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1 | BEGIN:VCALENDAR |
2 | VERSION:2.0 | |
3 | PRODID:GNU Emacs | |
4 | METHOD:PUBLISH | |
5 | CALSCALE:GREGORIAN | |
6 | DTSTART:20210320T134500Z | |
7 | DTEND:20210321T223000Z | |
8 | BEGIN:VEVENT | |
9 | METHOD:PUBLISH | |
10 | DTSTAMP:20210316T000000Z | |
11 | UID:2BYNYDBL2CDSMACUZ6QHVV7VE4CT6M45 | |
12 | CLASS:PUBLIC | |
13 | STATUS:CONFIRMED | |
14 | SUMMARY:Welcome address by FSF | |
15 | DESCRIPTION:There's no description available | |
16 | for this session yet - sorry! | |
17 | URL=https://libreplanet.org/2021/speakers/#5397 | |
18 | LOCATION:Jupiter | |
19 | DTSTART:20210320T134500Z | |
20 | DTEND:20210320T140000Z | |
21 | CATEGORIES:LibrePlanet special sessions | |
22 | ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;CUTYPE=INVIDIDUAL;CN="LibrePlanet 2021": | |
23 | invalid:nomail | |
24 | END:VEVENT | |
25 | BEGIN:VEVENT | |
26 | DTSTAMP:20210316T000000Z | |
27 | METHOD:PUBLISH | |
28 | UID:577B2JR66RFRYZYRA7LJQJLWFVXG2PS7 | |
29 | CLASS:PUBLIC | |
30 | STATUS:CONFIRMED | |
31 | SUMMARY:Technopolice: One year of activism against surveillance techno | |
32 | logies | |
33 | DESCRIPTION:Technopolice is a French movement aiming to | |
34 | analyze and document the spread of surveillance | |
35 | technologies in our cities and lives, in order to defend | |
36 | civil rights and liberties. The movement was initiated by | |
37 | La Quadrature du Net in 2019, and was followed by other | |
38 | organizations and individuals in a decentralized way. In | |
39 | this talk we will go through:\n\n - one year of study and | |
40 | activism in the Technopolice movement;\n\n - how we | |
41 | collectively gather information on these ongoning | |
42 | projects;\n\n - how we legally, technically, ethically and | |
43 | socially analyze and debate on them;\n\n - how we try to | |
44 | make them visible and understandable to non-technical | |
45 | users;\n\n - how people, artists, activists, and citizens | |
46 | can resist;\n\n - how we can all spread the word, that | |
47 | this is not our future, and not the one that we have | |
48 | chosen;\n\n - how we value freedom, transparency, | |
49 | ethics;\n\n - how we value common goods and that our | |
50 | future is ours to build. | |
51 | URL=https://libreplanet.org/2021/speakers/#4877 | |
52 | LOCATION:Jupiter | |
53 | DTSTART:20210320T141000Z | |
54 | DTEND:20210320T145500Z | |
55 | CATEGORIES:Free software in Government | |
56 | ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;CUTYPE=INVIDIDUAL;CN="Edlira Nano | |
57 | ":invalid:nomail | |
58 | ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;CUTYPE=INVIDIDUAL;CN="Guinness":invalid: | |
59 | nomail | |
60 | END:VEVENT | |
61 | BEGIN:VEVENT | |
62 | METHOD:PUBLISH | |
63 | DTSTAMP:20210316T000000Z | |
64 | UID:Z2UAPJUBWBTBMTNAC4L7RROK7D32PQZ7 | |
65 | CLASS:PUBLIC | |
66 | STATUS:CONFIRMED | |
67 | SUMMARY:Software Heritage: The great library of source code | |
68 | DESCRIPTION:Software Heritage collects, preserves, and | |
69 | shares software source code from major software | |
70 | development forges, free software distributions, package | |
71 | manager repositories, and more. As such, Software Heritage | |
72 | is the premier digital preservation initiative whose goal | |
73 | encompasses the long-term archival of free software | |
74 | commons for generations to come.\n\nThe Software Heritage | |
75 | archive is the largest publicly accessible archive of | |
76 | software source code, having collected 10 billion unique | |
77 | source code files and 2 billion unique commits from more | |
78 | than 140 million software projects.\n\nThis talk will | |
79 | provide an update about the Software Heritage project, | |
80 | focusing on increased archive coverage, integration with | |
81 | other initiatives, and way to practically use the archive, | |
82 | for both end users and developers. | |
83 | URL=https://libreplanet.org/2021/speakers/#4863 | |
84 | LOCATION:Saturn | |
85 | DTSTART:20210320T141000Z | |
86 | DTEND:20210320T145500Z | |
87 | CATEGORIES:Free Software in practice | |
88 | ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;CUTYPE=INVIDIDUAL;CN="Stefano Zacchiroli | |
89 | ":invalid:nomail | |
90 | END:VEVENT | |
91 | BEGIN:VEVENT | |
92 | METHOD:PUBLISH | |
93 | DTSTAMP:20210316T000000Z | |
94 | UID:K7WZDZSQELQXP6ZEL3UWVCURB24WJ3UE | |
95 | CLASS:PUBLIC | |
96 | STATUS:CONFIRMED | |
97 | SUMMARY:Bridging the digital divide in education with free software an | |
98 | d hardware | |
99 | DESCRIPTION:In the current digital era, knowledge systems | |
100 | are available and accessible in many forms digitally, | |
101 | making learning a easier process for almost everyone who | |
102 | has access to them. For instance, a primary school student | |
103 | is able to work on electronics, robotics, and programming. | |
104 | On the flipside, there are underprivileged students who do | |
105 | not have access to even a basic computer due to lack of IT | |
106 | infrastructure in their schools. This creates a digital | |
107 | divide.\n\nTo bridge the divide, we can use free software | |
108 | like GNU/Linux, free hardware designs, and freely licensed | |
109 | educational materials. The BalaSwecha project makes use of | |
110 | all these to develop a GNU/Linux distribution based on | |
111 | interactive learning principles for children studying in | |
112 | underprivileged and underfunded schools. The presentation | |
113 | will deal about details and execution of this community | |
114 | project. | |
115 | URL=https://libreplanet.org/2021/speakers/#4650 | |
116 | LOCATION:Neptune | |
117 | DTSTART:20210320T141000Z | |
118 | DTEND:20210320T145500Z | |
119 | CATEGORIES:Social context | |
120 | ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;CUTYPE=INVIDIDUAL;CN="Sripath Roy Kogant | |
121 | i":invalid:nomail | |
122 | END:VEVENT | |
123 | BEGIN:VEVENT | |
124 | METHOD:PUBLISH | |
125 | DTSTAMP:20210316T000000Z | |
126 | UID:HT5QFX2Q4ISWL5H42CG3WHMOGPALULRJ | |
127 | CLASS:PUBLIC | |
128 | STATUS:CONFIRMED | |
129 | SUMMARY:The state of software in schools and what to do about it | |
130 | DESCRIPTION:This session will briefly address why free | |
131 | software is important in education and provide examples of | |
132 | how proprietary software is rapidly deployed in | |
133 | schools.\n\n This presentation aims to help people:\n\n - | |
134 | rise up against this injustice, big and small,\n\n - share | |
135 | time and resources which will be shared by and for | |
136 | participants,\n\n - provide a safe discussion space to | |
137 | address issues in education,\n\n - generate ideas for how | |
138 | to become active in their community to be included in an | |
139 | Action Guide,\n\n - connect with others who are interested | |
140 | in helping the cause for free software in education | |
141 | spheres. | |
142 | URL=https://libreplanet.org/2021/speakers/#4909 | |
143 | LOCATION:Jupiter | |
144 | DTSTART:20210320T150500Z | |
145 | DTEND:20210320T155000Z | |
146 | CATEGORIES:Education | |
147 | ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;CUTYPE=INVIDIDUAL;CN="Mariah Villarreal" | |
148 | :invalid:nomail | |
149 | END:VEVENT | |
