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29 March 22<sup>nd</sup>-23<sup>rd</sup><br />
30 MIT, Cambridge, MA</p>
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c04d0206 95<p><a href="sessions.html">Sessions</a> | <span style="color:grey;">Speakers</span> | <a href="legal_seminar.html">Legal seminar</a></p>
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96
97<h1>Keynote speakers</h1>
c04d0206 98<table>
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99<tr class="speaker">
100 <td class="speaker-photo" style="padding-top:23px"><img src="//static.fsf.org/nosvn/libreplanet/2014/site/speakers/sue_gardner.jpg" alt="Sue Gardner">
101 <td><h3>Sue Gardner, <a href="https://wikimedia.org">Wikimedia Foundation</a></h3><p>Since 2007, Sue Gardner has served as the Executive Director of the Wikimedia Foundation, the global non-profit that operates <a href="https://www.wikipedia.org/">Wikipedia</a>. Wikipedia is the world's largest and most popular encyclopedia, which is free to use and free of advertising. Wikipedia contains more than 30 million volunteer-authored articles in over 280 languages, and is visited by more than 516 million people every month, making it the fifth most popular website in the world.</p>
102
103<p>Ms. Gardner, a seasoned journalist, was formerly head of <a href="http://www.cbc.ca/">CBC.ca</a>, the website for the <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canadian_Broadcasting_Corporation">Canadian Broadcasting Corporation</a>, one of Canada's most prominent and best-loved cultural institutions. Under her leadership, CBC.ca won many international awards for excellence, and grew to become Canada's most popular news site. She started her career in 1990 as a producer with CBC's "As It Happens," an internationally-recognized groundbreaking news and current events radio program. She has worked in radio, television, newspapers, magazines and online.</p>
104
105<p>Sue Gardner has been described as the librarian to the world and the Mother Teresa of the Internet. In 2009, she was voted by Huffington Post readers as their media game-changer of the year and in 2012, Forbes magazine named her the world's 70th most powerful woman. Her work is motivated by the desire to ensure that everyone in the world has free and easy access to the information they want and need.</p>
106 </tr>
107 <tr class="speaker">
108 <td class="speaker-photo" style="padding-top:23px"><img src="//static.fsf.org/nosvn/libreplanet/2014/site/speakers/eben_moglen.jpg" alt="Eben Moglen">
109 <td><h3>Eben Moglen, <a href="https://www.softwarefreedom.org">Software Freedom Law Center</a></h3><p>Professor of Law and Legal History at Columbia University Law School. Professor Moglen has represented many of the world's leading free software developers. Professor Moglen earned his PhD in History and law degree at Yale University during what he sometimes calls his “long, dark period” in New Haven. After law school he clerked for Judge Edward Weinfeld of the United States District Court in New York City and for Justice Thurgood Marshall of the United States Supreme Court. He has taught at Columbia Law School since 1987 and has held visiting appointments at Harvard University, Tel Aviv University and the University of Virginia. In 2003 he was given the Electronic Frontier Foundation's Pioneer Award for efforts on behalf of freedom in the electronic society. Professor Moglen is admitted to practice in the State of New York and before the United States Supreme Court. </p>
110 </tr>
111
112 <tr class="speaker">
113 <td class="speaker-photo" style="padding-top:23px"><img src="//static.fsf.org/nosvn/libreplanet/2014/site/speakers/karen_sandler.jpg" alt="Karen Sandler">
114 <td><h3>Karen Sandler, <a href="https://www.gnome.org/foundation/">GNOME Foundation</a></h3><p>Karen M. Sandler is the Executive Director of the GNOME Foundation. She is known for her advocacy for free software, particularly for software safety on medical devices. Prior to joining GNOME, she was General Counsel of the <a href="https://www.softwarefreedom.org/">Software Freedom Law Center</a>. Karen continues to do pro bono legal work with SFLC and serves as an officer of the <a href="https://sfconservancy.org/">Software Freedom Conservancy</a>. She is also pro bono General Counsel of <a href="http://questioncopyright.org/">QuestionCopyright.org</a> and an advisor to the Ada Initiative. Before joining SFLC, Karen worked as an associate in the corporate departments of Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher LLP in New York and Clifford Chance in New York and London. Karen received her law degree from Columbia Law School in 2000, where she was a James Kent Scholar and co-founder of the Columbia Science and Technology Law Review. Karen received her bachelors degree in engineering from The Cooper Union. She is a recipient of the O'Reilly Open Source Award.</p>
