to cover two days, including 
parallel breakout sessions. Attendee spots have been increased to 210 
to meet demand and more time for discussion and networking has been 
set-aside in the evenings. For early registrants a conference package 
will be sent out before the event that includes additional material 
on the conference objective, speakers/organizers and a detailed 
backgrounder for the scheduled Mock Cyber Crime Trial that will take 
place.

The intended audience includes technology and security experts, 
CIO's, senior technology executives, cryptographers, engineers, law 
enforcement, academics, private sector leaders, privacy experts and 
students.

Sponsors:


* Alcatel Canada
* Certicom Corp.
* Communications Security Establishment, Canadian Federal Government
* Information & Privacy Commission, Ontario
* JetNet Managed Internet Services Inc.
* MITACS
* Pitney Bowes


Organizers:
-----------

* Mike Gurski (Conference Chair)
Information & Privacy Commission, Ontario
* Alfred Menezes
Centre for Applied Cryptographic Research (CACR)
University of Waterloo
* Sherry Shannon
Centre for Applied Cryptographic Research (CACR) and SVI Consulting

Program Co-ordinators:
-----------------------

* Pasha Peroff, Technology Policy Reseracher, Information & Privacy 
Commission, Ontario
* Jason Young, Legal Dept., Information & Privacy Commission, Ontario
* Robert Guerra, Director, Computer Professionals for Social 
Responsibility (CPSR)


Speakers (Partial List):
------------------------

* Dave Banisar, Deputy Director, Privacy International
* Dr. Ann Cavoukian, Information & Privacy Commission, Ontario
* Jennifer Granick, Clinical Director - Center for Internet & 
Society, Stanford University
* Scott Hutchinson, Sr. Prosecutor, Ontario Ministry of the Attorney General
* Dr. Steven Mann, University of Toronto
* Stephanie Perrin, Chief Privacy Officer, Zero Knowledge & Recipient 
of the 2001 Electronic Frontier Foundation's Pioneer Award
* Ron Ross, President, Jet Net
* Ari Schwartz, Center for Democracy and Technology
* Lawrence Surtees, IDC & Network World columnist
* Kristen Tsolis, Cyber Terrorism Researcher, US Navy Postgraduate School
* Dr. Scott Vanstone, Founder & Chief Cryptography, Certicom Corp.
* Minky Worden, Electronic Media Director, Human Rights Watch
Workshop Program



Day One
	 

8:00 - 9:00 AM


Registration

8:00 - 9:00


Continental Breakfast

9:00 - 9:20


Welcome from the Chair

Ann Cavoukian, Information and Privacy Commissioner of Ontario. (cf)

9:20 - 10:20


Keynote: Re-inventing Privacy: Imperative for Human Rights Protection

Stephanie Perrin, Chief Privacy Officer, Zero-Knowledge Systems. (cf)

10:20 - 10:50


Refreshment Break

10:50 AM - 12:00 PM


Panel Presentation: A More Transparent Society: Perspectives on subject rights

Dr. Steve Mann, Professor, Computer Engineering Research Group, 
University of Toronto. (cf)

12:00 - 12:30 (Lunch break)

12:30 - 1:30


Lunch Speaker: Democracy and Limitations on Free Speech and Anonymity

Lawrence Surtees, Reporter - telecommunications and high-technology, 
Globe & Mail. (cf)

1:30 - 2:10


JetNet Presentation: The Challenges of Turning a Security Company in 
to a Privacy & Security Company

Ron Ross

2:10 - 4:30


Cybercrime Trial:

Jennifer Granick, Clinical Director - Center for Internet & Society, 
Stanford. (cf)

Scott Hutchison, Sr. Prosecutor, Ontario Ministry of Attorney General. (cf)

Dave Banisar, Deputy Director, Privacy International (cf)

Kristen Tsolis, Cyber-Terrorism Researcher, U.S. Navy Postgraduate School. (cf)

Technological Crime Unit, Commercial Crime Section, RCMP. (uncf)

Arni Stinnissen, Electronic Crime Team, Anti-Rackets Section, OPP. (uncf)

Allan Manson, Professor of Law, Queen's University. (uncf)

4:30 - 5:30


Conference Adjourns

5:30 - 9:00


Dinner & Entertainment

A night of hot jazz/downtempo grooves by a local band (venue undecided). (uncf)

  	 