150 | BEGIN:VEVENT | |
151 | METHOD:PUBLISH | |
152 | DTSTAMP:20210316T000000Z | |
153 | UID:Z4QPMNEL3WQXO7KKW4PEBPC3CZM4U56Z | |
154 | CLASS:PUBLIC | |
155 | STATUS:CONFIRMED | |
156 | SUMMARY:Lessons Framasoft has learned | |
157 | DESCRIPTION:Framasoft is a small, French nonprofit, made up | |
158 | of only thirty-five members and ten employees.\n\nWe've | |
159 | been promoting free/libre software and its culture for | |
160 | more than fifteen years. From a collaborative free | |
161 | software directory to a publishing house, from hosting | |
162 | more than thirty-five free/libre services (our Dégooglify | |
163 | the Internet campaign) to initiating a libre hosts | |
164 | collective (CHATONS), from PeerTube (free and federated | |
165 | alternative to YouTube) to Mobilizon (same, but for | |
166 | Facebook groups and events)...\n\nWe've tried a lot of | |
167 | things to help change the world, one byte at the | |
168 | time!\n\nWe want to share our experience outside of French | |
169 | boarders, so it can be studied and (hopefully) copied and | |
170 | adapted to other languages and cultures. | |
171 | URL=https://libreplanet.org/2021/speakers/#4730 | |
172 | LOCATION:Saturn | |
173 | DTSTART:20210320T150500Z | |
174 | DTEND:20210320T155000Z | |
175 | CATEGORIES:Community | |
176 | ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;CUTYPE=INVIDIDUAL;CN="Pouhiou Noénaute": | |
177 | invalid:nomail | |
178 | END:VEVENT | |
179 | BEGIN:VEVENT | |
180 | METHOD:PUBLISH | |
181 | DTSTAMP:20210316T000000Z | |
182 | UID:QOTDJZLWVEAOU6ZNMADUBPJFBN2NOUMP | |
183 | CLASS:PUBLIC | |
184 | STATUS:CONFIRMED | |
185 | SUMMARY:Freeing networks where we need freedom most | |
186 | DESCRIPTION:The struggle for the freedom of Internet is ever | |
187 | growing. Corporations, and their partner in crime, | |
188 | governments, come up with new clever ideas to restrict | |
189 | free flow of information. Overlords of the truth are | |
190 | trying to recover old control, which the Internet has | |
191 | eroded everywhere in favor of the people.\n\nNetworking | |
192 | and freedom of communication are meant to be great | |
193 | equalizers. That would be true if carriers of | |
194 | communication signals could come out of thin air. Like the | |
195 | land and means of production, our signals depend on | |
196 | existing infrastructure, and the lords who own them are an | |
197 | obstacle to the freedom of the people. Freifunk is a | |
198 | non-commercial, grassroots initiative to support free | |
199 | computer networks in the German region. We try to apply | |
200 | the same principles in Turkey, bringing power back to the | |
201 | people. | |
202 | URL=https://libreplanet.org/2021/speakers/#4844 | |
203 | LOCATION:Neptune | |
204 | DTSTART:20210320T150500Z | |
205 | DTEND:20210320T155000Z | |
206 | CATEGORIES:Exploring Free Software concepts | |
207 | ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;CUTYPE=INVIDIDUAL;CN="Alper Atmaca":inva | |
208 | lid:nomail | |
209 | ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;CUTYPE=INVIDIDUAL;CN="Özcan Oğuz":invali | |
210 | d:nomail | |
211 | END:VEVENT | |
212 | BEGIN:VEVENT | |
213 | METHOD:PUBLISH | |
214 | DTSTAMP:20210316T000000Z | |
215 | UID:6PJA4AGAEUDBSAIY2TKF7QQZJBVQTP2B | |
216 | CLASS:PUBLIC | |
217 | STATUS:CONFIRMED | |
218 | SUMMARY:A European Open Technology Fund: Building sustainable public f | |
219 | unding for free software | |
220 | DESCRIPTION:There's no description available | |
221 | for this session yet - sorry! | |
222 | URL=https://libreplanet.org/2021/speakers/#5416 | |
223 | LOCATION:Jupiter | |
224 | DTSTART:20210320T160000Z | |
225 | DTEND:20210320T164500Z | |
226 | CATEGORIES:Keynote | |
227 | ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;CUTYPE=INVIDIDUAL;CN="Julia Reda":invali | |
228 | d:nomail | |
229 | END:VEVENT | |
230 | BEGIN:VEVENT | |
231 | METHOD:PUBLISH | |
232 | DTSTAMP:20210316T000000Z | |
233 | UID:7MH2UY2QV6M2VWVCNNMOMINWHPQ7YTF7 | |
234 | CLASS:PUBLIC | |
235 | STATUS:CONFIRMED | |
236 | SUMMARY:"Logiciel libre, société libre": Free software activism in Fra | |
237 | nce and Europe | |
238 | DESCRIPTION:Founded in 1996, April is the main French | |
239 | advocacy association devoted to promoting and protecting | |
240 | free/libre software. Since 1996, it has been a major | |
241 | player in the democratization and the spread of free | |
242 | software and open standards to the general public, | |
243 | professionals and institutions in the French-speaking | |
244 | world. It also acts as a watchdog on digital freedoms, | |
245 | warning the public about the dangers of private interests | |
246 | keeping an exclusive stranglehold on information and | |
247 | knowledge.\n\nFree software cannot develop fully without a | |
248 | benevolent political and legislative environment. That is | |
249 | where April plays a crucial role in France and Europe, | |
250 | along with allied organizations. Its actions, thanks to | |
251 | its volunteers and its staff, are precious for everyone | |
252 | who produces and/or uses free software. It is the | |
253 | organization's small contribution to the free software | |
254 | movement. Étienne Gonnu, an April staff member, will | |
255 | present on how it operates, the current French and | |
256 | European issues April is working on, and share future | |
257 | perspectives, strategies, successes, and challenges. | |
258 | URL=https://libreplanet.org/2021/speakers/#4787 | |
259 | LOCATION:Jupiter | |
260 | DTSTART:20210320T165500Z | |
261 | DTEND:20210320T174000Z | |
262 | CATEGORIES:Community | |
263 | ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;CUTYPE=INVIDIDUAL;CN="Etienne Gonnu":inv | |
264 | alid:nomail | |
265 | END:VEVENT | |
266 | BEGIN:VEVENT | |
267 | METHOD:PUBLISH | |
268 | DTSTAMP:20210316T000000Z | |
269 | UID:IRTRC5ZBBP5V2S2AFF32SDKAKKLWU6UL | |
270 | CLASS:PUBLIC | |
271 | STATUS:CONFIRMED | |
272 | SUMMARY:The defense of the GNOME Foundation | |
273 | DESCRIPTION:In August 2019, GNOME was notified that it was | |
274 | being sued in the state of California over a broad patent | |
275 | which allegedly covered Shotwell, a photo management | |
276 | application. The plaintiff? A prolific filer of patent | |
277 | suits, and a patent assertion entity. This was the first | |
278 | time that a free software project has been sued for patent | |
279 | infringement.\n\nThis talk is the story from the executive | |
280 | director of the GNOME Foundation, on how he responded and | |
281 | the strategies taken to not only defeat the suit, but to | |
282 | secure a groundbreaking agreement which means that this | |
283 | particular PAE will never be able to sue any free software | |
284 | project ever again. | |
285 | URL=https://libreplanet.org/2021/speakers/#4689 | |
286 | LOCATION:Saturn | |
287 | DTSTART:20210320T165500Z | |
288 | DTEND:20210320T174000Z | |
289 | METHOD:PUBLISH | |
290 | CATEGORIES:Licensing | |
291 | ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;CUTYPE=INVIDIDUAL;CN="Neil McGovern":inv | |
292 | alid:nomail | |
293 | END:VEVENT | |
294 | BEGIN:VEVENT | |
295 | METHOD:PUBLISH | |
296 | DTSTAMP:20210316T000000Z | |
297 | UID:AGC3KPEMW32GD4U4IVYRR66JN6CWWQ4D | |
