July 2018 Archives

News digest | Open Society Information Program | Week ending 27 July 2018

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The Information Program NEWS DIGEST, published the second and fourth Thursdays of each month, aims to update colleagues in the Open Society Foundations and friends further afield about the news, opinions and events the Program team have been watching this fortnight. The views expressed in these stories do not necessarily reflect those of the Information Program or the OSF.  Prepared by Wendy M. Grossman.

 

Our staff, advisers and major grantees tweet at http://bit.ly/13j5fjq. Current and former grantees featured in this issue: Benetech, Citizen Lab, La Quadrature du Net, Tactical Tech.

 

JOB OPENINGS

 

Wikimedia

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Wikimedia is looking for a senior public policy manager, who will be one of two such managers on the Public Policy team, based in the legal department, and will work closely with outside digital rights advocates and Wikimedia affiliates in the US and internationally. Wikimedia seeks candidates with successful track records in advocacy work around internet legal and policy issues.

http://bit.ly/2KXybrR

 

DataKind

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DataKind is searching for a new Director of Global Community. DataKind brings together volunteers from around the world to use data science and AI in the service of humanity. The director of global community will be responsible for recruiting expert volunteer teams, working with charity partners to define their data science needs, and managing projects through to success.

http://bit.ly/2KshVeU

 

 

NEWS

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For breaking news stories, visit: http://pinboard.in/u:osi_info_program/t:news/

 

EU fines Google €4.34 billion over anti-competitive Android licensing

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At the Guardian, Jennifer Rankin reports that the EU has fined Google €4.34 billion over licensing terms that have constrained smartphone manufacturers using its Android operating system in order to drive revenues for its profitable search engine. Google has 90 days to remediate its practices. In a blog posting, the company says it will appeal and claims the EU's decision will harm consumers. Also at the Guardian, Samuel Gibbs finds that a number of analysts think the ruling is "too little, too late" because Google is now too firmly entrenched for others to be able to compete. In an editorial, the Guardian argues that the ruling opens up wider issues, still to be decided.

Guardian (fine): http://bit.ly/2v7uGoG

Google: http://bit.ly/2LCCkSg

Guardian (reactions): http://bit.ly/2LoeoTs

Guardian (editorial): http://bit.ly/2LQ8UNa

 

Indian government threatens to sue WhatsApp over spread of fake news

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At Vice, David Gilbert reports that the Indian government is threatening to sue WhatsApp over the viral spread of fake videos that have been linked to mob lynchings. The company has published new restrictions on forwarding messages, photos, and videos, and will test lowering the limit on simultaneous chats to five. Also at Vice, Gilbert and Zeenat Saberin report on several violent deaths due to WhatsApp rumors, including that of Sukanta Chakraborty, whose job as a "rumor buster" for the state of Tripura involved teaching local village residents to spot fake news. Analysts in India say there is reason to believe that prime minister Narandra Modi's BJP party is behind much of the fear-based fake news circulating on WhatsApp and other platforms.

Vice (lawsuit): http://bit.ly/2LFG1q4

Vice (deaths): http://bit.ly/2LU4STW

 

Formally organized social media manipulation campaigns spread to 48 countries

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A report from the Oxford Internet Institute finds that the number of countries with evidence of formally organized domestic social media manipulation campaigns has risen from 28 to 48 since 2017. The EU vs Disinfo site publishes its catalogue of  over 4,200 cases of debunked pro-Kremlin disinformation from more than 20 countries. In a report presented to the British House of Lords and published by the Constitution Society, Julianne Kerr Morrison, Ravi Naik, and Tactical Tech co-founder Stephanie Hankey argue that government should increase oversight of political campaigning, encourage spending transparency, and continue to engage with social media and digital advertising companies. Naked Security reports that the US Department of Justice has announced that under a new policy it will inform businesses, organizations, and individuals if they're being targeted by foreign operations with the goal of influencing US elections.

OII: http://bit.ly/2On3Sts

EU vs Disinfo: http://bit.ly/2v47eJ1

Constitution Society: http://bit.ly/2A9n9LV

Naked Security: http://bit.ly/2v5ODME

 

German police raid privacy protection association Zwiebelfreunde

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La Quadrature du Net reports that on June 20 the German police searched the homes of several of the Zwiebelfreunde association's board members and seized all their computers and storage media, and went on to search the Augsburg hackerspace OpenLab2. The reported reason: Zwiebelfreunde collects donations for Riseup, which hosts the email address associated with a blog calling for anti-fascist protests in Augsburg, which the police consider a call for violent actions. LQDN believes that the real reason is that Zwiebelfreunde has long promoted the use of privacy-enhancing tools such as Tor.

LQDN: http://bit.ly/2uOmom2


Steve Bannon plans anti-Soros right-wing European revolution

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At the Daily Beast, Nico Hines reports that Steve Bannon, Donald Trump's former White House chief advisor, is setting up a foundation in Europe called The Movement which he hopes will spark a right-wing revolution in Europe, starting with the May 2019 European Parliament elections. Bannon hopes his organization will ultimately rival George Soros's Open Society Foundation, and is laying the groundwork for an envisioned right-wing "supergroup" within the European Parliament.

Daily Beast: https://thebea.st/2AebxHu

 

US: Open government advocates fear the secrecy of private messaging

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The Associated Press reports that private messaging apps are increasingly being used by government officials conducting public business, and that the use of these technologies is undermining open government laws and policies. Different states are taking different approaches: in Kansas the governor has banned the use of private accounts for any of his office's business, while in Kentucky and Arizona lawmakers have unsuccessfully proposed exempting all communications on personal phones from state open records laws. 
AP: http://bit.ly/2mL229d

 

Social media giants launch Data Transfer Project for data portability

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At the company's blog, Microsoft's vice-president for corporate standards announces that Microsoft, in conjunction with Facebook, Google, and Twitter, is launching the open source Data Transfer Project, intended to help users seamlessly and securely move their data between their services. At The Verge, Russell Brandom reports that most of the coding so far has been done by Google and Microsoft engineers and notes that Google claims the initiative is intended to give those who download their data the tools to make use of it.