Day Two
	 

8:00 - 9:00 AM


Continental Breakfast

9:00 - 10:15


Breakout A: Panel: Latest developments in privacy and security technology

IBM Labs/Tivoli (cf)

Dr. Scott Vanstone, Chief Cryptographer, Certicom Corporation. (cf)




Breakout B: Privacy in the Workplace

Mary O'Donoghue, Information and Privacy Commissioner/Ontario (cf)



10:15 - 11:00


Refreshment Break

11:00 AM - 12:00 PM


Panel Presentation: Wireless Privacy, the Do's and Don'ts of wireless

Ari Schwartz, Sr. Policy Analyst, Center for Democracy & Technology, 
Washington, D.C. (cf)

Mike Gurski, Sr. Technology Policy Advisor, Information and Privacy 
Commissioner/Ontario. (cf)

12:00 - 12:30 (Lunch break)

12:30 - 1:30


Lunch Speaker: Protecting Human Rights With Privacy Technology

Minky Worden, Electronic Media Director, Human Rights Watch. (cf)

Amnesty International (uncf)

1:30 - 3:00


Breakout C:

Critical Analysis methods for the Future: A case study of the 
cracking of the 802.11 encryption code

Speakers unconfirmed


Breakout D: XXX

Peter Hope-Tindall, dataPrivacy Partners. (cf)

U8TV



3:00 - 4:30


Concluding Remarks: Challenging Complacence

Brian Beamish, Director, Policy and Compliance, Information and 
Privacy Commissioner/Ontario (cf)

Alfred Menezes, Professor, Department of Combinatorics and 
Optimization, University of Waterloo. (cf)

4:30 PM


Conference Ends

  	 

Registration

There is no registration fee for guests invited by the sponsors 
(Certicom, Communications Security Establishment, Information & 
Privacy Commission, JetNet, MITACS, and Pitney Bowes). The 
registration fee for other participants is as follows:

* Cdn $300 (US $150).
* For participants affiliated with an academic institution: Cdn $100 (US $75).
Please register as soon as possible as space is limited for this 
workshop; registration is on a first-come first-serve basis.

Please note that there may be an additional banquet fee of Cdn $30 
(US $20) for all registrants who wish to attend the workshop banquet 
on November 1. Details will be included in the second announcement.

To register, complete, in full, the attached REGISTRATION FORM and 
return it along with your payment to:
Mrs. Frances Hannigan, C&O Dept.,
University of Waterloo,
Waterloo, Ontario, Canada N2L 3G1.

You may also register by email (fhannigan at math.uwaterloo.ca) or by 
phone (Frances Hannigan: 519-888-4027).

------------------------cut from here---------------------------------
8th CACR INFORMATION SECURITY WORKSHOP      REGISTRATION FORM
THE HUMAN FACE OF PRIVACY TECHNOLOGY

Fullname:
_________________________________________________________

Affiliation:
_________________________________________________________

Address:
_________________________________________________________

_________________________________________________________

_________________________________________________________

_________________________________________________________

_________________________________________________________

E-Mail Address:
_________________________________________________________

Telephone #:
_________________________________________________________

**Make Cheque/Money Order Payable in Cdn or US funds only to: CACR

**Credit Card payments can now be accepted:

[ ] Visa       [ ] MasterCard

Cardholder's Name: ____________________________________________

Card Number: __________________________________________________

Expiration Date: ______________________________________________

Signature: ____________________________________________________

-------------------------cut from here-------------------------------

Accommodations

The workshop will be held at The University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario.

Each participant will arrange their own travel and accommodation for 
the meeting. There are many hotels close to The University of 
Toronto. A list of hotels will be provided in the second announcement.

Travel

The closest airport is Lester Pearson Airport (Toronto Airport).

For further information or to return your Registration, please contact:
Mrs. Frances Hannigan
Department of Combinatorics & Optimization
University of Waterloo
Waterloo, Ontario, Canada N2L 3G1
e-mail: fhannigan at math.uwaterloo.ca
Fax: (519) 725-5441
Phone: (519) 888-4027

-- 
Progress, far from consisting in change, depends on retentiveness.
Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.
"The Life of Reason," 1906, George Santayana (1863-1952)
--
Robert Guerra <rguerra at yahoo.com>
PGP Keys <http://pgp.greatvideo.com/keys/rguerra/>





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