298 | CLASS:PUBLIC | |
299 | STATUS:CONFIRMED | |
300 | SUMMARY:Gamifying education the libre way | |
301 | DESCRIPTION:Gamification is a concept that has flourished in | |
302 | the digital age. By leveraging the high interactivity and | |
303 | enticing incentives of game design with tight feedback | |
304 | loops, difficult concepts can be absorbed with little | |
305 | effort. But can a complex and controversial topic such as | |
306 | climate change be transformed into a fun and exciting | |
307 | learning opportunity? In this talk, we will explore how | |
308 | the philosophy of free software has been used to do | |
309 | exactly that by showing what we did to create and modify | |
310 | our own game and discuss how it can be applied in | |
311 | empowering educators and students to gamify their own | |
312 | interests. | |
313 | URL=https://libreplanet.org/2021/speakers/#4821 | |
314 | LOCATION:Neptune | |
315 | DTSTART:20210320T165500Z | |
316 | DTEND:20210320T174000Z | |
317 | CATEGORIES:Free Software in practice | |
318 | ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;CUTYPE=INVIDIDUAL;CN="Giselle Jhunjhnuwa | |
319 | la":invalid:nomail | |
320 | ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;CUTYPE=INVIDIDUAL;CN="Charlie Koch":inva | |
321 | lid:nomail | |
322 | END:VEVENT | |
323 | BEGIN:VEVENT | |
324 | METHOD:PUBLISH | |
325 | DTSTAMP:20210316T000000Z | |
326 | UID:YMJZYNH53R3RTA5LTHASCHLTT5AMC5U3 | |
327 | CLASS:PUBLIC | |
328 | STATUS:CONFIRMED | |
329 | SUMMARY:Right to Repair | |
330 | DESCRIPTION:What if everyone had free access to a repair | |
331 | manual for everything they owned? Making repair accessible | |
332 | to everyone is the best shot we’ve got at reducing e-waste | |
333 | and starting to make our high-tech lives | |
334 | sustainable.\n\nRight to repair is working to make that | |
335 | happen--to restore a small amount of freedom to the | |
336 | hardware world. We've introduced legislation in over 20 | |
337 | states and are pushing manufacturers to release schematics | |
338 | and security patches for embedded systems.\n\nLearn the | |
339 | latest in the fight from one of the leaders of the | |
340 | movement. We're also in the midst of a big fight over the | |
341 | most evil section of the DMCA, the dreaded Section 1201 | |
342 | that bans breaking encryption on hardware that you | |
343 | rightfully own. | |
344 | URL=https://libreplanet.org/2021/speakers/#4548 | |
345 | LOCATION:Jupiter | |
346 | DTSTART:20210320T175000Z | |
347 | DTEND:20210320T183500Z | |
348 | CATEGORIES:Social context | |
349 | ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;CUTYPE=INVIDIDUAL;CN="Kyle Wiens":invali | |
350 | d:nomail | |
351 | ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;CUTYPE=INVIDIDUAL;CN="iFixit":invalid:no | |
352 | ||
353 | END:VEVENT | |
354 | BEGIN:VEVENT | |
355 | METHOD:PUBLISH | |
356 | DTSTAMP:20210316T000000Z | |
357 | UID:M2MWEQNRFM2U3DSLXDZMDOMAPFDUSZK6 | |
358 | CLASS:PUBLIC | |
359 | STATUS:CONFIRMED | |
360 | SUMMARY:HPP committee | |
361 | DESCRIPTION:There's no description available | |
362 | for this session yet - sorry! | |
363 | URL=https://libreplanet.org/2021/speakers/#5420 | |
364 | LOCATION:Saturn | |
365 | DTSTART:20210320T175000Z | |
366 | DTEND:20210320T183500Z | |
367 | CATEGORIES:LibrePlanet special sessions | |
368 | ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;CUTYPE=INVIDIDUAL;CN="HPP Committee":inv | |
369 | alid:nomail | |
370 | END:VEVENT | |
371 | BEGIN:VEVENT | |
372 | METHOD:PUBLISH | |
373 | DTSTAMP:20210316T000000Z | |
374 | UID:GDFK565YC5BRYP32FTCSKMTQA3T5CZSG | |
375 | CLASS:PUBLIC | |
376 | STATUS:CONFIRMED | |
377 | SUMMARY:Manufactura Independente: 10 years of designing in the libre | |
378 | DESCRIPTION:In 2010, we started Manufactura Independente, a | |
379 | space to develop our design practice using free/libre | |
380 | software. At the time we had just finished our studies and | |
381 | learnt the hard way how proprietary software and file | |
382 | formats can own your work. While our first dip in the | |
383 | waters was tough -- installing a new OS, understanding new | |
384 | tools, rejecting proprietary options -- the path was | |
385 | clear: we were in control, we became users, contributors | |
386 | and owners of the tools we employed. With each project we | |
387 | set out to explore tools and principles, going beyond | |
388 | "open" towards a framing of copyleft and freedom in the | |
389 | graphic arts. 10 years went by and we want to underscore | |
390 | that anniversary by sharing our work, tools and stories of | |
391 | how we grew to love the GNU, and how free software ideals | |
392 | came to redefine our design practice, and are more | |
393 | relevant than ever today. | |
394 | URL=https://libreplanet.org/2021/speakers/#4828 | |
395 | LOCATION:Neptune | |
396 | DTSTART:20210320T175000Z | |
397 | DTEND:20210320T183500Z | |
398 | CATEGORIES:Free Software in practice | |
399 | ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;CUTYPE=INVIDIDUAL;CN="Manufactura Indepe | |
400 | ndente":invalid:nomail | |
401 | END:VEVENT | |
402 | BEGIN:VEVENT | |
403 | METHOD:PUBLISH | |
404 | DTSTAMP:20210316T000000Z | |
405 | UID:ICVPQTKLF6S3YYFNWVWL4ZWA5VOYN5WV | |
406 | CLASS:PUBLIC | |
407 | STATUS:CONFIRMED | |
408 | SUMMARY:Usable security for end-users: How Tor improves usability with | |
409 | out compromising user privacy | |
410 | DESCRIPTION:The Tor network, used by 2.5 million users every | |
411 | day, protects their privacy via “onion routing,” which | |
412 | directs Internet traffic – email, instant messages, online | |
413 | posts, Web form visits, and more – through a multilayered | |
414 | network that obfuscates who the user is, thus concealing | |
415 | their identity and location.\n\nBecause our design | |
416 | prioritizes privacy, our tools gather very little | |
417 | information about our users. Early in 2018, we began our | |
418 | User Research Program, where we incorporated user research | |
419 | as part of our outreach security trainings by doing | |
420 | interviews and collecting user feedback on the tools we | |
421 | taught participants during the training. So far, this | |
422 | program has reached an audience of over 800 people in | |
423 | countries like Brazil, Colombia, Mexico, India, Indonesia, | |
424 | Kenya and Uganda. The methods of conducting open user | |
425 | research and collecting usability feedback mentioned above | |
426 | have been informing design decisions in every stable Tor | |
427 | Browser release since 7.5 (and we’re up to | |
428 | 10.0.2!).\n\nDuring this presentation we will share our | |
429 | human-centered design methodologies and the impact they | |
430 | had in releasing usable free software PET's. | |
431 | URL=https://libreplanet.org/2021/speakers/#4841 | |
432 | LOCATION:Jupiter | |
433 | DTSTART:20210320T184500Z | |
434 | DTEND:20210320T193000Z | |
435 | CATEGORIES:Security | |
436 | ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;CUTYPE=INVIDIDUAL;CN="Antonela Debiasi": | |
437 | invalid:nomail | |
438 | END:VEVENT | |
439 | BEGIN:VEVENT | |
440 | METHOD:PUBLISH | |
441 | DTSTAMP:20210316T000000Z | |