Microsoft: http://bit.ly/2NOvhn4

The Verge: http://bit.ly/2mKAC3f

 

 

FEATURES AND ANALYSIS

====================

For more features and analysis selected by the Program team, visit:

http://pinboard.in/u:osi_info_program/t:oped/

 

Making machines play fair

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In this video clip of a talk given as part of the Royal Society's year-long "You and AI" lecture series, Microsoft theoretical computer science Cynthia Dwork discusses the emerging scientific theory of how to build fairness into algorithmic systems. She considers many building blocks, from defining fairness and the different demands of individual and group fairness, to understanding scoring and financial incentives, and the use of randomness. Others in the lecture series include AI Now Institute director Kate Crawford speaking about machine learning and bias and DeepMind CEO Demis Hassabis outlining the history of AI,

YouTube: http://bit.ly/2mKB6X7

Royal Society: http://bit.ly/2AdAOSa

 

Cambodia: Chinese espionage group TEMP.Periscope targets July 2018 elections

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In this blog posting, the US security company FireEye reports the results of its investigation into the Chinese espionage group TEMP.Periscope. FireEye has found active compromises of multiple Cambodian entities related to the country's upcoming July 29 elections. TEMP.Periscope has been active since at least 2013, and previously targeted maritime-related targets, consulting services, and the high-tech industry, among others. FireEye expects the group to continue targeting these and other agencies and organizations. 

FireEye: http://bit.ly/2LmD2DP

 

Blockchain's potential for social benefits

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In this blog posting, Jim Fruchterman, head of Benetech, summarizes the July 6 TechCrunch conference on blockchain, which he attended in order to represent the social good sector at an event otherwise solely attended bytechnologists, investors, and entrepreneurs.  Fruchterman believes that blockchain technology could be especially useful in low-trust environments - for example, his team is working on a system for fingerprinting videos to help authenticate evidence collected during the Syrian conflict. In a video clip at TechCrunch, Fruchterman discusses the potential with reporter Megan Rose Dickey.

Benetech: http://bit.ly/2AcPG35

TechCrunch: https://tcrn.ch/2uQF3Oe

 

UN Special Rapporteur recommends

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In this blog posting at Citizen Lab, Lex Bill notes that the draft report from the UN Special Rapporteur on violence against women, Dubravka Šimonović, draws on recommendations Citizen Lab made in its formal 2017 submission. Among its recommendations: states should legislate to prohibit emerging forms of online, gender-based violence, while internet intermediaries should commit to eradicating online gender-based violence and promote human rights and digital security. Citizen Lab commends the Special Rapporteur for recognizing the need to respect both the rights to privacy and freedom of expression and the rights of women and girls online.

Citizen Lab: http://bit.ly/2Ltdo0o

UN: http://bit.ly/2JWJE6d

 

Dealing with Holocaust deniers: lessons from moderating AskHistorians

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In this article at Slate, Johannes Breit, a volunteer moderator for the AskHistorians subreddit, discusses the core principles the moderators have had to adopt. The subreddit, which is one of the largest history forums on the internet, operates a strict ban on Holocaust denialism, including "just asking questions", which in their experience is intended to sow doubt rather than genuinely seek knowledge. Facebook's newly announced policy of removing posts for "advocating violence" won't work, Breit argues, calling Holocaust denial "a form of political agitation in the service of bigotry". They have concluded that denying these positions a platform is the only option.

Slate: https://slate.me/2mJu30z

 

US: The NSA's AT&T spy hubs

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In this article at The Intercept, Ryan Gallagher reveals the extent of AT&T's status as a trusted partner in the US National Security Agency's surveillance program.  Monitoring the eight peering circuits at backbone facilities in Seattle, San Francisco, LA, Dallas, Chicago, Atlanta, Washington, DC, and New York, says former AT&T technician Mark Klein, gives the NSA access to all the data that's interchanged between AT&T's network and those belonging to other companies that peer with it, such as Spring, Cogent, Level 3, Telia, Tata Communications, Telecom Italia, and Deutsche Telekom.

The Intercept: http://bit.ly/2LrkTEI

 

 

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DIARY

==============

To see more events recommended by the Information Program team, visit:

https://pinboard.in/u:osi_info_program/t:events/. If you would like your event listed in this mail, email info.digest@opensocietyfoundations.org.

 

Defcon

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August 9-12, 2018

Las Vegas, NV, USA

The heart of the DEF CON 26 theme is the concept of the counterfuture. The counterfuture is the open-source alternative to totalitarian dystopia; a world where we use tech and ingenuity for empowerment and connection rather than isolation and control.

http://bit.ly/2A2ojUE

 

Free and Open Communications on the Internet

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FOCI brings together researchers and practitioners from technology, law, and policy who are working on means to study, detect, or circumvent practices that inhibit free and open communications on the Internet.

http://bit.ly/2N8qWKW

 

4VOX-Pol Third Biennial Conference

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August 20-21, 2018

Amsterdam, The Netherlands

The VOX-Pol Network of Excellence (NoE) is a European Union Framework Programme 7 (FP7)-funded academic research network focused on researching the prevalence, contours, functions, and impacts of Violent Online Political Extremism and responses to it.c

http://bit.ly/2Hhzj3Q

 

World Library and Information Congress

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August 24-30, 2018

Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia

The 84th edition of the World Library and Information Congress has the theme, "Transform Libraries, Transform Societies" with the additional tagline, "Reaching out to the hard to reach", which was chosen in recognition of the critical role played by libraries in the development of a nation, particularly in their ability to transform societies.

http://bit.ly/2qSXIta

 

Human Rights Measurement Initiative (HRMI) co-design workshop

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September 12 - 14, 2018

Johannesburg, South Africa

Co-hosted with Amnesty International, this workshop will develop innovative and collaborative approaches for using human rights data for impact, and agree on the next steps for HRMI's expansion of country and rights coverage.

http://bit.ly/2JwLWO6

 

SciELO 20 Years Conference

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September 26-28, 2018

São Paulo, Brazil

In 2018, the SciELO Program will celebrate 20 years of operation, in full alignment with the advances of open science. The conference will address and debate the main political, methodological, and technological issues and trends that define today's state of the art in scholarly communication. These issues will also be shaping the future of the universal openness of scholarly publishing and its relationship with today's Open Access journals, in particular those of the SciELO Network.

