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29 March 22<sup>nd</sup>-23<sup>rd</sup><br />
30 MIT, Cambridge, MA</p>
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93 <h2>Program</h2>
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95 <p><span style="color:grey;">Sessions</span> | <a href="speakers.html">Speakers</a> | <a href="legal_seminar.html">Legal seminar</a></p>
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97<p>
98<div>
99<div class="panel panel-default margin-top" style="width:200px; float:right; margin-right: 25px">
100 <div class="panel-heading">
101 <h2 class="panel-title">
102 Contents
103 </h2>
104 </div>
105 <div class="panel-body">
106
107<p><a href="#saturday">Saturday sessions</a></p>
108<p><a href="#sunday">Sunday sessions</a></p>
109<p><a href="#social">Social events</a></p>
110
111 </div>
112 </div>
113<p>All times are in Eastern Daylight Time (EDT), which is UTC - 4 hours.</p>
114
115<h1><a name="saturday">Saturday, 3/22</a></h1>
116
117<h3>09:00 - 09:45: Registration and Breakfast</h3>
118
119<h3>09:45 - 10:45: Opening Plenary with John Sullivan and Karen Sandler</h3>
120
121<h3>10:45 - 10:55: Break</h3>
122
123<h2>10:55 - 11:40 | Session Block 1</h2>
124
125<h3>Fighting surveillance with free software</h3>
126
127<p><em>Holmes Wilson</em> <br />
128<strong>Room 123 | Thread: Surveillance</strong> <br />
129Millions of people have demanded an end to the NSA's mass spying programs. But we can't rely on governments to end government surveillance. Free software and end-to-end crypto is key. To protect the world from bulk spying, we need to make software that's secure <em>and</em> easy to use.</p>
130
131<h3>Opus, Daala, and free codec updates</h3>
132
133<p><em>Gregory Maxwell, Monty Montgomery</em> <br />
134<strong>Room 141 | Thread: Projects</strong> <br />
135An update on the the Xiph.Org Foundation's free codec projects, focusing on the next generation Opus and Daala codecs, and where we plan to go with development and advocacy in the near future.</p>
136
137<h3>Lightning talks session 1</h3>
138
139<p><strong>Room 144</strong> <br />
140Lightning talks are short presentations given by conference attendees on free software topics they're passionate about. Come to any or all of the three sessions to talk or just listen.</p>
141
142<h3>11:40 - 11:50: Break</h3>
143
144<h2>11:50 - 12:35: Session block 2</h2>
145
146<h3>An overview of OpenPGP</h3>
147
148<p><em>Paul Tagliamonte</em> <br />
149<strong>Room 123 | Thread: Surveillance</strong> <br />
150OpenPGP is the standard upon which modern cryptography systems are built upon. The Free Software OpenPGP implementation, GnuPG, is used ubiquitously throughout the free software world, and many people depend on safe and secure communications while using it. This talk will cover the basics of OpenPGP's format, and a very brief overview of how crypto systems, such as GnuPG, encode and send your data. This talk may assume technical knowledge for some parts.</p>
151
152<h3>Get started contributing to MediaWiki</h3>
153
154<p><em>Mark Holmquist</em> <br />
155<strong>Room 141 | Thread: Projects</strong> <br />
156In this session, we'll lay the groundwork for working with the MediaWiki software, a PHP and JavaScript Web application that, through extensions, can be used for a great many purposes. You may be familiar with MediaWiki from Wikipedia, the Free Software Directory, or one of the thousands of other independent wikis that run the software.</p>
157
158<h3>Considering the future of copyleft: how will the next generation perceive GPL?</h3>
159
160<p><em>Bradley Kuhn</em> <br />
161<strong>Room 155 | Thread: Applied free software</strong> <br />
162Copyleft licenses, particularly the GPL and LGPL, are widely used throughout the free software community. Over the last few years, recent debates have led many to various conclusions about the popularity of copyleft. This talk will discuss where copyleft stands today, how it interacts with the modern free software world, and how copyleft advocates may need to adapt to th future of Free Software licensing.</p>
163
164<h3>Lightning talks session 2</h3>
165
166<p><strong>Room 144</strong> <br />
167Lightning talks are short presentations given by conference attendees on free software topics they're passionate about. Come to any or all of the three sessions to talk or just listen.</p>
168
169<h2>12:35 - 13:50: Lunch</h2>
170
171<h2>13:50 - 14:35: Session block 3</h2>
172
173<h3>Your Web apps should talk not just in English, but in español, Kiswahili, 廣州話, and অসমীয়া too</h3>
174
175<p><em>Sucheta Ghoshal</em> <br />
176<strong>Room 123 | Thread: Movement-building</strong> <br />
177This talk aims to help web developers understand what localization is and why it is important. In this talk I will explain, how MediaWiki/Wikipedia - arguably the biggest and most localized projects on the Internet - handle internationalization, how you can do it for your own apps, via jQuery.i18n (or other frameworks), and I will also talk about TranslateWiki.net, a place for free software projects to get their strings translated.</p>