442 | UID:7ALNWNEZIANQJR4DG4IU6DG4QDQM72IJ | |
443 | CLASS:PUBLIC | |
444 | STATUS:CONFIRMED | |
445 | SUMMARY:Does your GPU work with free graphics drivers? | |
446 | DESCRIPTION:Does your GPU work with free graphics drivers? | |
447 | Nowadays, chances are good! What about with free firmware? | |
448 | In this talk, we'll look at the state of free software for | |
449 | graphics hardware: where we are, how far we've come, and | |
450 | where we're going. We'll talk about why some vendors | |
451 | support free software and tell the epic tales of | |
452 | reverse-engineering the hardware of those that don't. Will | |
453 | free software prevail?\n\nThe story of the free graphics | |
454 | movement, complete with protagonist hackers, proprietary | |
455 | antagonists, and plot twists on the road to freedom. | |
456 | URL=https://libreplanet.org/2021/speakers/#4687 | |
457 | LOCATION:Saturn | |
458 | DTSTART:20210320T184500Z | |
459 | DTEND:20210320T193000Z | |
460 | CATEGORIES:Free Software in practice | |
461 | ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;CUTYPE=INVIDIDUAL;CN="Alyssa Rosenzweig" | |
462 | :invalid:nomail | |
463 | END:VEVENT | |
464 | BEGIN:VEVENT | |
465 | METHOD:PUBLISH | |
466 | DTSTAMP:20210316T000000Z | |
467 | UID:G5OFPTVYXVVAPUGOPTRNRXM72SZRZYJF | |
468 | CLASS:PUBLIC | |
469 | STATUS:CONFIRMED | |
470 | SUMMARY:Adopting free software ideals | |
471 | DESCRIPTION:Adopting free software ideals can be confusing | |
472 | and challenging for individuals, filled with cognitive | |
473 | dissonance and questioning of practicality. Am I a bad | |
474 | person if I use nonfree software? What example should I | |
475 | set as a free software activist or advocate? How does that | |
476 | relate to responsibilities of developers and | |
477 | distributors?\n\nThis is a talk about practical ethics and | |
478 | ideals. It is personal, drawing upon my experiences and | |
479 | evolution over the past fifteen years. It contains some | |
480 | awkward discussions that free software activists like to | |
481 | avoid, and hopes to guide those seeking to adopt more free | |
482 | software ideals, but fear they may not be able to meet | |
483 | such high standards. It's a talk about evolution and | |
484 | growth.\n\nBut complacency in the face of conflict can | |
485 | also dilute our ideals. So this is also a talk about | |
486 | balancing ideals in the context of one's own unique | |
487 | circumstances, while at the same time preserving a strong | |
488 | message about software freedom. | |
489 | URL=https://libreplanet.org/2021/speakers/#4415 | |
490 | LOCATION:Neptune | |
491 | DTSTART:20210320T184500Z | |
492 | DTEND:20210320T193000Z | |
493 | CATEGORIES:Exploring Free Software concepts | |
494 | ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;CUTYPE=INVIDIDUAL;CN="Mike Gerwitz":inva | |
495 | lid:nomail | |
496 | END:VEVENT | |
497 | BEGIN:VEVENT | |
498 | METHOD:PUBLISH | |
499 | DTSTAMP:20210316T000000Z | |
500 | UID:SSPBBDU6ZX2RLKS2QB664TY4OPMC7YCE | |
501 | CLASS:PUBLIC | |
502 | STATUS:CONFIRMED | |
503 | SUMMARY:Jami and how it empowers users | |
504 | DESCRIPTION:Jami is free software for universal | |
505 | communication which respects the freedoms and privacy of | |
506 | its users. Jami is an official GNU package with a main | |
507 | goal of providing a framework for virtual communications, | |
508 | along with a series of end-user applications for | |
509 | audio/video calling and conferencing, text messaging, and | |
510 | file transfer.\n\nWith the outbreak of the COVID-19 | |
511 | pandemic, working from home has become the norm for many | |
512 | workers around the world. More and more people are using | |
513 | videoconferencing tools to work or communicate with their | |
514 | loved ones. The emergence of these tools has been followed | |
515 | by many questions and scandals concerning the privacy and | |
516 | freedom of users.\n\nThis talk gives an introduction to | |
517 | Jami, a free/libre, truly distributed, and peer-to-peer | |
518 | solution, and explains why and how it differs from all | |
519 | other existing solutions and how it empowers users. | |
520 | URL=https://libreplanet.org/2021/speakers/#4285 | |
521 | LOCATION:Jupiter | |
522 | DTSTART:20210320T194000Z | |
523 | DTEND:20210320T202500Z | |
524 | CATEGORIES:Free Software in practice | |
525 | ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;CUTYPE=INVIDIDUAL;CN="Amin Bandali":inva | |
526 | lid:nomail | |
527 | END:VEVENT | |
528 | BEGIN:VEVENT | |
529 | METHOD:PUBLISH | |
530 | DTSTAMP:20210316T000000Z | |
531 | UID:HYQUR4WBGVADGYLKXXKLGTOMK7WLBWTS | |
532 | CLASS:PUBLIC | |
533 | STATUS:CONFIRMED | |
534 | SUMMARY:Building equitable free software communities for all | |
535 | DESCRIPTION:Are you part of a free software community that’s | |
536 | building a tool you care about? Do you wish more people | |
537 | would participate, share code, and get excited about what | |
538 | you’re building? Have you ever tried to join a free | |
539 | software community that didn’t make you feel welcome? | |
540 | Let’s learn about what can make free software communities | |
541 | active, equitable, and resilient, and how we can encourage | |
542 | community collaboration, bug reporting, and contributions. | |
543 | URL=https://libreplanet.org/2021/speakers/#4843 | |
544 | LOCATION:Saturn | |
545 | DTSTART:20210320T194000Z | |
546 | DTEND:20210320T202500Z | |
547 | CATEGORIES:Community | |
548 | ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;CUTYPE=INVIDIDUAL;CN="Karen Johnson":inv | |
549 | alid:nomail | |
550 | END:VEVENT | |
551 | BEGIN:VEVENT | |
552 | METHOD:PUBLISH | |
553 | DTSTAMP:20210316T000000Z | |
554 | UID:MJ26ML4TVPHTLJKKVARGDTCMCPCGIBTN | |
555 | CLASS:PUBLIC | |
556 | STATUS:CONFIRMED | |
557 | SUMMARY:3NWeb: A Better digital world is possible | |
558 | DESCRIPTION:Monopolization and centralization decreases our | |
559 | resilience in unstable times. In this session, we present | |
560 | decentralized services designed around the principle of | |
561 | least authority: the 3NWeb free software protocols and | |
562 | client. 3NWeb use cases include encrypted messaging and | |
563 | storage, which we will demonstrate. The protocols can be | |
564 | run over anonymous networks such as Tor. We need to share | |
565 | our knowledge and collectively move our society to be more | |
566 | immune to crisis via increased deployment of free | |
567 | software. 3NWeb can help the world move one more step in | |
568 | that direction. | |
569 | URL=https://libreplanet.org/2021/speakers/#4907 | |
570 | LOCATION:Neptune | |
571 | DTSTART:20210320T194000Z | |
572 | DTEND:20210320T202500Z | |
573 | CATEGORIES:Security | |
574 | ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;CUTYPE=INVIDIDUAL;CN="Mikalai Birukou":i | |
575 | nvalid:nomail | |
576 | ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;CUTYPE=INVIDIDUAL;CN="Sean O'Brien":inva | |
577 | lid:nomail | |
578 | END:VEVENT | |
579 | BEGIN:VEVENT | |
580 | METHOD:PUBLISH | |
581 | DTSTAMP:20210316T000000Z | |
582 | UID:ZJEDPLTOEPCDWOHWKHZEGICNM5HU6KW4 | |
583 | CLASS:PUBLIC | |
584 | STATUS:CONFIRMED | |
585 | SUMMARY:To be announced | |