http://bit.ly/2FlpVzU

 

Global Congress on Intellectual Property and the Public Interest V

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September 27-29

Washington, DC, US

The Global Congress is the main meeting of a global network of over 800 researchers, activists, and practitioners who work on the intersection of intellectual property and promotion of the public interest. The core goal is to promote evidence-based policy-making by fostering partnerships between academics and policy advocates from around the world.

http://bit.ly/2sSuVnn

 

Amsterdam Privacy Conference

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October 5-9, 2018

Amsterdam, Netherlands

APC 2018 brings together researchers, practitioners, policy makers and professionals in the field of privacy to share insights, exchange ideas and formulate, discuss and answer the challenging privacy questions that lie ahead of us. The goal of the conference is to bring together academics, policy makers, journalists, and practitioners to promote active discussion on timely topics, and foster debate on privacy issues between participants from various backgrounds and perspectives.

http://bit.ly/2ucbFEu

 

International Conference of Data Protection and Privacy Commissioners

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October 22-26, 2018

Brussels, Belgium

The 40th version of this event will be hosted by the European Data Protection Supervisor (EDPS), Giovanni Buttarelli and the chair of the Commission for Personal Data Protection of the Republic of Bulgaria, Ventsislav Karadjov. The conference is expected to focus on the recently launched international debate on the ethical dimension of data protection in the digital era. Accompanying conference events will also take place in Bulgaria.

http://bit.ly/2B1bX38

 

Meeting of the Minds Summit 2018

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November 27-29, 2018

Sacramento, CA, USA

The 12th annual Meeting of the Minds annual summit will spotlight tools and best practices working for smart city leaders across the globe. The event focuses on emerging and tested urban sustainability solutions which are scalable, replicable, and transferable for cities and regions. Discussions are rooted in a deep understanding of technology and equity as key drivers for smart cities.

http://bit.ly/2N80py1

 

Munin Conference on Scholarly Publishing

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November 28, 2018

Tromso, Norway

The Munin Conference is an annual conference on scholarly publishing and communication, primarily revolving around open access, open data and open science. The 2018 conference will be the thirteenth edition.

http://bit.ly/2N3zPWb

 

Computers, Privacy, and Data Protection 2019

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January 30 - February 1, 2019

Brussels, Belgium

The 12th international CPDP conference is accepting submissions for panel and session proposals until June 21, 2018.

http://bit.ly/2sSQ02x

 

We Robot 2019

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April 11-13, 2019

Miami, Florida, US

We Robot is an interdisciplinary conference on the legal and policy questions relating to robots. The increasing sophistication of robots and their widespread deployment everywhere - from the home, to hospitals, to public spaces, and even to the battlefield - disrupts existing legal regimes and requires new thinking on policy issues. The conference fosters conversations between the people designing, building, and deploying robots, and the people who design or influence the legal and social structures in which robots will operate.

http://bit.ly/2x6T3XD

 

Global Privacy Summit 2019

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May 2-3. 2019

Washington, DC

The annual conference of the International Association of Privacy Professionals. Intended for anyone who works in privacy anywhere across the globs, whether they work in the public or private sector.

http://bit.ly/2tNnJbP

 

re:publica 2019

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May 6-8, 2019

Berlin, Germany

The re:publica in Berlin is Europe's biggest conference on topics concerning digitization and society while also being one of the world's most exceptional festivals on digital culture. Since its beginnings in 2007 with 700 bloggers in attendance, it has grown into an international society conference. In 2017 it had 9,000 national and international participants from all areas of society.

http://bit.ly/2GMXl6o

 

 

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News digest | Open Society Information Program | Week ending 13 July 2018

====================================================

The Information Program NEWS DIGEST, published the second and fourth Thursdays of each month, aims to update colleagues in the Open Society Foundations and friends further afield about the news, opinions and events the Program team have been watching this fortnight. The views expressed in these stories do not necessarily reflect those of the Information Program or the OSF.  Prepared by Wendy M. Grossman.

 

Our staff, advisers and major grantees tweet at http://bit.ly/13j5fjq. Current and former grantees featured in this issue: Communia, EDRi, Knowledge Ecology International.

 

JOB OPENINGS

=============

 

Wikimedia

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Wikimedia is looking for a senior public policy manager, who will be one of two such managers on the Public Policy team, based in the legal department, and will work closely with outside digital rights advocates and Wikimedia affiliates in the US and internationally. Wikimedia seeks candidates with successful track records in advocacy work around internet legal and policy issues.

http://bit.ly/2KXybrR

 

DataKind

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DataKind is searching for a new Director of Global Community. DataKind brings together volunteers from around the world to use data science and AI in the service of humanity. The director of global community will be responsible for recruiting expert volunteer teams, working with charity partners to define their data science needs, and managing projects through to success. Director of Global Community: http://bit.ly/2KshVeU

 

 

NEWS

=====

For breaking news stories, visit: http://pinboard.in/u:osi_info_program/t:news/

 

European Parliament votes to reject controversial copyright legislation

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European Digital Rights reports that on July 5 the European Parliament voted not to fast-track the Copyright Directive Reform package by a vote of 278-318. Large numbers of individuals, civil society groups, academics, and the European Wikimedia community protested against the legislation, in particular Article 11 (the "link tax") and Article 13 (the "upload filter").  There will now be an open debate and vote, expected the week of September 10th. At Communia, Timothy Vollmer gives more detail of the politics surrounding the vote.

EDRi: http://bit.ly/2L15VV7

Communia: http://bit.ly/2ztC1Ei

 

US Senate votes to ratify the Marrakesh Treaty

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Knowledge Ecology International reports that the US Senate has voted to approve the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) Marrakesh Treaty to Facilitate Access to Published Works for Persons Who Are Blind, Visually Impaired or Otherwise Print Disabled. The vote brings the total of countries that have notified WIPO that they have ratified the treaty to 40. At least 54 more countries have signed or ratified the treaty but not yet notified WIPO.

