@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@ Date: Fri, 2 Feb 1996 From: •••@••.••• (Anthony E. Wright) To: Multiple recipients of list <•••@••.•••> Subject: Invite to Media and Democracy Congress Dear Telecommunications Roundtable participant: Please join the Center for Media Education and other nonprofits at the upcoming Media & Democracy Congress. It will take place in San Francisco, February 29 through March 3, and offers the opportunity to get together with media activists, organizational leaders, and others who share our interest in the current political landscape, to strategize and plan for the public media of the 21st century. You will receive a full Congress brochure in the mail shortly. The Congress begins on the morning of Thursday, February 29, with training opportunities and "affinity group" meetings (online, radio, TV, and advocacy press). That evening there will be a plenary on "The Future of Journalism in a Disney World" and a welcome reception. Other plenaries, panels and workshops dominate the following two and a half days with prominent speakers addressing issues of technology, the right-wing, gender, commercialism, diversity, media activism, collaboration and funding. There will also be a special session devoted to access issues and related issues entwined throughout the Congress. Your participation would be valuable. Please direct any questions to Viveca Greene, the Congress Coordinator, at 415-284-1419. Center for Media Education -- Anthony E. Wright •••@••.••• Coordinator, Future of Media Project Center for Media Education @@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@ Date: Wed, 31 Jan 1996 From: •••@••.••• (Hal Abelson) To: "Multiple recipients of list •••@••.•••" <•••@••.•••> Subject: CFP96: Student registration is full. Others should register soon. Please redistribute widely **************************************** The Sixth Conference on Computers, Freedom, and Privacy will take place at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology on March 27-30, 1996. CFP96 is hosted by MIT and by the World Wide Web Consortium. You can register for CFP96 by US Mail, by fax, or via the World Wide Web. Conference attendance will be limited. Due to the enormous public interest in CFP issues over the past year, we encourage you to register early. Students: We regret to announce that the 100 registration slots we reserved at the special student rate have all been filled as of January 31. All further registrations will be at the regular rate. **************************************** For more information, see the CFP96 Web page at http://web.mit.edu/cfp96 or send a blank email message to •••@••.••• Since its inception in 1991, the series of CFP conferences has brought together experts and advocates from the fields of computer science, law, business, public policy, law enforcement, government, and many other areas to explore how computer and telecommunications technologies are affecting freedom and privacy. Events planned for this year's conference include: - An exploration of the struggle over the control over controversial material on the global network. This will examine the feasibility of technological solutions for controlling access to content, and question whether the assertion of domestic sovereignty over parts of the global network is even possible - A moot Supreme Court hearing to determine the constitutionality of a proposed US law to prohibit the use of encryption in data communications, unless the decryption keys are escrowed to ensure government access to them. - A look at the emerging technology of digital cash and the possibility of anonymous electronic payments over the Internet, emphasizing the challenges both to privacy and to law-enforcement. - An examination of whether computer-mediated communication, with its many-to-many nature, might make become an effective counterpoint to traditional mass media in influencing public policy. - Queries into the interrelationship between copyright and free expression: Will copyright law be an enabler of freedom of expression in digital networked environments or will it be an impediment to free speech? - A discussion of international developments in cryptography policy and regulation and what multinational companies are doing to meet their encryption needs. - A look at the impact of the explosive spread of the internet in China and throughout Asia. Can a society have competitive economic development without permitting the freedom of expression and access made possible by new information technologies? What are some of the likely social impacts of the internet on China and of the Chinese internet on the outside world? - Demonstrations of the latest information technology affecting freedom and privacy, and tutorials on technical and legal issues. -- Hal Abelson Phone: (617) 253-5856 Fax: (617) 258-8682 Email: •••@••.••• URL: http://www-swiss.ai.mit.edu/~hal/hal.html MIT Artificial Intelligence Laboratory Room NE43-429 545 Technology Square Cambridge, MA 02139 @@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@ Date: Thu, 18 Jan 1996 From: •••@••.••• (Benton Foundation) To: Multiple recipients of list <•••@••.•••> Subject: $100 Billion Giveaway Forum The Benton Foundation is unveiling a new public space on our web site for discussion of communication policy issues such as spectrum allocation and the transition to digital television, connecting schools to computer networks, and universal service. In order to get the discussion going, we would like to invite you to become one of the initial participants in this discussion. The Forum Page on Benton's World Wide Web site (http://cdinet.com/HyperNews/get/Benton/forum.html) will make use of new Web tools to facilitate discussions on communications policy subjects. This technology will allow users to read and post opinions on public policy options and will also allow discussants to post responses in HyperText Markup Language (HTML) -- enabling posters to cite other locations on the Internet and to create links to those sites. Our first discussion topic is on spectrum allocation and the transition to digital television. Our latest working paper -- Pretty Pictures or Pretty Profits -- outlines a number of options concerned nonprofits might follow to insure public interest values in the age of digital television. Any new spectrum allocation plan must include protecting the public interest. The public owns these coveted airwaves and for the government to give them away with no additional public interest safeguards and no compensation to the American taxpayer is scandalous. Right now the owners of the airwaves -- the public -- are in a once-in-a-lifetime position to define what "in the public interest" will mean in the age of digital television. I hope that you will help us get our discussions posting your opinion on the various options outlined by Pretty Pictures. Your input will help our colleagues to define what "in the public interest" means in the age of digital television . Benton Foundation <•••@••.•••> @@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@ ~=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=~=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=~--~=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=~=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=~ Posted by Richard K. Moore (•••@••.•••) Wexford, Ireland Cyber-Rights: http://www.cpsr.org/cpsr/nii/cyber-rights/ CyberLib: http://www.internet-eireann.ie/cyberlib Materials may be reposted in their entirety for non-commercial use. ~=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=~=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=~--~=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=~=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=~