586 | DESCRIPTION:There's no description available | |
587 | for this session yet - sorry! | |
588 | URL=https://libreplanet.org/2021/speakers/#5424 | |
589 | LOCATION:Jupiter | |
590 | DTSTART:20210320T203500Z | |
591 | DTEND:20210320T212000Z | |
592 | ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;CUTYPE=INVIDIDUAL;CN="LibrePlanet 2021": | |
593 | invalid:nomail | |
594 | END:VEVENT | |
595 | BEGIN:VEVENT | |
596 | METHOD:PUBLISH | |
597 | DTSTAMP:20210316T000000Z | |
598 | UID:6Z7BEBW7S3FE6YCZ7V7UR7FD34QHRLJF | |
599 | CLASS:PUBLIC | |
600 | STATUS:CONFIRMED | |
601 | SUMMARY:The challenges of change for values-centered nonprofits | |
602 | DESCRIPTION:Organizational change is never easy. It can be | |
603 | particularly challenging in values-centered non-profits, | |
604 | where calls for healthy organizational change can be seen | |
605 | as criticism or a threat to the core values. This | |
606 | conversation between two long-time nonprofit leaders will | |
607 | dive into organizational change at two tech- and | |
608 | values-centered nonprofits, the Sunlight Foundation (where | |
609 | former leaders were accused of sexual harassment) and at | |
610 | the Wikimedia Foundation (where a sweeping strategic | |
611 | process has resulted in a broader vision that goes beyond | |
612 | free licensing to explicitly include equity). By seeing | |
613 | how one organization tried to rebuild after crisis, and | |
614 | another proactively reimagined its role in the broader | |
615 | free ecosystem, attendees should come away with ideas for | |
616 | how their own communities (small and large) can address | |
617 | the past and look towards the future. | |
618 | URL=https://libreplanet.org/2021/speakers/#4678 | |
619 | LOCATION:Saturn | |
620 | DTSTART:20210320T203500Z | |
621 | DTEND:20210320T212000Z | |
622 | CATEGORIES:Social context | |
623 | ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;CUTYPE=INVIDIDUAL;CN="Luis Villa":invali | |
624 | d:nomail | |
625 | ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;CUTYPE=INVIDIDUAL;CN="Katherine Maher":i | |
626 | nvalid:nomail | |
627 | END:VEVENT | |
628 | BEGIN:VEVENT | |
629 | METHOD:PUBLISH | |
630 | DTSTAMP:20210316T000000Z | |
631 | UID:AAPKBUVDG2HSF4NHNXJXTUM55PNNG5I3 | |
632 | CLASS:PUBLIC | |
633 | STATUS:CONFIRMED | |
634 | SUMMARY:Lightning talks | |
635 | DESCRIPTION:A lightning talk is a five-minute presentation | |
636 | on any topic that you think would be interesting to a | |
637 | group of free software users, hackers, and activists. Each | |
638 | session has time for a total of twelve talks. Since we're | |
639 | seeking a breadth of relevant topics, submitting a talk | |
640 | does not guarantee you a slot.\n\nWe'll pick the twelve | |
641 | talks that we feel are most interesting to our attendees | |
642 | once we've gotten enough submissions. We're especially | |
643 | interested in hearing from new people who haven't ever | |
644 | spoken at an FSF event! | |
645 | URL=https://libreplanet.org/2021/speakers/#5421 | |
646 | LOCATION:Neptune | |
647 | DTSTART:20210320T203500Z | |
648 | DTEND:20210320T212000Z | |
649 | CATEGORIES:LibrePlanet special sessions | |
650 | ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;CUTYPE=INVIDIDUAL;CN="LibrePlanet 2021": | |
651 | invalid:nomail | |
652 | END:VEVENT | |
653 | BEGIN:VEVENT | |
654 | METHOD:PUBLISH | |
655 | DTSTAMP:20210316T000000Z | |
656 | UID:DXJUN5ENFDOHBBUZIVUMLLDT2DRMTE3Y | |
657 | CLASS:PUBLIC | |
658 | STATUS:CONFIRMED | |
659 | SUMMARY:Keynote by FSF president Geoff Knauth, and executive director | |
660 | John Sullivan | |
661 | DESCRIPTION:There's no description available | |
662 | for this session yet - sorry! | |
663 | URL=https://libreplanet.org/2021/speakers/#5422 | |
664 | LOCATION:Jupiter | |
665 | DTSTART:20210320T213000Z | |
666 | DTEND:20210320T220500Z | |
667 | CATEGORIES:Keynote | |
668 | ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;CUTYPE=INVIDIDUAL;CN="LibrePlanet 2021": | |
669 | invalid:nomail | |
670 | END:VEVENT | |
671 | BEGIN:VEVENT | |
672 | METHOD:PUBLISH | |
673 | DTSTAMP:20210316T000000Z | |
674 | UID:ERKQ2JJB4FFGW43XBXCSIEZQIO2NFXFE | |
675 | CLASS:PUBLIC | |
676 | STATUS:CONFIRMED | |
677 | SUMMARY:FSF Awards Ceremony | |
678 | DESCRIPTION:There's no description available | |
679 | for this session yet - sorry! | |
680 | URL=https://libreplanet.org/2021/speakers/#5451 | |
681 | LOCATION:Jupiter | |
682 | DTSTART:20210320T220500Z | |
683 | DTEND:20210320T222000Z | |
684 | CATEGORIES:LibrePlanet special session | |
685 | ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;CUTYPE=INVIDIDUAL;CN="FSF Awards Ceremon | |
686 | y":invalid:nomail | |
687 | END:VEVENT | |
688 | BEGIN:VEVENT | |
689 | METHOD:PUBLISH | |
690 | DTSTAMP:20210316T000000Z | |
691 | UID:JXBU5SDHSFENIP7T2EVBBUUNA3KU6GL2 | |
692 | CLASS:PUBLIC | |
693 | STATUS:CONFIRMED | |
694 | SUMMARY:Closing remarks by FSF | |
695 | DESCRIPTION:There's no description available | |
696 | for this session yet - sorry! | |
697 | URL=https://libreplanet.org/2021/speakers/#5423 | |
698 | LOCATION:Jupiter | |
699 | DTSTART:20210320T222000Z | |
700 | DTEND:20210320T223000Z | |
701 | CATEGORIES:LibrePlanet special sessions | |
702 | ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;CUTYPE=INVIDIDUAL;CN="LibrePlanet 2021": | |
703 | invalid:nomail | |
704 | END:VEVENT | |
705 | BEGIN:VEVENT | |
706 | METHOD:PUBLISH | |
707 | DTSTAMP:20210316T000000Z | |
708 | UID:F27VBGZNJCVBA4ZF5WSKPBJ2KYWG3CRC | |
709 | CLASS:PUBLIC | |
710 | STATUS:CONFIRMED | |
711 | SUMMARY:Welcome Address by FSF | |
712 | DESCRIPTION:There's no description available | |
713 | for this session yet - sorry! | |
714 | URL=https://libreplanet.org/2021/speakers/#5427 | |
715 | LOCATION:Jupiter | |
716 | DTSTART:20210321T134500Z | |
717 | DTEND:20210321T140000Z | |
718 | CATEGORIES:LibrePlanet special sessions | |
719 | ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;CUTYPE=INVIDIDUAL;CN="LibrePlanet 2021": | |
720 | invalid:nomail | |
721 | END:VEVENT | |
722 | BEGIN:VEVENT | |
723 | METHOD:PUBLISH | |
724 | DTSTAMP:20210316T000000Z | |
725 | UID:AGGQVFXQV72MYFSMSQY2YQI3FXBSN4H5 | |
726 | CLASS:PUBLIC | |
727 | STATUS:CONFIRMED | |
728 | SUMMARY:REUSE: Simple steps to declare your copyright and licenses | |
729 | DESCRIPTION:Free software licensing can be tiresome. But | |
730 | setting the conditions for the use and reuse of your code | |
731 | is extremely important. To make developers' lives easier, | |
732 | there is the REUSE initiative. This presentation will | |
733 | explain simple yet powerful best practices for defining | |
734 | licenses and copyright holders.\n\nIn three easy steps, | |
735 | you can make sure that for all files are labelled clearly. | |
736 | No matter how complex you project is, REUSE keeps you | |
737 | covered. With the additional documents and tools, you can | |
738 | increase the time you actually can concentrate on | |
739 | coding.\n\nJoin the session to learn about the principles | |
740 | and see a live demo of how we make a project REUSE | |
741 | compliant. | |
742 | URL=https://libreplanet.org/2021/speakers/#4663 | |
743 | LOCATION:Jupiter | |
744 | DTSTART:20210321T141000Z | |