KEI: http://bit.ly/2L1jBQ0

 

EU regulators reject ICANN's latest Whois privacy plan

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At The Register, Kieren McCarthy reports that the European Data Protection Supervisor's office has rejected the latest plan proposed by the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) for putting the Whois domain name directory into compliance with the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR). ICANN's contracts with its domain name registrars require them to collect names, addresses, and personal contact details from all domain name registrants in order to populate Whois. Since regulators began offering guidance on how to bring Whois into compliance in 2003, ICANN has made numerous failed proposals, including trying to argue that it's not a data controller. In May, ICANN requested EDPS's advice after a German court rejected ICANN's attempt to force a domain name registrar to continue collecting Whois data.

The Register: http://bit.ly/2zwRbZG


Social media restrictions spread in Africa

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AFP reports that Zambia plans to join a growing list of African countries in restricting social media usage. Communications minister Brian Mushimba told the Zambian parliament on July 5 that the measures were needed to fight fraud and abuse and reduce online pornography. Dispatch reports that Uganda began blocking "over the top" access on July 1 for anyone who hadn't paid the country's tax of UGX200 (US$0.52) per day. Ugandan Communications Commission executive director Godfrey Mutabazi says that the country's telecommunications companies have begun blocking VPNs, which Ugandans have been using to avoid the tax. The New York Times reports that an Egyptian court has sentenced Lebanese tourist Mona el-Mazbouh to eight years in prison for "deliberately broadcasting false rumors which aim to undermine society and attack religions" in a video tirade she posted on her Facebook page.

Quartz: http://bit.ly/2KYv2bf

Dispatch: http://bit.ly/2zwjt6C

New York Times: https://nyti.ms/2L5muMj

 

US: Immigration and Customs Enforcement system automatically recommends detention

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At Motherboard, Daniel Oberhaus reports that as a result of the Trump administration's "zero tolerance" policy, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) changed its risk assessment software so it recommended detention for all apprehended immigrants rather than, as before, just those with serious criminal histories. After the change ICE tripled its detention rate, imprisoning 43,000 people in 2017. In a 2015 review, the Department of Homeland Security called the risk assessment system "ineffective".
Motherboard: http://bit.ly/2ubFHWb

 

Chinese cameras conduct "emotional surveillance"

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At the LA Times, Don Lee reports that the facial expressions in images collected by surveillance cameras placed in classrooms in his school in Eastern China are being used to create a running score for each student and class. The scores are used to trigger alerts that require teachers to intervene if students appear disengaged or moody. Student and parent protests have led the school to temporarily pause the system.

LA Times: https://lat.ms/2mbBEF7

Proxy for EU readers: http://bit.ly/2NIvPeP

 

 

FEATURES AND ANALYSIS

====================

For more features and analysis selected by the Program team, visit:

http://pinboard.in/u:osi_info_program/t:oped/

 

Tim Berners-Lee plans to re-decentralize the web

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In this interview at Vanity Fair, World Wide Web inventor Tim Berners-Lee admits he was devastated to learn that Russian hackers and Cambridge Analytica interfered with the 2016 US presidential election. In response, Berners-Lee is working on Solid, a platform intended to re-decentralize the web and give individuals, rather than corporations, control over their data.

Vanity Fair: http://bit.ly/2L60pgQ

 

How Facebook "Likes" created the attention monopoly

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In this article at Medium, Matt Locke recounts the history of Facebook "Likes". Originally invented as a harmless way of helping to curate postings on the B3ta web community, "Likes" were adopted as a Facebook feature in 2009. It was combining "Likes" with the social graph and the newsfeed that gave Facebook its dominating role in advertising. Faecbook's attention monopoly might have been avoided, Locke says, by requiring social media companies to adopt common technical standards in 2009. At Locus, Cory Doctorow urges us to distinguish automated persuasion from automated targeting. Elections and referendums haven't been tipped by changing people into racists, but by connecting to racists and persuading them to vote. Doctorow calls the corporate surveillance system corrupt because the profits are highly concentrated but the damage is borne by society at large.

Medium: http://bit.ly/2NHqGne

Locus: http://bit.ly/2N8tbxY

 

Cybercrime profits from ad fraud

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In this report from the Marketing Science Consulting Group, Augustine Fou documents the connection between cybercrime and ad fraud, which he says is the most lucrative use for botnets. Criminals use the devices they compromise to create botnets to click on fake ads displayed on fake sites that they control and that launder traffic by auto-forwarding it to other sites. Fake apps drain most digital advertising budgets. Criminals also profit from selling the tools necessary for these frauds. The Washington Post reports that Twitter is suspending more than 1 million fake and suspicious accounts per day, or a total of over 70 million in May and June 2018, based on input from the AI start-up Magic Pony, which Twitter acquired in 2016. 
Marketing Science (Google Drive): http://bit.ly/2Je1iC5

Washington Post: https://wapo.st/2uqu6Sm

 

Ways to think about machine learning

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In this blog posting, Benedict Evans, a venture capitalist with Andreesen Horowitz, discusses how to think about machine learning, proposing that the key elements are automation, enabling technology, and relational databases. Because data isn't fungible, single-purpose machine learning systems will proliferate but will not approach "intelligence", just as in the 1950s we imagined fully functional robot servants - but got washing machines. In a Guardian feature, Olivia Solon notes that many start-ups claim their offerings are based on artificial intelligence but actually rely on humans to work. Because research shows that people tend to disclose more when they think they are talking to (or their data is being processed by) a machine rather than a human, this lack of transparency is an increasing problem.

Benedict Evans: http://bit.ly/2N5GGyg

Guardian: http://bit.ly/2zwEiyG

 

The disappearing horizon of autonomous vehicles

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In this Spectator article, Christian Wolmar, the author of the resent book Driverless Cars: On a Road to Nowhere, visits the autonomous vehicle exhibition in Stuttgart and finds that manufacturers are as skeptical about the hype as he is. The exhibition was full of suppliers, but no car manufacturers, and the few cars on display were not driverless. In a review of Wolmar's book at ZDNet, Wendy M. Grossman found his arguments compelling. In testimony before the California State Senate in February 2018, Rosemary Shahan, founder of Consumers for Auto Reliability and Safety, argued for applying more stringent disclosure and safety standards before allowing autonomous vehicles on the public roads, and warned that the US federal government is preemptively pushing the public to trust car manufacturers to get safety and security right.