115 </tr>
116
117 <tr class="speaker">
118 <td class="speaker-photo" style="padding-top:23px"><img src="//static.fsf.org/nosvn/libreplanet/2014/site/speakers/richard_stallman.jpg" alt="Richard Stallman">
119 <td><h3>Richard Stallman, <a href="https://www.fsf.org">Free Software Foundation</a></h3><p>Richard is a software developer and software freedom activist. In 1983 he announced the project to develop the <a href="https://gnu.org">GNU operating system</a>, a Unix-like operating system meant to be entirely free software, and has been the project's leader ever since. With that announcement Richard also launched the Free Software Movement. In October 1985 he started the Free Software Foundation.</p>
120
121<p>Since the mid-1990s, Richard has spent most of his time in political advocacy for free software, and spreading the ethical ideas of the movement, as well as campaigning against both software patents and dangerous extension of copyright laws. Before that, Richard developed a number of widely used software components of GNU, including the original Emacs, the GNU Compiler Collection, the GNU symbolic debugger (gdb), GNU Emacs, and various other programs for the GNU operating system.</p>
122
123<p>Richard pioneered the concept of copyleft, and is the main author of the GNU General Public License, the most widely used free software license.</p>
124
125<p>Richard graduated from Harvard in 1974 with a BA in physics. During his college years, he also worked as a staff hacker at the MIT Artificial Intelligence Lab, learning operating system development by doing it. He wrote the first extensible Emacs text editor there in 1975. He also developed the AI technique of dependency-directed backtracking, also known as truth maintenance. In January 1984 he resigned from MIT to start the GNU project. </p>
126 </tr>
127 </table>
128<h1>Session speakers</h1>
129<h3>Lionel Allorge, April</h3>
130
131<p>Lionel Allorge has been involved with the free software movement since 2000, when he joined April, the French free software advocacy association. After several years as board member, he was elected president in 2012.</p>
132
133<h3>Carolyn Anhalt, Techno-Activism Third Mondays (TA3M)</h3>
134
135<p>Carolyn's work in technology focuses on cross-cultural communications and multi-lingual applications. She currently contributes to research with Internews on a project documenting techniques and effects of online censorship and surveillance in various countries. In addition to this, she also advises and trains organizations and individuals on information security practices.</p>
136
137<h3>Madeleine Ball, PersonalGenomes.org</h3>
138
139<p>Madeleine Ball is director of research at the Harvard Personal Genome Project and co-founder of the Open Humans Network at <a href="http://www.personalgenomes.org/">PersonalGenomes.org</a>. As a scientist, programmer, and writer, Madeleine believes policy changes and open tools are vital for enabling open data and methods for understanding human biology.</p>
140
141<h3>Walter Bender, Sugar Labs</h3>
142
143<p>Walter Bender is founder of Sugar Labs, a member project of the non-profit foundation Software Freedom Conservancy. Sugar Labs develops educational software used by more than three million children in more than forty countries. As director of the MIT Media Laboratory, Bender led a team of researchers in fields as varied as tangible media to affective computing to lifelong kindergarten.</p>
144
145<h3>Frédéric Couchet, April</h3>
146
147<p>Frédéric Couchet is a free software activist, founder and executive director of April, an association which has been promoting and defending free software in France and Europe since 1996.</p>
148
149<h3>Kade Crockford, ACLU of Massachusetts</h3>
150