178
179<h3>Celebrating one decade of Trisquel GNU/Linux</h3>
180
181<p><em>Ruben Rodriguez Perez</em> <br />
182<strong>Room 141 | Thread: Projects</strong> <br />
183This year is the 10th anniversary of the fully free GNU/Linux distribution Trisquel. We will take a sneak peek of the upcoming 7.0 version "Belenos" and unveil plans for the very near future. These plans will include a renewed effort in creating educational software and improved online tools for the community, both for users and developers.</p>
184
185<h3>Geek knowing: from FAQ to feminism 101</h3>
186
187<p><em>Joseph Reagle</em> <br />
188<strong>Room 155 | Thread: Movement-building</strong> <br />
189In addition to information sharing and helpfulness, geek culture has a complementary norm obliging others to educate themselves on rudimentary topics. This obligation to know is expressed by way of jargon-laden exhortations such as "check the FAQ"(frequently asked questions) and "RTFM" (read the fucking manual). Additionally, the geek lexicon includes designations of the stature of the knower and the extent of what he or she knows (e.g., "newbie"). Online feminists, especially "geek feminists," are similarly beset by naive or disruptive questions, and demonstrate and further their geekiness through the deployment of the obligation to know, with some interesting differences. For instance, geek feminism includes a term for designating rudimentary (i.e., "101") knowledge, for "derailing" questions, and has novel concerns with respect to stature and extent of knowing (e.g., the Unicorn Law, impostor syndrome, and mansplaining).</p>
190
191<h3>Free Software Directory sprint session 1</h3>
192
193<p><strong>Room 144</strong> <br />
194Tens of thousands of people visit the Free Software Directory each month to discover free software. Each entry in the Directory contains a wealth of useful information, from basic category and descriptions, to providing detailed info about version control, IRC channels, documentation, and licensing info. Stop by any or all of the three sessions today to help improve existing entries, add to new ones, or to find out about our latest efforts, such as importing package info from GNU/Linux distributions. No experience required.</p>
195
196<h3>14:35 - 14:45: Break</h3>
197
198<h2>14:45 - 16:05: Workshop session 1</h2>
199
200<h3>The creeping techno-surveillance state: how can we fight back?</h3>
201
202<p><em>Kade Crockford, Josh Levy</em> <br />
203<strong>Room 123 | Thread: Surveillance</strong> <br />
204The government is tracking who you call and when. Snoops are reading your emails. Internet companies like Facebook, Google, and Yahoo are working with companies you've never heard of to compile deep, secret profiles of millions of us, sell the data, and make billions. We're being surveilled from all sides. This panel will address practical responses to the creeping techno-surveillance state. How are individuals and communities responding when so many of our private details are being hoovered up, in secret and for secret purposes? What are the best practices for navigating the spy-infested waters of the Internet? We've reached a point in which opting-out is no longer an option. Instead, we must arm ourselves with new digital habits, policy solutions and grassroots pressure to protect our digital rights. The NSA, the defense establishment, and Silicon Valley are incredibly powerful. How can we possibly fight back? What are the policy solutions that will roll back the laws that enable government spying and hold companies accountable when they collude in these programs or go too far with their own corporate surveillance practices? How can individuals work with others to pressure Congress, governmental agencies, and Internet companies to do the right thing and protect our privacy?</p>
205
206<h3>No more mouse: saving elementary education</h3>
207
208<p><em>Walter Bender</em> <br />
209<strong>Room 141 | Thread: Applied free software</strong> <br />
210The lack of a mouse and the presence of "the mouse" are having a detrimental impact on global elementary education. The rush to adopt tablets is putting passive tools of consumption into the hands of young learners at a time in their development when "making" is paramount. The "Disneyification" of media further erodes the opportunity for personal expression by young learners. In this panel we will characterize these threats and discuss strategies for combating them.</p>
211
212<h3>Beyond the women in tech talk</h3>
213
214<p><em>ginger coons, Kÿra, Femke Snelting</em> <br />
215<strong>Room 155 | Thread: Movement-building</strong> </p>
216
217<h3>Free Software Directory sprint session 2</h3>
218
219<p><strong>Room 144</strong> <br />