Spectator: http://bit.ly/2N4whmq

ZDNet: https://zd.net/2JdBTZp

California Senate (PDF): http://bit.ly/2L9FPfx

 

UK: Government Digital Service struggles to overcome political culture

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In this article at The Register, Rebecca Hill discusses the present state of the Government Digital Service (GDS), set up in 2010 to place technology at the heart of government. GDS founding leader Mike Bracken has gone on to help other governments to copy the group, but in the UK GDS has stalled because the structure and culture within government departments doesn't fit the digital ethos. The story contains lessons for those seeking to digitize organizations with long-entrenched resistance to change.

The Register: http://bit.ly/2L1U0Xe

 

 

***

 

DIARY

==============

To see more events recommended by the Information Program team, visit:

https://pinboard.in/u:osi_info_program/t:events/. If you would like your event listed in this mail, email info.digest@opensocietyfoundations.org.

 

State of Our Networks

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July 13-18, 2018

Toronto, Canada

The theme of this year's State of Our Networks is Do It With Others (DIWO). In the face of threats to the open internet, which tools and tactics will help us respond to the opportunities and challenges of this moment? We are inviting proposals for talks, workshops, discussions, demonstrations and interventions to explore these questions.

http://bit.ly/2NKDWHB

 

The Circle of HOPE

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July 20-22, 2018

New York, NY, USA

Organized by 2600 Magazine, the 12th biennial Hackers on Planet Earth conference celebrates the hacker spirit. Talks typically feature new ways of examining and dissecting technology to reveal inconvenient truths.

http://bit.ly/2BbzJpM

 

PETS

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July 24-27, 2018

Barcelona, Spain

The Privacy Enhancing Technologies Symposium brings together privacy experts from around the world to present and discuss recent advances and new perspectives on research in privacy technologies. PETS/PoPETs is the premier venue for novel applied and/or theoretical research into the design, analysis, experimentation, or fielding of privacy-enhancing technologies.

http://bit.ly/2unEs5z

 

Defcon

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August 9-12, 2018

Las Vegas, NV, USA

The heart of the DEF CON 26 theme is the concept of the counterfuture. The counterfuture is the open-source alternative to totalitarian dystopia; a world where we use tech and ingenuity for empowerment and connection rather than isolation and control.

http://bit.ly/2A2ojUE

 

Free and Open Communications on the Internet

----------------------------------------

FOCI brings together researchers and practitioners from technology, law, and policy who are working on means to study, detect, or circumvent practices that inhibit free and open communications on the Internet.

http://bit.ly/2N8qWKW

 

VOX-Pol Third Biennial Conference

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August 20-21, 2018

Amsterdam, The Netherlands

The VOX-Pol Network of Excellence (NoE) is a European Union Framework Programme 7 (FP7)-funded academic research network focused on researching the prevalence, contours, functions, and impacts of Violent Online Political Extremism and responses to it.c

http://bit.ly/2Hhzj3Q

 

World Library and Information Congress

----------------------------------------

August 24-30, 2018

Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia

The 84th edition of the World Library and Information Congress has the theme, "Transform Libraries, Transform Societies" with the additional tagline, "Reaching out to the hard to reach", which was chosen in recognition of the critical role played by libraries in the development of a nation, particularly in their ability to transform societies.

http://bit.ly/2qSXIta

 

Human Rights Measurement Initiative (HRMI) co-design workshop

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September 12 - 14, 2018

Johannesburg, South Africa

Co-hosted with Amnesty International, this workshop will develop innovative and collaborative approaches for using human rights data for impact, and agree on the next steps for HRMI's expansion of country and rights coverage.

http://bit.ly/2JwLWO6

 

SciELO 20 Years Conference

----------------------------------------

September 26-28, 2018

São Paulo, Brazil

In 2018, the SciELO Program will celebrate 20 years of operation, in full alignment with the advances of open science. The conference will address and debate the main political, methodological, and technological issues and trends that define today's state of the art in scholarly communication. These issues will also be shaping the future of the universal openness of scholarly publishing and its relationship with today's Open Access journals, in particular those of the SciELO Network.

http://bit.ly/2FlpVzU

 

Global Congress on Intellectual Property and the Public Interest V

----------------------------------------

September 27-29

Washington, DC, US

The Global Congress is the main meeting of a global network of over 800 researchers, activists, and practitioners who work on the intersection of intellectual property and promotion of the public interest. The core goal is to promote evidence-based policy-making by fostering partnerships between academics and policy advocates from around the world.

http://bit.ly/2sSuVnn

 

Amsterdam Privacy Conference

----------------------------------------

October 5-9, 2018

Amsterdam, Netherlands

APC 2018 brings together researchers, practitioners, policy makers and professionals in the field of privacy to share insights, exchange ideas and formulate, discuss and answer the challenging privacy questions that lie ahead of us. The goal of the conference is to bring together academics, policy makers, journalists, and practitioners to promote active discussion on timely topics, and foster debate on privacy issues between participants from various backgrounds and perspectives.

http://bit.ly/2ucbFEu

 

International Conference of Data Protection and Privacy Commissioners

----------------------------------------

October 22-26, 2018

Brussels, Belgium

The 40th version of this event will be hosted by the European Data Protection Supervisor (EDPS), Giovanni Buttarelli and the chair of the Commission for Personal Data Protection of the Republic of Bulgaria, Ventsislav Karadjov. The conference is expected to focus on the recently launched international debate on the ethical dimension of data protection in the digital era. Accompanying conference events will also take place in Bulgaria.

http://bit.ly/2B1bX38

 

Meeting of the Minds Summit 2018

----------------------------------------

November 27-29, 2018

Sacramento, CA, USA

The 12th annual Meeting of the Minds annual summit will spotlight tools and best practices working for smart city leaders across the globe. The event focuses on emerging and tested urban sustainability solutions which are scalable, replicable, and transferable for cities and regions. Discussions are rooted in a deep understanding of technology and equity as key drivers for smart cities.

http://bit.ly/2N80py1

 

Munin Conference on Scholarly Publishing

----------------------------------------

November 28, 2018

Tromso, Norway

The Munin Conference is an annual conference on scholarly publishing and communication, primarily revolving around open access, open data and open science. The 2018 conference will be the thirteenth edition.