151<p>Kade Crockford is the director of the ACLU of Massachusetts' Technology for Liberty project, where she writes and edits the Privacy Matters blog, available at <a href="http://www.privacysos.org/blog">privacysos.org/blog</a>. The Technology for Liberty project aims to reform obsolete law at the intersection of privacy and technology, as well as marshal developing technologies to serve civil liberties and individual freedom. </p>
152
153<h3>Molly de Blanc</h3>
154
155<p>Molly de Blanc is a department liaison at MIT OpenCourseWare. She interned at the Free Software Foundation and One Laptop Per Child in non-technical capacities. She lives in Somerville, MA with hackers, free culture enthusiasts, and quite a few plants.</p>
156
157<h3>Remy DeCausemaker, RIT Lab for Technological Literacy</h3>
158
159<p>As assistant director of the Rochester Institute of Technology Lab for Technological Literacy, Remy serves as FOSS Research Coordinator at the Center for Media, Arts, Games, Interaction, and Creativity (MAGIC). Inside and outside of the classroom, he helps mentor and guide the students of RIT's Humanitarian <a href="http://hfoss-fossrit.rhcloud.com">Free/Opensource Software Development course</a>. He is a co-founder of CIVX.us, who's mission is to improve access, openness, and transparency of public information. With help from Sugarlabs, TeachingOpensource, Software Freedom Law Center, The Fedora Project, and many others, Remy brings FOSS to campuses, conferences, and campaigns everywhere he can.</p>
160
161<h3>Máirín Duffy, Red Hat, Inc. &amp; The Fedora Project</h3>
162
163<p>Máirín is a principal interaction designer on the Fedora Engineering team at Red Hat. She is passionate about software freedom, particularly in the creative domain; her favorite application is <a href="http://inkscape.org">Inkscape</a>.</p>
164
165<h3>Yochai Gal, Boston TechCollective</h3>
166
167<p>Yochai Gal is a co-founder of TechCollective, a worker-owned IT firm in San Francisco, CA, and also of its second chapter in Boston, MA. He is also a former board member of the Network of Bay Area Worker Cooperatives, an affiliate body of the Federation of Worker Cooperatives. His expertise is in cooperative business operations, systems administration, data recovery, and general IT.</p>
168
169<h3>Matthew Garrett, Nebula</h3>
170
171<p>Matthew Garrett is a cloud security developer and free software contributor.</p>
172
173<h3>Sucheta Ghoshal, Wikimedia Foundation</h3>
174
175<p>Sucheta Ghoshal has been engaged with MediaWiki development for a long time now -- writing code for Wikipedia mostly in JavaScript and PHP. She is working as an associate software engineer in the Language Engineering Team of the Wikimedia Foundation. She was also an OPW intern with the Wikimedia Foundation, and is now volunteering as a mentor for the same program. </p>
176
177<h3>Ezra Glenn, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Urban Studies &amp; Planning</h3>
178
179<p>Ezra Haber Glenn is a lecturer in Urban Studies and Planning at MIT. Prior to holding this position he served as director of community development for the City of Lawrence, MA. Past positions include director of planning &amp; development and director of commercial development for the City of Somerville, MA, and land use planner at the consulting firm of McGregor &amp; Associates in Boston. He serves on the board of directors of the Somerville Community Corporation and as a mayoral appointee to the Somerville Community Preservation Committee.</p>
180
181<p>He is also the developer and maintainer of the "acs" package in the R statistical programming language, which helps users download and analyze data from the U.S. Census. He blogs on <a href="http://eglenn.scripts.mit.edu/citystate">CityState</a> and <a href="http://radar.oreilly.com">O'Reilly's Radar</a>.</p>
182
183<h3>Shauna Gordon-McKeon, OpenHatch</h3>
184
185<p>Shauna Gordon-McKeon is a program director for OpenHatch, where she develops and runs an event series introducing college students to free software. She also volunteers with the Open Science Collaboration, a network of academic and citizen scientists with an interest in open science, metascience, and good scientific practices. She has a background in neuroscience and endocrinology, and a strong interest in contributing to scientific progress as a non-professional.</p>
186
187<h3>Mark Holmquist, Wikimedia Foundation</h3>
188