220Tens of thousands of people visit the Free Software Directory each month to discover free software. Each entry in the Directory contains a wealth of useful information, from basic category and descriptions, to providing detailed info about version control, IRC channels, documentation, and licensing info. Stop by any or all of the three sessions today to help improve existing entries, add to new ones, or to find out about our latest efforts, such as importing package info from GNU/Linux distributions. No experience required.</p>
221
222<h3>16:05- 16:15: Break</h3>
223
224<h2>16:15 - 17:35: Workshop session 2</h2>
225
226<h3>Update on the circumvention tech community and how to get involved</h3>
227
228<p><em>Carolyn Anhalt, Nick Merrill, Sandra Ordonez, George Rosamond</em> <br />
229<strong>Room 123 | Thread: Surveillance</strong> </p>
230
231<h3>Mapping for social justice</h3>
232
233<p><em>Evan Misshula</em> <br />
234<strong>Room 141 | Thread: Applied free software</strong> </p>
235
236<h3>Free Software Directory sprint session 3</h3>
237
238<p><strong>Room 144</strong> <br />
239Tens of thousands of people visit the Free Software Directory each month to discover free software. Each entry in the Directory contains a wealth of useful information, from basic category and descriptions, to providing detailed info about version control, IRC channels, documentation, and licensing info. Stop by any or all of the three sessions today to help improve existing entries, add to new ones, or to find out about our latest efforts, such as importing package info from GNU/Linux distributions. No experience required.</p>
240
241<h3>17:35 - 17:45: Break</h3>
242
243<h3>17:45 - 18:45: Free Software Awards with Eben Moglen and Richard Stallman</h3>
244
245<h1><a name="sunday">Sunday, 3/23</a></h1>
246
247<h3>09:00 - 09:45: Registration and breakfast</h3>
248
249<h3>09:45 - 10:45: Keynote: Jacob Appelbaum</h3>
250
251<h3>10:45 - 10:55: Break</h3>
252
253<h2>10:55 - 11:40 | Session Block 1</h2>
254
255<h3>Free your JavaScript</h3>
256
257<p><em>Zachary Wick</em> <br />
258<strong>Room 123 | Thread: Activism</strong> <br />
259This talk will focus on how to write, validate, and release freely licensed JavaScript. Writing and releasing your JavaScript under a free license helps your users avoid "The JavaScript Trap." This talk will also demonstrate how developers and webmasters can use GNU LibreJS to ensure that their users don't have to give up their computing freedom to use the websites that they are responsible for.</p>
260
261<h3>What does this program do? Reproducible builds, transparency, and freedom</h3>
262
263<p><em>Seth Schoen</em> <br />
264<strong>Room 141 | Thread: Projects</strong> <br />
265Today we often use binaries that someone claims were built from particular source code, but we usually have no way to check that the source and binaries we've been actually given correspond to one another. We rely on someone's say-so, and they might be wrong! Software developers and the infrastructure used to create and distribute software are significant targets of attack. We need ways to give everybody meaningful assurances about the provenance and integrity of the software they use.</p>
266
267<h3>Building an open digital archive in India: knowledge, access and other issues</h3>
268
269<p><em>Noopur Raval</em> <br />
270<strong>Room 155 | Thread: Applied free software</strong> <br />
271This session will discuss two case studies that involve archiving different kinds of cultural information resources in the Indian context using free software and the challenges therein. It will also discuss the possibility of collaborating and licensing issues faced in India.</p>
272
273<h3>Free Software Messaging meeting session 1</h3>
274
275<p><strong>Room 144</strong> <br />
276How does the free software movement present itself externally and internally? Who does our messaging appeal to, and who does it not appeal to? What should our goals be in conversations about free software? Discuss these questions and more in this facilitated roundtable discussion.</p>
277
278<h3>11:40 - 11:50: Break</h3>
279
280<h2>11:50 - 12:35: Session block 2</h2>
281
282<h3>1984+30: GNU speech to defeat e-newspeak</h3>
283
284<p><em>Alexandre Oliva</em> <br />
285<strong>Room 123 | Thread: Movement-building</strong> <br />
286In Orwell's 1984, Newspeak had its vocabulary reduced so that subversive ideas could not be expressed. Likewise, user-programmable general-purpose computers are losing ground to ones that don't let users express the computations they wish to perform, unless they are available in exclusive appstores. Unable to program, users lose the freedom to improve software, and even the notion that they could! Failing to realize the importance of essential software freedoms, they fail to demand them! That's double plus unGNU! Let's fix it!</p>
287
288<h3>State of the goblin</h3>
289
290<p><em>Christopher Webber</em> <br />