http://bit.ly/2N3zPWb

 

Computers, Privacy, and Data Protection 2019

----------------------------------------

January 30 - February 1, 2019

Brussels, Belgium

The 12th international CPDP conference is accepting submissions for panel and session proposals until June 21, 2018.

http://bit.ly/2sSQ02x

 

We Robot 2019

----------------------------------------

April 11-13, 2019

Miami, Florida, US

We Robot is an interdisciplinary conference on the legal and policy questions relating to robots. The increasing sophistication of robots and their widespread deployment everywhere - from the home, to hospitals, to public spaces, and even to the battlefield - disrupts existing legal regimes and requires new thinking on policy issues. The conference fosters conversations between the people designing, building, and deploying robots, and the people who design or influence the legal and social structures in which robots will operate.

http://bit.ly/2x6T3XD

 

Global Privacy Summit 2019

----------------------------------------

May 2-3. 2019

Washington, DC

The annual conference of the International Association of Privacy Professionals. Intended for anyone who works in privacy anywhere across the globs, whether they work in the public or private sector.

http://bit.ly/2tNnJbP

 

re:publica 2019

----------------------------------------

May 6-8, 2019

Berlin, Germany

The re:publica in Berlin is Europe's biggest conference on topics concerning digitization and society while also being one of the world's most exceptional festivals on digital culture. Since its beginnings in 2007 with 700 bloggers in attendance, it has grown into an international society conference. In 2017 it had 9,000 national and international participants from all areas of society.

http://bit.ly/2GMXl6o

 

 

***

 

Hear more from the Information Program!

================================

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================================

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Open Society Foundation, part of the Open Society Foundations, is a company limited by guarantee registered in England and Wales (company number 4571628) and a registered charity (charity number 1105069). Its registered office address is 7th Floor, Millbank Tower, 21-24 Millbank, London SW1P 4QP

 

 

News digest | Open Society Information Program | Week ending 29 June 2018

====================================================

The Information Program NEWS DIGEST, published the second and fourth Thursdays of each month, aims to update colleagues in the Open Society Foundations and friends further afield about the news, opinions and events the Program team have been watching this fortnight. The views expressed in these stories do not necessarily reflect those of the Information Program or the OSF.  Prepared by Wendy M. Grossman.

 

Our staff, advisers and major grantees tweet at http://bit.ly/13j5fjq. Current and former grantees featured in this issue: Citizen Lab, Communia, EFF, R3D.

 

JOB OPENINGS

============

DataKind

----------------------------------------------------------------------

DataKind is searching for a new Director of Global Community and a Technical Project Manager. DataKind brings together volunteers from around the world to use data science and AI in the service of humanity. The director of global community will be responsible for recruiting expert volunteer teams, working with charity partners to define their data science needs, and managing projects through to success. The technical program manager will be responsible for leading the strategy to expand and support their network of volunteer data scientists and AI experts to create a global force for good.

Director of Global Community: http://bit.ly/2KshVeU

Technical program manager: http://bit.ly/2tNrAp4

 

 

NEWS

=====

For breaking news stories, visit: http://pinboard.in/u:osi_info_program/t:news/

 

Egypt: Parliament approves Law on Combating Cybercrimes

----------------------------------------------------------------------

Access Now reports that the Egyptian Parliament has approved the Law on  Combating Cybercrimes, which legalizes broad internet censorship and full surveillance of the country's population. Access Now notes that the law also enables the government to exchange data with foreign countries without requiring those countries to have data protection laws or other requirements limiting scope, retention or processing; is vague about its definitions and purpose; and exacerbates the threat to free expression already posed by Egypt's media and publications laws.

Access Now: http://bit.ly/2KxmuYo

 

European Parliament votes to tighten online copyright

----------------------------------------------------------------------

Communia, an association of digital rights groups, reports that as a result of the June 20 vote on the report on the proposed Copyright in the Single Market Directive, the Legal Affairs Committee of the European Parliament (JURI) has adopted</a> Article 11 (the  publishers' "link tax"); Article 13 (upload filters for open platforms); and a provision intended to force image search engines to pay to display thumbnail images as search results. Earlier, JURI voted against introducing freedom of panorama and permitting the use of protected works in user-generated content. Communia calls the vote "an utter disregard for the rights of citizens in the digital environment". On his blog, Michael Geist reports that in Canada, where the Standing Committee on Industry, Science, and Technology is conducting a copyright review, the motion picture industry is calling for increased liability for internet intermediaries.

Communia: http://bit.ly/2KfMKHv

Geist: http://bit.ly/2Naj5x4

 

US: Supreme Court rules that the Fourth Amendment protects cellphone location data

----------------------------------------------------------------------

At EFF, Andrew Crocker and Jennifer Lynch report that the US Supreme Court has ruled 5-4 in Carpenter v. United States that the Fourth Amendment protects cellphone location information. The result will be to require police to get a warrant in order to access this data. At Lawfare, Sabrina McCubbin gives further background on the case, legal precedents, and the Court's reasoning.

EFF: http://bit.ly/2tDNwnf
Lawfare: http://bit.ly/2tD1cz9
 

India: Group campaigns for privacy-protecting Aadhaar law

----------------------------------------------------------------------

At The Hindu, Soibam Rocky Singh reports that in response to the Cambridge Analytica scandal and security concerns surrounding the Aadhaar database, the Internet Freedom Foundation is backing a model bill created by a group of lawyers and policy analysts. The Indian Privacy Code 2018 is intended to shift power from the Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI) to the people by granting citizens the right to know what information has been collected and how it is used; it also creates an option to refuse consent, not currently possible due to administrative practices.