745 | DTEND:20210321T145500Z | |
746 | CATEGORIES:Licensing | |
747 | ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;CUTYPE=INVIDIDUAL;CN="Max Mehl":invalid: | |
748 | nomail | |
749 | END:VEVENT | |
750 | BEGIN:VEVENT | |
751 | METHOD:PUBLISH | |
752 | DTSTAMP:20210316T000000Z | |
753 | UID:WO7KO4GW5WPAW6LG7F2AOQESUIVHANBM | |
754 | CLASS:PUBLIC | |
755 | STATUS:CONFIRMED | |
756 | SUMMARY:User Respecting Software – free software development driven by u | |
757 | sers | |
758 | DESCRIPTION:Why is it that some free software projects, | |
759 | although started at the same time as comparable propriety | |
760 | projects, are still playing catch-up in terms of number of | |
761 | users and desired features? Features comparisons as well | |
762 | as the network effect and how well known a piece of | |
763 | software is play into this, but what features do users | |
764 | find most important? We can’t make “better” software until | |
765 | we know what features users actually care about. This talk | |
766 | will explore prominent examples of free software projects | |
767 | and look at how free software can stay ahead of the curve. | |
768 | URL=https://libreplanet.org/2021/speakers/#4834 | |
769 | LOCATION:Saturn | |
770 | DTSTART:20210321T141000Z | |
771 | DTEND:20210321T145500Z | |
772 | CATEGORIES:Exploring Free Software concepts | |
773 | ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;CUTYPE=INVIDIDUAL;CN="Lori Nagel":invali | |
774 | d:nomail | |
775 | END:VEVENT | |
776 | BEGIN:VEVENT | |
777 | METHOD:PUBLISH | |
778 | DTSTAMP:20210316T000000Z | |
779 | UID:BEOM2LQ7K6SFX65R65COQKSQLP5SFOCQ | |
780 | CLASS:PUBLIC | |
781 | STATUS:CONFIRMED | |
782 | SUMMARY:How to free the imagination | |
783 | DESCRIPTION:Many issues exist in the comic book industry: | |
784 | How to solve the problem of unauthorized sharing? How to | |
785 | protect authors from the asymmetrical relation between | |
786 | them and publishers? Where to find funding to live more | |
787 | fairly when doing art? How can authors be more independent | |
788 | with the tools they use? How to manage derivations, fan | |
789 | fiction and commercial reuse?\n\nThe author of | |
790 | Pepper&Carrot - a free/libre webcomic - will propose new | |
791 | answers to these questions. | |
792 | URL=https://libreplanet.org/2021/speakers/#4769 | |
793 | LOCATION:Neptune | |
794 | DTSTART:20210321T141000Z | |
795 | DTEND:20210321T145500Z | |
796 | CATEGORIES:Free Software in practice | |
797 | ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;CUTYPE=INVIDIDUAL;CN="David Revoy":inval | |
798 | id:nomail | |
799 | END:VEVENT | |
800 | BEGIN:VEVENT | |
801 | METHOD:PUBLISH | |
802 | DTSTAMP:20210316T000000Z | |
803 | UID:BFIKN6ITQVUOJ6ZSO7VM2ZDZH3VI77O5 | |
804 | CLASS:PUBLIC | |
805 | STATUS:CONFIRMED | |
806 | SUMMARY:Plom: Paperless Open Marking | |
807 | DESCRIPTION:We will present Paperless Open Marking (Plom), a | |
808 | software system for giving tests on paper, but marking and | |
809 | returning them online. We (undergraduate students) worked | |
810 | on this software as a summer project.\n\nPlom was | |
811 | developed because existing grading software was usually | |
812 | proprietary, too expensive, did not allow for the | |
813 | complexity of multiversioned tests required for crowded | |
814 | exam rooms, and might not respect local privacy laws. Plom | |
815 | respects privacy of student data: all data stays on your | |
816 | server, and markers do not see student names or IDs while | |
817 | they are marking.\n\n Plom is GPLv3 licensed and is | |
818 | currently in use at the University of British Columbia. As | |
819 | an undergraduate student team, we made significant | |
820 | improvements to the functionality and correctness of Plom, | |
821 | and are excited to share our contributions with you. | |
822 | URL=https://libreplanet.org/2021/speakers/#4823 | |
823 | LOCATION:Jupiter | |
824 | DTSTART:20210321T150500Z | |
825 | DTEND:20210321T155000Z | |
826 | CATEGORIES:Education | |
827 | ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;CUTYPE=INVIDIDUAL;CN="Victoria Schuster" | |
828 | :invalid:nomail | |
829 | ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;CUTYPE=INVIDIDUAL;CN="Dryden Wiebe":inva | |
830 | lid:nomail | |
831 | ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;CUTYPE=INVIDIDUAL;CN="Vala Vakilian":inv | |
832 | alid:nomail | |
833 | END:VEVENT | |
834 | BEGIN:VEVENT | |
835 | METHOD:PUBLISH | |
836 | DTSTAMP:20210316T000000Z | |
837 | UID:QC42ALNJCJQNJFPCVDPGIDBW6T3TCXBS | |
838 | CLASS:PUBLIC | |
839 | STATUS:CONFIRMED | |
840 | SUMMARY:"Public Money? Public Code!" A campaign framework to promote s | |
841 | oftware freedom | |
842 | DESCRIPTION:In this talk, I will explain how the "Public | |
843 | Money? Public Code!" campaign framework can be used to | |
844 | push for the adoption of free software-friendly policies | |
845 | in your area. | |
846 | URL=https://libreplanet.org/2021/speakers/#4530 | |
847 | LOCATION:Saturn | |
848 | DTSTART:20210321T150500Z | |
849 | DTEND:20210321T155000Z | |
850 | CATEGORIES:Free software in Government | |
851 | ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;CUTYPE=INVIDIDUAL;CN="Matthias Kirschner | |
852 | ":invalid:nomail | |
853 | END:VEVENT | |
854 | BEGIN:VEVENT | |
855 | METHOD:PUBLISH | |
856 | DTSTAMP:20210316T000000Z | |
857 | UID:UGAMV4IFFKRDMDCNBMM7AKIB6USLKHY4 | |
858 | CLASS:PUBLIC | |
859 | STATUS:CONFIRMED | |
860 | SUMMARY:Openwifi project: The dawn of the free/libre WiFi chip | |
861 | DESCRIPTION:In past decades, free software has played a key | |
862 | role towards the free and trusted Internet. In recent | |
863 | years, free software processor projects like RISC-V have | |
864 | pushed forward to construct free devices and computers. | |
865 | However, the radio connectivity of the device still relies | |
866 | on the black box silicons (WiFi, BLE, cellular chips). The | |
867 | Openwifi project (https://github.com/open-sdr/openwifi) | |
868 | aims to offer an free WiFi chip design that could act as | |
869 | the missing piece of the free software and hardware | |
870 | puzzle. As the initial step, the Openwifi project has | |
871 | implemented the 802.11a/g full-stack on an FPGA-based | |
872 | software defined radio (SDR) platform. The 802.11n feature | |
873 | is funded by NLnet and is under development. This | |
874 | presentation will give you the project overview and | |
875 | discuss the future of the project. | |
876 | URL=https://libreplanet.org/2021/speakers/#4670 | |
877 | LOCATION:Neptune | |
878 | DTSTART:20210321T150500Z | |
879 | DTEND:20210321T155000Z | |
880 | CATEGORIES:Free Software in practice | |
881 | ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;CUTYPE=INVIDIDUAL;CN="Xianjun Jiao":inva | |
882 | lid:nomail | |
883 | END:VEVENT | |
884 | BEGIN:VEVENT | |
885 | METHOD:PUBLISH | |
886 | DTSTAMP:20210316T000000Z | |
887 | UID:MRNMOOHYYD3MM3RW2BVTOIGBPAZINBEM | |
888 | CLASS:PUBLIC | |
889 | STATUS:CONFIRMED | |
890 | SUMMARY:Machine agency: Infrastructure for creative automation | |
891 | DESCRIPTION:How can we harness the precision of machines for | |
892 | the creativity of individuals? Automation and computer | |