291<strong>Room 141 | Track: Projects</strong> </p>
292
293<h3>Distributed free-cultural production and the future of creative economy</h3>
294
295<p><em>Fateh Slavitskaya</em> <br />
296<strong>Room 155 | Thread: Applied free software</strong> </p>
297
298<h3>Free Software Messaging meeting session 2</h3>
299
300<p><strong>Room 144</strong> <br />
301How does the free software movement present itself externally and internally? Who does our messaging appeal to, and who does it not appeal to? What should our goals be in conversations about free software? Discuss these questions and more in this facilitated roundtable discussion.</p>
302
303<h2>12:35 - 13:50: Lunch</h2>
304
305<h2>13:50- 14:35: Session block 3</h2>
306
307<h3>Free software activism: a European perspective and experience</h3>
308
309<p><em>Lionel Allorge, Frederic Couchet</em> <br />
310<strong>Room 123 | Thread: Activism</strong> <br />
311For a long time, hackers have been creating a lot of free software. Each free software project is an important contribution to ensure that all software users have the freedom to control their computers. Free software use has been increasing, but impediments to its development still exist today. From copyright threats to patents, including treacherous computing, bundled sales of computer with software, FUD, and threats to net neutrality, the causes for concern are numerous. Free software cannot develop fully without a benevolent political and legislative environment. That is where April plays a crucial role in France and Europe, along with allied organizations. Its actions, thanks to its volunteers and its staff, are precious for everyone who produces and/or use free software. It is the organization's small contribution to the free software movement. We will present April, how it operates, the current European issues they are working on, and future perspectives and share strategies, successes, and challenges.</p>
312
313<h3>Updating Mailman's UI</h3>
314
315<p><em>Máirín Duffy</em> <br />
316<strong>Room 141 | Thread: Projects</strong> <br />
317As part of the Mailman 3 project, the Hyperkitty mail archiver will be introducing a new user interface for browsing mailing lists and we're hoping it'll improve the ability of free software projects to communicate effectively. Learn more about the new interface, its design, and our progress, including a report on OPW intern Karen Tang's work with the Hyperkitty UI.</p>
318
319<h3>Adventures in hackademia: leveraging free software in the classroom</h3>
320
321<p><em>Remy DeCausemaker</em> <br />
322<strong>Room 141 | Thread: Applied Free Software</strong> <br />
323This session will cover the curriculum, methodology, and contributions made for and by the students of the Humanitarian Free/Open Source Software Development course at Rochester Institute of Technology in Upstate New York. This is the gateway course for a newly minted, first-of-its-kind, academic minor in Free/Open Source Software and Free Culture. Course materials are licensed CC-BY-SA, source code is available online, and patches are always welcome.</p>
324
325<h3>F-Droid sprint session 1</h3>
326
327<p><strong>Room 144</strong> <br />
328F-Droid is an easily-installable catalogue of free software applications for Android and Replicant devices. Stop any or all of the three sessions to improve existing entries and add new ones, and make it easier for people to install free software on their mobile devices. No experience required.</p>
329
330<h3>14:35 - 14:45: Break</h3>
331
332<h2>14:45 - 16:05: Workshop session 1</h2>
333
334<h3>Tracking changes: Activists using free software across movements</h3>
335
336<p><em>April Glaser, Libby Reinish</em> <br />
337<strong>Room 123 | Thread: Activism</strong> </p>
338
339<h3>Choosing between freedom and security</h3>
340
341<p><em>Matthew Garrett</em> <br />
342<strong>Room 141, 14:45 - 15:15 | Thread: Surveillance</strong> <br />
3432013 taught us that our computers are less secure than we'd hoped. What is the role of free software in improving our security? Does improving security mean compromising our freedoms? Or can we simultaneously increase user freedom <em>and</em> improve system security?</p>
344
345<h3>Diversity outreach</h3>
346
347<p><em>Karen Sandler, Marina Zhurakhinskaya</em> <br />
348<strong>Room 141, 15:20 - 16:05 | Thread: Movement-building</strong> <br />
349Since 2010, the GNOME Foundation's Outreach Program for Women has provided 130 women with an opportunity to participate in remote internships with twenty three free software organizations. It has helped participants become established free software contributors and has made a deep impact on the communities that have participated. We'll present what currently makes the program successful and will seek input from the audience about how the program can be expanded to offer opportunities to other underrepresented people, in addition to women.</p>
350
