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12th Conference on Computers, Freedom and Privacy 2002: San Francisco, CA, USA
- Proceedings of the 12th Annual Conference on Computers, Freedom and Privacy, CFP 2002, San Francisco, California, USA, April 16-19, 2002. ACM 2002, ISBN 978-1-58113-505-3
National id card: the next generation
- Andrew Schulman:
The US/Mexico border crossing card (BCC): a case study in biometric, machine-readable id. 1:1
Truth is the first casualty of war - availability of information post 9/11
- George W. Bush:
Executive order on critical infrastructure protection. 1:1-1:10 - George W. Bush:
Executive order establishing office of homeland security. 2:1-2:7 - Lee Tien:
Access to information after 9/11. 3:1-3:5
USA patriot act and privacy
- Clint N. Smith:
Impact on internet service providers. 1:1-1:2
A prognosis for use of health, medical, and genetic information
- Gregory Fowler:
Linking the public voice with the genetic policy process: a case study. 1:1-1:8 - Peter Swire, Lauren Steinfeld:
Security and privacy after September 11: the health care example. 2:1-2:13
Bridging the digital divide: the bay area and beyond
- Michael Yutrzenka:
The Cisco community fellowship program and Cisco corporate philanthropy. 1:1-1:3
The DMCA and you
- Lance J. Hoffman:
Motivations behind a role play at CFP: repeated assaults on the constitution by extremist property rights advocates. 1:1-1:4
Future of intellectual property
- Drew Clark:
How copyright became controversial. 1:1-1:10
Student privacy issues
- Ruchika Agrawal, Lily Sarafan, Tami Kameda, Matthew Waddell, Eric Albert, Alana Aldag, Jed Burgess, Enoch Chen, Chris Countryman, Jeremy Ginsberg, Art Hu, Sandra Liu, Walter Luh, Brad Markham, Derek Shanahan, Barbara Simons:
A preliminary study at Stanford University. 1:1-1:3
Public records "how public is too public? public records and personal privacy"
- Beth Givens:
Public records on the internet: the privacy dilemma. 1:1-1:7 - Carrie Gardner:
Fact or fiction: privacy in American libraries. 2:1-2:5
The promise of privacy enhancing technologies
- Lorrie Faith Cranor:
The role of privacy advocates and data protection authorities in the design and deployment of the platform for privacy preferences. 1:1-1:8 - Roger Dingledine, Nick Mathewson, Paul Syverson:
Reputation in privacy enhancing technologies. 2:1-2:6
Should we meet John Doe? civil litigation and anonymity in cyberspace
- Paul Alan Levy, David C. Vladeck, J. C. Salyer:
Amicus: Vincent Donato, et al, v. Stephen Moldow, et al. 1:1-1:18 - Frequently asked questions (and answers) about John Doe anonymity. 2:1-2:5
- Paul Alan Levy, J. C. Salyer:
Amicus: Dendrite International, Inc. v. John Does. 3:1-3:38 - Michael S. Vogel:
Unmasking "John Doe" defendants: the case for caution in creating new legal standards. 4:1-4:7 - Joan Melvin:
Petition: Joan Melvin v. John Doe, et al. 5:1-5:14
Privacy and private litigation
- Ronald L. Plesser:
Piper rudnick: litigated privacy issues. 1:1-1:8
CFP2002 Online Real-Audio Recordings
- James Bamford:
Opening Speaker. 1:1 - Timothy J. Muris:
Wednesday, April 17th Luncheon Keynote. 2:2 - Bill Lockyer:
Wednesday, April 17th Dinner Keynote. 3:3 - Electronic Frontier Foundation:
EEF Pioneer Awards. 4:4 - Patrick Ball:
Statistics and Slobodan: crunching big data for the Milosevic case at the International Criminal Tribunal for Former Yugoslavia. 5:5 - Kim Alexander, Ernie Hawkins, Peter G. Neumann, Joe Taggard, Jason Dearen, Andy Neff:
Plenary Session #5: how to hack an election. 6:6 - Dan Gillmor, Jason Catlett, Avi Rubin, Brian Arbogast, Roger Cochetti:
Plenary Session #6: Who Goes There? Privacy in Identity and Location Services. 7:7 - John Morris, Tim O'Reilly, Brian Behlendorf, Erwin J. Basinski:
Open Source. 8:8 - James Dempsey, Veni Markocski, Mas Wigrantoro Roes Setiyadi, Teresa Peters:
Getting it Right: Global Internet Policy Issues. 9:9 - Alan Davidson, Peter G. Neumann, Susan Crawford, Karl Auerbach:
ICANN in Year 3. 10:10 - Alex Fowler, Peter Swire, Mary Henderson, Gregory Fowler:
A Prognosis for Use of Health, Medical, and Genetic Information. 11:11 - Larry Irving:
Thursday, April 18th Luncheon keynote. 12:12 - Michael Cornfield, Jason Mark, Chris Carlsson, Caruso, Heather Mansfield:
Plenary Session #7: Grassroots Goes Global: Activism Online. 13:13 - Privacy International:
2002 Orwell Awards. 14:14 - Jackie Speier:
Friday, April 19th Morning Keynote. 15:15 - Bruce Koball, Dewayne Hendricks:
Plenary Session #10: Are the Tools the Rules?: The Future of the Digital Commons. 16:16 - Fran Maier, Paula Bruening, Jim Harper, Mel Petersen, Sarah Andrews:
The Role of Consumer Education in Protecting Privacy. 17:17 - Peter S. Menell, Fred von Lohmann, Sarah Deutsch, Frank Hausmann, Mark Litvack:
Copyright and Innovation: the P2P Experience. 18:18 - Simon Davies, Gus Hosein, Ian Brown, Barry Steinhardt:
International Security Cooperation and Privacy. 19:19 - Bruce Sterling:
Closing Keynote. 20:20
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