893 | control of machines is increasingly widespread. However, | |
894 | it's often employed for dull, dirty, or dangerous tasks. | |
895 | This is partially because setting up these systems is | |
896 | complex and time consuming. How can we instead lower the | |
897 | threshold to automation such that it can be employed for | |
898 | experimental and explorational practices? In this talk, I | |
899 | will describe my research group's machine designs, and | |
900 | perhaps more importantly, discuss the attributes that | |
901 | makes them buildable, tailorable, and extendable by | |
902 | others. | |
903 | URL=https://libreplanet.org/2021/speakers/#5429 | |
904 | LOCATION:Jupiter | |
905 | DTSTART:20210321T160000Z | |
906 | DTEND:20210321T164500Z | |
907 | CATEGORIES:Keynote | |
908 | ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;CUTYPE=INVIDIDUAL;CN="Nadya Peek":invali | |
909 | d:nomail | |
910 | END:VEVENT | |
911 | BEGIN:VEVENT | |
912 | METHOD:PUBLISH | |
913 | DTSTAMP:20210316T000000Z | |
914 | UID:YPBBYPM5YS6CYX4VDPWF3HL4H5Y6YCPX | |
915 | CLASS:PUBLIC | |
916 | STATUS:CONFIRMED | |
917 | SUMMARY:SecureDrop Workstation: Handling unsafe documents safely | |
918 | DESCRIPTION:SecureDrop is a whistleblowing platform | |
919 | originally created in 2012 for journalists to accept | |
920 | leaked documents safely from anonymous sources. It's used | |
921 | by dozens of news organizations including The Guardian, | |
922 | The Washington Post and The New York Times. This talk | |
923 | introduces the SecureDrop Workstation, the next-generation | |
924 | platform aimed at helping journalists communicate with | |
925 | sources in a high-security environment. Based on Qubes OS, | |
926 | the SecureDrop Workstation leverages Xen hypervisor | |
927 | isolation to manage sensitive source material safely, | |
928 | including viewing, archiving, and processing documents. | |
929 | The talk will review the results of the recent security | |
930 | audit focusing on the Workstation, and outline future | |
931 | directions for the project as it approaches general | |
932 | availability. | |
933 | URL=https://libreplanet.org/2021/speakers/#4819 | |
934 | LOCATION:Jupiter | |
935 | DTSTART:20210321T165500Z | |
936 | DTEND:20210321T165500Z | |
937 | CATEGORIES:Security | |
938 | ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;CUTYPE=INVIDIDUAL;CN="Conor Schaefer":in | |
939 | valid:nomail | |
940 | END:VEVENT | |
941 | BEGIN:VEVENT | |
942 | METHOD:PUBLISH | |
943 | DTSTAMP:20210316T000000Z | |
944 | UID:WDX2SHKZNJ3RCPQD36U2Q2WKL5LUOUVI | |
945 | CLASS:PUBLIC | |
946 | STATUS:CONFIRMED | |
947 | SUMMARY:Remote education: My children's freedom and privacy at stake | |
948 | DESCRIPTION:During COVID-19 confinement, I saw how all | |
949 | teachers were choosing proprietary video conferencing | |
950 | programs over free software for the continuation of online | |
951 | lessons.\n\nI had two options: do nothing about it and let | |
952 | proprietary video conferencing tools spread among my | |
953 | children and their classmates, or try to fight back | |
954 | against this injustice.\n\nMy paramount concern was for my | |
955 | own children. I knew in advance what it meant to start | |
956 | this battle. Moreover, this could affect my children’s | |
957 | feelings. They were not attending school and they were | |
958 | already facing a very complex challenge by being forced to | |
959 | stay at home. On the other hand, I was also afraid of | |
960 | having some kind of retaliation from their teachers | |
961 | against them because of my fight.\n\nI didn’t want any of | |
962 | these things to happen. I needed to decide what to do, and | |
963 | evaluate if my commitment towards the free software | |
964 | movement was more important than my own children, or if I | |
965 | had to let it go this time.\n\nI concluded that the answer | |
966 | was not either face a big fight or do nothing, I could do | |
967 | something in between; that at least would be better than | |
968 | doing nothing. | |
969 | URL=https://libreplanet.org/2021/speakers/#4570 | |
970 | LOCATION:Saturn | |
971 | DTSTART:20210321T165500Z | |
972 | DTEND:20210321T165500Z | |
973 | CATEGORIES:Education | |
974 | ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;CUTYPE=INVIDIDUAL;CN="Javier Sepulveda S | |
975 | anchis":invalid:nomail | |
976 | END:VEVENT | |
977 | BEGIN:VEVENT | |
978 | METHOD:PUBLISH | |
979 | DTSTAMP:20210316T000000Z | |
980 | UID:O5WNALXPMFH2DMRIIIZHI5WUGS44A6ET | |
981 | CLASS:PUBLIC | |
982 | STATUS:CONFIRMED | |
983 | SUMMARY:Ingestum: A FOSS NLP document ingestion library | |
984 | DESCRIPTION:Many NLP projects that depend upon the analysis | |
985 | of documents are impaired by the difficulty of | |
986 | transforming source material into a computer-readable | |
987 | format. For example, PDF files are designed for human | |
988 | consumption but can look like a bag full of words to a | |
989 | computer. To address this problem engineers at Sorcero | |
990 | developed Ingestum, a library that is used to "devour" | |
991 | content sources, outputting a format that can be used for | |
992 | additional processing. Ingestum has four main | |
993 | concepts:\n\nSources - common content sources that feed | |
994 | the ingestion process, e.g. PDF, HTML, PNG, WAV, Twitter, | |
995 | email, et al. \n\nDocuments - the intermediary and final | |
996 | states of a source during the ingestion process. | |
997 | \n\nTransformers - a transformation function that can be | |
998 | applied a document, e.g. removing hyphens from a text | |
999 | document. \n\nConditionals - a logic conditional operation | |
1000 | that can be use to modify the behavior of a transformer. | |
1001 | URL=https://libreplanet.org/2021/speakers/#4830 | |
1002 | LOCATION:Neptune | |
1003 | DTSTART:20210321T165500Z | |
1004 | DTEND:20210321T165500Z | |
1005 | CATEGORIES:Exploring Free Software concepts | |
1006 | ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;CUTYPE=INVIDIDUAL;CN="Walter Bender":inv | |
1007 | alid:nomail | |
1008 | ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;CUTYPE=INVIDIDUAL;CN="Martín Abente Laha | |
1009 | ye":invalid:nomail | |
1010 | ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;CUTYPE=INVIDIDUAL;CN="Juan Pablo Ugarte" | |
1011 | :invalid:nomail | |
1012 | END:VEVENT | |
1013 | BEGIN:VEVENT | |
1014 | METHOD:PUBLISH | |
1015 | DTSTAMP:20210316T000000Z | |
1016 | UID:QRDMG6HGXLGDBXVXDVG6V3FYO5ILLS4K | |
1017 | CLASS:PUBLIC | |
1018 | STATUS:CONFIRMED | |
1019 | SUMMARY:Informal chatter to formal decisions: How-to | |
1020 | DESCRIPTION:So many repetitive conversations? No forward | |
1021 | movement? Everyone getting along mostly, but not sure how | |
1022 | to be decisive without clear hierarchy? What could | |
1023 | legitimate authorization look like in a decentralized | |
1024 | world anyway? This talk touches on specific steps anyone | |
1025 | can take. | |
1026 | URL=https://libreplanet.org/2021/speakers/#4906 | |
1027 | LOCATION:Jupiter | |
1028 | DTSTART:20210321T175000Z | |
1029 | DTEND:20210321T183500Z | |
1030 | CATEGORIES:Community | |
1031 | ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;CUTYPE=INVIDIDUAL;CN="Katheryn Sutter":i | |