The Hindu: http://bit.ly/2IEyl28

 

US: Security contractors use school shootings to sell facial recognition

----------------------------------------------------------------------

At the Washington Post, Drew Harwell reports that security contractors are pitching facial recognition systems to leaders of US schools and community centers as a safety shield against school shootings even though the technology is unproven as a deterrent. Vendors decline to give details of how their systems have been designed, tested, or protected on the basis that it's proprietary information, while parents complain about the lack of oversight.
Washington Post: https://wapo.st/2yRQtWs

 

New York Police Department enlarges gang database 70% over four years

----------------------------------------------------------------------

At The Intercept, Alice Speri reports that the New York Police Department has expanded its gang database by 70% since Mayor Bill de Blasio took office in January 2014. In that time, 99% of those added to the database, which now includes over 42,000 people, were non-white. The NYPD has not explained the criteria on which additions to the database are made or details of how the list is shared or managed. Critics believe the database's expansion is a response to a class-action lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of NYPD's stop-and-frisk program, which stopped 684,330 people in 2011, its peak year.

The Intercept: http://bit.ly/2Kuh0Oc

 

 

FEATURES AND ANALYSIS

====================

For more features and analysis selected by the Program team, visit:

http://pinboard.in/u:osi_info_program/t:oped/

 

Studying Facebook: send in the scientists

----------------------------------------------------------------------

In this article at Bloomberg, mathematician Cathy O'Neil argues that an army of scientists should be sent in during the upcoming 2018 US midterm elections to study Facebook's contention that people can trust it not to let its network undermine democracy. O'Neil proposes A/B testing of headlines and other scientific tests to move the discussion from ideology to science. We need to demand more studies, O'Neil concludes. FactCheck analyzes Facebook's February announcement that it would give independent scholars access to user data so they can study the role it plays in elections. The initiative is backed by seven foundations, who will not have access to the data; peer review and proposal selection will be managed by the Social Science Research Council.

Bloomberg: https://bloom.bg/2IAepNG

FactCheck: http://bit.ly/2KiXIfuj

 

Iran: The far-reaching effects of the Telegram ban

----------------------------------------------------------------------

In this article at Wired, Lily Hay Newman discusses the impact of Iran's ban of the secure communications app  Telegram on the country's citizens. A detailed report from the Center for Human Rights in Iran has collected dozens of first-hand accounts and finds that although many Iranians continue to use Telegram via circumvention tools such as VPNs, the ban is interfering with free speech, journalism, and political campaigning, and harming businesses that depended on it - including government employees.

Wired: http://bit.ly/2IBV52v

 

Mexico: Government, exclusive spyware, and civil society surveillance

----------------------------------------------------------------------

In this video clip at The Citizen Lab, R3D director Luis Fernando Garcia discusses Mexico's use of government-exclusive spyware, intended to stop terrorism and serious crime, to illegally target at least 22 people -  journalists, opposition politicians, and civil society actors - working to expose human rights abuses. Garcia hopes the exposure will provide an opportunity to hold those responsible to account and to create a precedent to apply to other human rights abuses in Mexico.
Citizen Lab: http://bit.ly/2Mw1Cyc

 

Internet of Things provides new vector for domestic abusers

----------------------------------------------------------------------

In this article at the New York Times, Nellie Bowles reports that Internet of Things cameras, thermostats, digital locks, and doorbells are providing domestic abusers with new tools for harassment, monitoring, revenge, and control. In 30 interviews, Bowles found that even when a partner had left the home, the devices often remained behind and continued to provide a vector for intimidation and confusion. Turning everything off may just isolate the victim and escalate the violence. In a few cases, medical personnel have simply thought the victim was crazy.

New York Times: https://nyti.ms/2lI7r09
 

"Deepfake" manipulated videos progress towards realism

----------------------------------------------------------------------

In this article at Gizmodo, George Dvorsky finds at the annual SIGGRAPH that the quality of "deepfake" videos - that is, super-realistic manipulated videos - is improving faster than anyone thought possible. The new research system Deep Video Portraits uses generative neural networks to transfer a source actor's facial expressions and movements to a target actor (such as a world leader). TechCrunch reports that the authentication startup Truepic has raised $8 million to work on identifying Deepfakes. At the Verge, James Vincent reports that Adobe is using machine learning to automate digital forensics and spot edited images (such as those its Photoshop product creates). Finally, in an essay at Vice, Samantha Cole argues that media's focus on political hoaxes has drawn attention away from the women the original Deepfakes, a Reddit user, harmed in creating fake pornography. Neither the women whose faces he used nor the pornography actors whose filmed bodies he appropriated gave their consent.

Gizmodo: http://bit.ly/2KqyuLv

TechCrunch: https://tcrn.ch/2tOjEUq

Verge: http://bit.ly/2yROscT

Vice: http://bit.ly/2IBhInQ

 

UK: Businesses opt out of cash

----------------------------------------------------------------------

In this article at the Guardian, Tony Naylor considers the growing trend toward cashlessness among British pubs and restaurants, fueled in part by bank closures and in part by concerns about safety and cost. Critics complain that cash-free policies risk excluding people who lack bank accounts or smartphones, and may allow restaurant owners to pocket staff tips. However, also at the Guardian, David Crouch reports that the central bank governor of Sweden, the country nearest to becoming cashless, has called for legislation to ensure that the public sector retains control over the ability to make and receive payments and to ensure that payments can continue if technological systems fail. At the Spectator, Ross Clark, the author of The War on Cash, argues that a cashless world would be a disaster because it will fail to eliminate crime or tax fraud, and would enable politicians and central banks to impose negative interest rates.

Guardian (UK): http://bit.ly/2Kt3kTD

Guardian (Sweden): http://bit.ly/2yUstC8

Spectator: http://bit.ly/2lHJPZi

 

***

 

DIARY

==============

To see more events recommended by the Information Program team, visit:

https://pinboard.in/u:osi_info_program/t:events/. If you would like your event listed in this mail, email info.digest@opensocietyfoundations.org.