189<p>Mark Holmquist, AKA "marktraceur", has been working with the free software movement and various free software projects for all of his adult life. He continues to pursue clarity in questions of ethics and morality related to free software, as well as build quality software for everyone to use freely, both as his day job at the Wikimedia Foundation and in his spare time.</p>
190
191<h3>Bradley Kuhn, Free Software Foundation</h3>
192
193<p>Bradley M. Kuhn helped found Software Freedom Conservancy in 2006, and became its executive director in 2010. Kuhn additionally volunteers on Free Software Foundation's board of directors, and was previously FSF's executive director from 2001-2005. Kuhn became a volunteer contributor in the software freedom Movement in 1992, and worked in the 1990s as a system administrator and software developer. Kuhn focused his last 15 years on free software licensing and non-profit structures for software freedom.</p>
194
195<h3>Josh Levy, Free Press</h3>
196
197<p>Josh leads Free Press's work to protect Internet freedom, stop government and corporate surveillance, secure public use of the public airwaves and promote universal access to high-speed Internet. Before joining Free Press, Josh was the managing editor of Change.org, where he supervised the launch of more than a dozen issue-based blogs. Josh holds a B.A. in English and religion from the University of Vermont and an M.F.A. in integrated media arts from Hunter College.</p>
198
199<h3>Emily Lippold Cheney, Data Commons Cooperative</h3>
200
201<p>Emily identifies as a cooperative organizer. For the past eight years, she has been working with students and youth nationally and internationally in an educator and developer capacity. In her role as an organizer, she works to build partnerships and cooperation within the global cooperative movement, as well as with other, like-minded movements and groups - like the FLOSS community! She is also an aspiring Drupalista.</p>
202
203<h3>Nicholas Merrill, The Calyx Institute</h3>
204
205<p>Nicholas Merrill is the founder of The Calyx Institute, a non-profit organization focused on the digital divide and privacy issues. He has worked primarily with free software since the beginning of his career in 1994, beginning with GNU/Linux and later with FreeBSD and OpenBSD. In 2004, he began a decade-long legal battle against the constitutionality of National Security Letters which still continues in the legal system.</p>
206
207<h3>Leandro Monk, FACTTIC (Federación Argentina de Cooperativas de Trabajo de Tecnología, Innovación y Conocimiento)</h3>
208
209<p>Leandro Monk is President of FACTTIC and a member of gcoop - Cooperativa de Software Libre.</p>
210
211<h3>Monty Montgomery, Xiph.Org Foundation</h3>
212
213<p>Monty Montgomery is a founder and the current Executive Director of the Xiph.Org Foundation, author of CDParanoia, Ogg, and the Vorbis audio codec, and contributor to numerous free digital media software projects. In addition to his programming work, Monty is known for his technically accessible articles about digital media, and appears in the Xiph.Org videos "A Digital Media Primer for Geeks" and "Digital Show and Tell."</p>
214
215<h3>Alexandre Oliva, FSF Latin America</h3>
216
217<p>Free Software evangelist. GNU speaker. FSF Latin America board member. Maintainer of GNU Linux-libre, and co-maintainer of GNU libc, GNU binutils and GNU Compiler Collection. GNU toolchain engineer with Red Hat Brazil.</p>
218
219<h3>Sandra Ordonez, Techno Activism 3rd Monday and OpenITP</h3>
220
221<p>Sandy Ordonez currently serves as outreach manager for Open Internet Tools Project, and a shepherd for Techno-Activism 3rd Mondays, a monthly event that that occurs simultaneously in twenty-one cities and brings together people interested in surveillance, censorship and open technology. She previously served as director of communications to Wikipedia, and external communications lead for Joomla. Her passions are community management, digital strategy, and collaborative culture.</p>
222
223<h3>Noopur Raval, Commons Machinery</h3>
224
225<p>Noopur Raval, who crawls the interwebs to produce accounts of techno-cultures. She is currently pursuing her M.Phil in Cinema Studies at JNU, New Delhi. Her thesis revolves around understanding new religious publics in India through their interactions with media technologies. She has previously worked with the Wikimedia Foundation and the Center for Internet &amp; Society, Bangalore to promote Wikipedia contribution in Indian languages. She is passionate about Open Source technology, free knowledge, education, and travel.</p>
