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Date: 2000-09-21
UK: LSE Forum Surveillance by Design
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Das genaue Programm war bis zuletzt in Bewegung, die
Voranmeldungen sind dominiert von IT-Industrie, natürlich
fehlt auch "law enforcement" nicht. Für die Mitveranstalter
aus AT setzen sich [email protected] und
[email protected] gerade in Bewegung bzw in den
Flieger. Berichte, sobald es Anlass dazu gibt.
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International Forum on Surveillance by Design
A one day public meeting on the development of global
surveillance strategies for law enforcement and national
security.
Time:
Friday September 22, 2000 at 9.15am
Place:
The Old Theatre The London School of Economics Houghton
Street London WC2A 2AE
Department of Information Systems, The London School of
Economics
Organisers:
Privacy International American Civil Liberties Union
Quintessenz
Sponsors:
Communications surveillance is now a global business. Over
the past three decades, law enforcement and national
security agencies have worked with the private sector to
ensure that all new forms of communications are capable of
being monitored. A range of new international legal
agreements provide the foundation for this activity.
Who are the key players in this new industry? What
mechanisms are being developed to build surveillance into
the architecture of communications? What forms of
technology are being used to intercept communications - and
to resist interception?
This unique one-day conference will explore these technical
and legal questions, and provide a public forum for open
discussion.
PROGRAMME
9.15 Chairman's welcome and introduction 9.25 Setting the
landscape of engagement. A overview of the main players
and key initiatives: Tony Bunyan (Statewatch) 9.45
Developing the Telephone System Chair: Steve Wright
(Omega Foundation)
An overview of global National Security arrangements: Wayne
Madsen (EPIC), Duncan Campbell (IPTV) The International
Law Enforcement Telecommunications Seminar: Tony
Bunyan (Statewatch) 11.00 New communications
infrastructures
Global Protocols: Jon Crowcroft (IETF) 11.30 BREAK 12.00
Mobile phone fraud: Ross Anderson (Cambridge University)
European Telecom Standards and `lawful interception' in the
age of 3GPP: Erich Moechel (Quintessenz, Austria) 12.30
International collaboration Chair: Barry Steinhardt (American
Civil Liberties Union)
G8 and Council of Europe action: Betty Shave (US DoJ), Gus
Hosein (LSE) 1.00 LUNCH 2.00 National initiatives
The Russian SORM system: Boris Pustinsev (Citizens
Watch, Russia) The Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act:
Ian Brown (UCL) The Netherlands interception arrangements:
Maurice Wessling (Bits of Freedom) 3.00 BREAK 3.30
Fighting for privacy Chair: Ian Brown
Secure telephony: Eric Blossom (Starium) Secure Internet
communications: ZeroKnowledge Privacy risks of PKI: Stefan
Brands (ZeroKnowledge) CALEA: Kurt Wimmer (Covington
and Burling) 4.45 Industry action Chair: Gus Hosein
Peter Harter (Securify) Stephanie Perrin (ZeroKnowledge
Systems)
Places are strictly limited in number, so anyone wishing to
attend should e-mail the conference chair, Simon Davies, at
[email protected]
Telephone enquiries : 020 7955 6579
Organising Committee: Simon Davies (PI & LSE), Erich
Moechel (Quintessenz), Barry Steinhardt (ACLU), Ian Brown
(UCL & Hidden Footprints), Stephanie Perrin (ZKS), Gus
Hosein (LSE).
Previous conferences in this series include Scrambling for
Safety 1, 2, 3 and 3.5
http://www.cs.ucl.ac.uk/staff/I.Brown/ifsd.html
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subscribe/unsubscribe
http://www.quintessenz.org/q/depesche/
comments [email protected]
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edited by Harkank
published on: 2000-09-21
comments to [email protected]
subscribe Newsletter
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