 

LIBER Annual Conference

----------------------------------------

July 4-6, 2018

Lille, France

The 47th annual conference of the Association of European Research Libraries (LIBER) will include plenary sessions with top international speakers, presentations on current research, posters, and an exhibition of products and services for the library sector, as well as a comprehensive social programme.

http://bit.ly/2zFcbbU

 

The Circle of HOPE

----------------------------------------

July 20-22, 2018

New York, NY, USA

Organized by 2600 Magazine, the 12th biennial Hackers on Planet Earth conference celebrates the hacker spirit. Talks typically feature new ways of examining and dissecting technology to reveal inconvenient truths.

http://bit.ly/2BbzJpM

 

Defcon

----------------------------------------

August 9-12, 2018

Las Vegas, NV, USA

The heart of the DEF CON 26 theme is the concept of the counterfuture. The counterfuture is the open-source alternative to totalitarian dystopia; a world where we use tech and ingenuity for empowerment and connection rather than isolation and control.

http://bit.ly/2A2ojUE

 

VOX-Pol Third Biennial Conference

----------------------------------------

August 20-21, 2018

Amsterdam, The Netherlands

The VOX-Pol Network of Excellence (NoE) is a European Union Framework Programme 7 (FP7)-funded academic research network focused on researching the prevalence, contours, functions, and impacts of Violent Online Political Extremism and responses to it.c

http://bit.ly/2Hhzj3Q

 

World Library and Information Congress

----------------------------------------

August 24-30, 2018

Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia

The 84th edition of the World Library and Information Congress has the theme, "Transform Libraries, Transform Societies" with the additional tagline, "Reaching out to the hard to reach", which was chosen in recognition of the critical role played by libraries in the development of a nation, particularly in their ability to transform societies.

http://bit.ly/2qSXIta

 

Human Rights Measurement Initiative (HRMI) co-design workshop

----------------------------------------

September 12 - 14, 2018

Johannesburg, South Africa

Co-hosted with Amnesty International, this workshop will develop innovative and collaborative approaches for using human rights data for impact, and agree on the next steps for HRMI's expansion of country and rights coverage.

http://bit.ly/2JwLWO6

 

SciELO 20 Years Conference

----------------------------------------

September 26-28, 2018

São Paulo, Brazil

In 2018, the SciELO Program will celebrate 20 years of operation, in full alignment with the advances of open science. The conference will address and debate the main political, methodological, and technological issues and trends that define today's state of the art in scholarly communication. These issues will also be shaping the future of the universal openness of scholarly publishing and its relationship with today's Open Access journals, in particular those of the SciELO Network.

http://bit.ly/2FlpVzU

 

Global Congress on Intellectual Property and the Public Interest V

----------------------------------------

September 27-29

Washington, DC, US

The Global Congress is the main meeting of a global network of over 800 researchers, activists, and practitioners who work on the intersection of intellectual property and promotion of the public interest. The core goal is to promote evidence-based policy-making by fostering partnerships between academics and policy advocates from around the world.

http://bit.ly/2sSuVnn

 

Amsterdam Privacy Conference

----------------------------------------

October 5-9, 2018

Amsterdam, Netherlands

APC 2018 brings together researchers, practitioners, policy makers and professionals in the field of privacy to share insights, exchange ideas and formulate, discuss and answer the challenging privacy questions that lie ahead of us. The goal of the conference is to bring together academics, policy makers, journalists, and practitioners to promote active discussion on timely topics, and foster debate on privacy issues between participants from various backgrounds and perspectives.

http://bit.ly/2ucbFEu

 

International Conference of Data Protection and Privacy Commissioners

----------------------------------------

October 22-26, 2018

Brussels, Belgium

The 40th version of this event will be hosted by the European Data Protection Supervisor (EDPS), Giovanni Buttarelli and the chair of the Commission for Personal Data Protection of the Republic of Bulgaria, Ventsislav Karadjov. The conference is expected to focus on the recently launched international debate on the ethical dimension of data protection in the digital era. Accompanying conference events will also take place in Bulgaria.

http://bit.ly/2B1bX38

 

Meeting of the Minds Summit 2018

----------------------------------------

November 27-29, 2018

Sacramento, CA, USA

The 12th annual Meeting of the Minds annual summit will spotlight tools and best practices working for smart city leaders across the globe. The event focuses on emerging and tested urban sustainability solutions which are scalable, replicable, and transferable for cities and regions. Discussions are rooted in a deep understanding of technology and equity as key drivers for smart cities.

http://bit.ly/2N80py1

 

Computers, Privacy, and Data Protection 2019

----------------------------------------

January 30 - February 1, 2019

Brussels, Belgium

The 12th international CPDP conference is accepting submissions for panel and session proposals until June 21, 2018.

http://bit.ly/2sSQ02x

 

We Robot 2019

----------------------------------------

April 11-13, 2019

Miami, Florida, US

We Robot is an interdisciplinary conference on the legal and policy questions relating to robots. The increasing sophistication of robots and their widespread deployment everywhere - from the home, to hospitals, to public spaces, and even to the battlefield - disrupts existing legal regimes and requires new thinking on policy issues. The conference fosters conversations between the people designing, building, and deploying robots, and the people who design or influence the legal and social structures in which robots will operate.

http://bit.ly/2x6T3XD

 

Global Privacy Summit 2019

----------------------------------------

May 2-3. 2019

Washington, DC

The annual conference of the International Association of Privacy Professionals. Intended for anyone who works in privacy anywhere across the globs, whether they work in the public or private sector.

http://bit.ly/2tNnJbP

 

re:publica 2019

----------------------------------------

May 6-8, 2019

Berlin, Germany

The re:publica in Berlin is Europe's biggest conference on topics concerning digitization and society while also being one of the world's most exceptional festivals on digital culture. Since its beginnings in 2007 with 700 bloggers in attendance, it has grown into an international society conference. In 2017 it had 9,000 national and international participants from all areas of society.

http://bit.ly/2GMXl6o

 

 

***

 

Hear more from the Information Program!

================================

If you want to hear more from the Information Program team each week, consider subscribing to our shared bookmarks using this RSS feed:

http://feeds.pinboard.in/rss/secret:95194ab804ccccac713b/u:osi_info_program/

 

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Hear less from the Information Program!

================================

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This digest operates under the OSF privacy policy: http://www.opensocietyfoundations.org/about/policies/privacy

 

Additionally, it uses the bit.ly URL shortening service, which operates under the following privacy policy: http://bit.ly/pages/privacy/

 

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0

License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/us/

 

Open Society Foundation, part of the Open Society Foundations, is a company limited by guarantee registered in England and Wales (company number 4571628) and a registered charity (charity number 1105069). Its registered office address is 7th Floor, Millbank Tower, 21-24 Millbank, London SW1P 4QP

 

 

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