226
227<h3>Joseph Reagle, Northeastern University</h3>
228
229<p>Joseph Reagle is author of Good Faith Collaboration: The Culture of Wikipedia (The MIT Press, 2010). As a research engineer at MIT he served as a working group chair and author within IETF and W3C on topics including digital security, privacy, and Internet policy. His current interests include infocide, geek feminism, and comment culture.</p>
230
231<h3>Stephen Revilak</h3>
232
233<p>Steve Revilak is a software developer, RFC 1392-compliant hacker, and Quartermaster of the Massachusetts Pirate Party.</p>
234
235<h3>Ruben Rodriguez Perez, The Trisquel GNU/Linux Project</h3>
236
237<p>Founder of the Trisquel GNU/Linux project, Ruben is a computer engineer and free software developer from Spain. He has worked on free software projects for the last twelve years, with a particular focus on educational software.</p>
238
239<h3>Seth Schoen, Electronic Frontier Foundation</h3>
240
241<p>Seth Schoen is a senior staff technologist at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, where he has worked since 2001. At EFF, he has researched computer security and forensics and provided testimony to several courts and government agencies. He is interested in helping people achieve more understanding of and control over the technology they use.</p>
242
243<h3>Paul Tagliamonte</h3>
244
245<p>Paul is a software engineer with the Sunlight Foundation, who works on a number of free software projects, such as Debian, Ubuntu, Fluxbox, and numerous other smaller projects. He's been a GNU/Linux user for ten years, and holds an undergraduate degree in Computer Science from John Carroll University.</p>
246
247<h3>Jeffrey Warren Public Lab</h3>
248
249<p>Co-founder and research director for the <a href="http://publiclab.org">Public Laboratory for Open Technology and Science</a>, Jeffrey Warren designs mapping and civic science tools and professionally flies balloons and kites. Notable software he has created include the vector-mapping framework Cartagen and orthorectification tool MapKnitter, as well as open spectral database and toolkit Spectral Workbench. He is a fellow at MIT's Center for Civic Media, on the board of the Open Source Hardware Association, on the advisory board of Personal Democracy Media's WeGov and an advocate of free software, hardware, and data. </p>
250
251<h3>Zachary Wick</h3>
252
253<p>Zach has been employed as a web developer, an embedded developer, and a mobile developer. He can often be found doing something outdoors or up to his elbows in solder and wires hacking a new feature into a device. </p>
254
255<h3>Holmes Wilson, Fight for the Future</h3>
256
257<p>Holmes Wilson is a former FSF campaign manager who now runs Fight for the Future, the Internet activism organization best known for organizing the protests to stop SOPA and--more recently--actions against NSA surveillance. He has also co-founded several major free projects, including the subtitling tool Amara, the torrent-enabled media player Miro, and the government transparency sites <a href="http://opencongress.org">OpenCongress.org</a> &amp; <a href="http://askthem.io">Askthem.io</a>. </p>
258
259<h3>Marina Zhurakhinskaya, Red Hat, GNOME Foundation</h3>
260
261<p>Marina Zhurakhinskaya works on community outreach and engagement at Red Hat and serves on the boards of the GNOME Foundation and the Ada Initiative. She organizes the GNOME Foundation's Outreach Program for Women. She is an MIT graduate with Bachelor's and Master's degrees in Computer Science.</p>
262
263<h3>Kÿra, The Empowermentors Collective</h3>
264
265<p>Kÿra is an activist within, and critic of, the free software and free culture movements. As a student, aspiring hacker, second generation hoppa, and trans femminine cyborg, Kÿra is committed to free software and free culture as a matter of POC empowerment, disability justice, decolonization, queer liberation, prison abolition, and the destabilization of patriarchy. They challenge the mainstream narratives advancing free software and free culture without consideration for racial and gender oppression. </p>
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