351<h3>Promoting free software adoption (and creation) in the public sector</h3>
352
353<p><em>Ezra Glenn, Andy Oram, others</em> <br />
354<strong>Room 155 | Thread: Surveillance</strong> <br />
355The session will present an overview of the "natural fit" between free software and the values of government agencies in a democracy (transparency; openness; participation and empowerment; cost-savings; collaboration), and then proceed to discuss recent successes -- and persistent challenges -- in the campaign to get public-sector organizations to adopt, accommodate -- and ideally support and create -- free software tools and open standards.</p>
356
357<h3>F-Droid sprint session 2</h3>
358
359<p><strong>Room 144</strong> <br />
360F-Droid is an easily-installable catalogue of free software applications for Android and Replicant devices. Stop any or all of the three sessions to improve existing entries and add new ones, and make it easier for people to install free software on their mobile devices. No experience required.</p>
361
362<h3>16:05 - 16:15: Break</h3>
363
364<h2>16:15 - 17:35: Workshop session 2</h2>
365
366<h3>Lessons in tech activism</h3>
367
368<p><em>Dana Moser, Kendra Moyer, Steve Revilak</em> <br />
369<strong>Room 123 | Thread: Activism</strong> <br />
370This session will be devoted to tech activism. We'll talk about activism to promote free software, some types of activism you can do with free software, and some of the challenges involved in getting activist groups to adopt free software.</p>
371
372<h3>IT cooperation: Accessible, free, &amp; open</h3>
373
374<p><em>Yochai Gal, Emily Lippold-Cheny, Leandro Monk</em> <br />
375<strong>Room 141 | Thread: Movement-building</strong> </p>
376
377<h3>Free Software and Open Science</h3>
378
379<p><em>Madeleine Ball, Shauna Gordon-McKeon</em> <br />
380<strong>Room 155 | Thread: Applied free software</strong> <br />
381The open science movement is a grassroots and growing effort to make science publicly accessible. While securing open access to published results is the most well known open science issue, activists are also working towards: breaking down the barriers between scientist and non-scientist through participatory research and citizen science; opening up the data and methods of published studies to allow reproducible results and meta-analysis; and highlighting the importance of contributions beyond patents and papers, such as the creation of free hardware and free software tools.</p>
382
383<p>In this panel, activists at the intersection of open science and free software will discuss how the two movements can learn from each other and work together. How do free software and open science differ in their approaches to shared goals of communal knowledge? What technical barriers to open science exist, and how can free software advocates help? How can open science projects build free software communities?</p>
384
385<h3>F-Droid sprint session 3</h3>
386
387<p><strong>Room 144</strong> <br />
388F-Droid is an easily-installable catalogue of free software applications for Android and Replicant devices. Stop any or all of the three sessions to improve existing entries and add new ones, and make it easier for people to install free software on their mobile devices. No experience required.</p>
389
390<h3>17:35 - 17:45: Break</h3>
391
392<h3>17:45 - 18:45: Closing Plenary: Sue Gardner</h3>
393
394<h1><a name="social">Social events</a></h1>
395
396<h3>Free Software Foundation open house and cryptoparty</h3>
397
398<p>Mingle at the FSF office before the conference with speakers and other attendees. Refreshments will be served. FSF campaigns managers Libby Reinish and Zak Rogoff will lead an optional cryptoparty during the open house. Please bring your laptop and a USB drive if you'd like to participate.</p>
399
400<p><strong>17:00 - 21:00</strong> <br />
401<strong>FSF Office</strong> <br />
402<strong>51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor</strong> <br />
403<strong>Boston, MA 02110</strong> </p>
404
405<h3>Saturday Night Party and Raffle</h3>
406
407<p>A social with food and drinks available, including plenty of vegan options. Meet new people from the free software movement, reconnect with friends from previous LibrePlanet conferences, and win free software prizes in the raffle.</p>
408
409<p><strong>19:30 - 23:00, with raffle drawing at 21:30</strong> <br />
410<strong><a href="http://www.classicirish.com/asgard-home.php">Asgard Pub &amp; Restaurant</a></strong> <br />
411<strong>350 Massachusetts Avenue</strong> <br />
412<strong>Cambridge, MA 02139</strong> </p>
413
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416<h3><a href="https://sipb.mit.edu">MIT's Student Information Processing Board (SIPB)</a></h3>
417
418<h3><a href="http://www.alephobjects.com">Aleph Objects</a></h3>
419
420<h3>Google</h3>
421
422<h3>Whole Foods</h3>
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