1032 | nvalid:nomail | |
1033 | END:VEVENT | |
1034 | BEGIN:VEVENT | |
1035 | METHOD:PUBLISH | |
1036 | DTSTAMP:20210316T000000Z | |
1037 | UID:4VYWVFDDA4IKKQDUPKJAZTD3ZDMSGHAF | |
1038 | CLASS:PUBLIC | |
1039 | STATUS:CONFIRMED | |
1040 | SUMMARY:Here's how you can get all your day-to-day computing done with f | |
1041 | ree software | |
1042 | DESCRIPTION:Here's how you can get all your day-to-day | |
1043 | computing done with free software. Alice, 11, has given | |
1044 | multiple talks at technical conferences and will go over | |
1045 | more than 10 programs that will replace proprietary with | |
1046 | free software. | |
1047 | URL=https://libreplanet.org/2021/speakers/#4818 | |
1048 | LOCATION:Saturn | |
1049 | DTSTART:20210321T175000Z | |
1050 | DTEND:20210321T183500Z | |
1051 | CATEGORIES:Free Software in practice | |
1052 | ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;CUTYPE=INVIDIDUAL;CN="Alice Monsen":inval | |
1053 | id:nomail | |
1054 | END:VEVENT | |
1055 | BEGIN:VEVENT | |
1056 | METHOD:PUBLISH | |
1057 | DTSTAMP:20210316T000000Z | |
1058 | UID:6EJZX2WANT3Z7WULWSEMO4E5AYZVHIE7 | |
1059 | CLASS:PUBLIC | |
1060 | STATUS:CONFIRMED | |
1061 | SUMMARY:A dispatch from the front lines of right to repair | |
1062 | DESCRIPTION:FUD fighting on the front lines of right to | |
1063 | repair: As our homes, workplaces and public spaces fill | |
1064 | with Internet-connected "smart" stuff, a digital right to | |
1065 | repair is critical to protecting consumer rights, property | |
1066 | rights and civil liberties. Despite that, electronics | |
1067 | giants like Apple, Samsung, LG and General Electric have | |
1068 | snuffed out scores of proposed state laws seeking to | |
1069 | create such a right. How? By scaring legislators with | |
1070 | tales of device hacking, cyber stalking and identity | |
1071 | theft.\n\nCreating a legal right to repair our stuff means | |
1072 | short-circuiting these arguments and injecting a dose of | |
1073 | facts into hearings and public debate. In this | |
1074 | presentation, Paul Roberts, the founder of SecuRepairs, | |
1075 | provides a dispatch from the front lines of right to | |
1076 | repair and how his group of more than 200 IT and | |
1077 | information security professionals is doing battle to set | |
1078 | the record straight on cybersecurity and the right to | |
1079 | repair. | |
1080 | URL=https://libreplanet.org/2021/speakers/#4707 | |
1081 | LOCATION:Neptune | |
1082 | DTSTART:20210321T175000Z | |
1083 | DTEND:20210321T183500Z | |
1084 | CATEGORIES:Social context | |
1085 | ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;CUTYPE=INVIDIDUAL;CN="Paul Roberts":inval | |
1086 | id:nomail | |
1087 | END:VEVENT | |
1088 | BEGIN:VEVENT | |
1089 | METHOD:PUBLISH | |
1090 | DTSTAMP:20210316T000000Z | |
1091 | UID:FLRBWJ6A2RDGI73TG3F5SRSB6U6RHKPT | |
1092 | CLASS:PUBLIC | |
1093 | STATUS:CONFIRMED | |
1094 | SUMMARY:Labor movements and the free software community | |
1095 | DESCRIPTION:The labor movement and free software are natural | |
1096 | complements to one another. Both rely on (often | |
1097 | decentralized) groups of workers that commit to a higher | |
1098 | purpose in the pursuit of building something that will | |
1099 | advance people on a larger scale. I’ll discuss the ways | |
1100 | that values of free software and labor movements | |
1101 | complement one another. I will outline the practical | |
1102 | technology needs of labor organizations that could be met | |
1103 | by free software. Finally I will talk about what attendees | |
1104 | can do to support labor movements with free software by | |
1105 | describing some promising organizations looking to bridge | |
1106 | the gap. | |
1107 | URL=https://libreplanet.org/2021/speakers/#4673 | |
1108 | LOCATION:Jupiter | |
1109 | DTSTART:20210321T184500Z | |
1110 | DTEND:20210321T193000Z | |
1111 | CATEGORIES:Free software in Government | |
1112 | ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;CUTYPE=INVIDIDUAL;CN="Amanda Sopkin":inva | |
1113 | lid:nomail | |
1114 | END:VEVENT | |
1115 | BEGIN:VEVENT | |
1116 | METHOD:PUBLISH | |
1117 | DTSTAMP:20210316T000000Z | |
1118 | UID:YRIC3Z52ISXJ5F3QCNSLXOUWU6HBA7M6 | |
1119 | CLASS:PUBLIC | |
1120 | STATUS:CONFIRMED | |
1121 | SUMMARY:An information theoretic model of privacy and security metrics | |
1122 | DESCRIPTION:An information theoretic model of privacy and | |
1123 | security metrics - or - how I learned to stop worrying | |
1124 | about password meters and love the dice.\n\nSince 2010, | |
1125 | EFF has maintained a project dubbed Panopticlick, which | |
1126 | aims to help users understand a technique called browser | |
1127 | fingerprinting. Web trackers are able to stitch together | |
1128 | little bits of information the users browser leaves behind | |
1129 | into a cohesive whole, a fingerprint which follows them | |
1130 | across their usage of the Web. Panopticlick is able to | |
1131 | quantify the amount of information your browser leaks | |
1132 | through the use of an information theoretical approach to | |
1133 | privacy which determines how much information each | |
1134 | individual metric (say, a user's list of fonts) reveals, | |
1135 | and the relationship of these individual metrics to how | |
1136 | much a browser reveals in general. Many of the | |
1137 | misconceptions users have when using the site reflect an | |
1138 | unclear picture about how their browser fingerprint is | |
1139 | arrived at, and often leads users down a path that | |
1140 | *decreases* their overall privacy in an attempt to | |
1141 | increase it. | |
1142 | URL=https://libreplanet.org/2021/speakers/#4624 | |
1143 | LOCATION:Saturn | |
1144 | DTSTART:20210321T184500Z | |
1145 | DTEND:20210321T193000Z | |
1146 | CATEGORIES:Security | |
1147 | ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;CUTYPE=INVIDIDUAL;CN="Bill Budington":in | |
1148 | valid:nomail | |
1149 | END:VEVENT | |
1150 | BEGIN:VEVENT | |
1151 | METHOD:PUBLISH | |
1152 | DTSTAMP:20210316T000000Z | |
1153 | UID:WNQE44KTT54VVS4NNLLD46ZINTB23PWX | |
1154 | CLASS:PUBLIC | |
1155 | STATUS:CONFIRMED | |
1156 | SUMMARY:To be announced | |
1157 | DESCRIPTION:There's no description available | |
1158 | for this session yet - sorry! | |
1159 | URL=https://libreplanet.org/2021/speakers/#5430 | |
1160 | LOCATION:Neptune | |
1161 | DTSTART:20210321T184500Z | |
1162 | DTEND:20210321T193000Z | |
1163 | ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;CUTYPE=INVIDIDUAL;CN="LibrePlanet 2021": | |
1164 | invalid:nomail | |
1165 | END:VEVENT | |
1166 | BEGIN:VEVENT | |
1167 | METHOD:PUBLISH | |
1168 | DTSTAMP:20210316T000000Z | |
1169 | UID:PKRDBT34PEYA3G5A2HTWI6YT3QIDOH3T | |
1170 | CLASS:PUBLIC | |
1171 | STATUS:CONFIRMED | |
1172 | SUMMARY:Unjust computing clamps down | |
1173 | DESCRIPTION:RMS will elaborate on growing injustices in | |
1174 | computing. They are:\n\n - Locked-down operating | |
1175 | systems\n\n - User-resticting app stores\n\n - Requiring | |
1176 | nonfree client software, including Javascript (Javascript | |
1177 | turns the web into something like an app store, but | |
1178 | worse)\n\n - Online dis-services\n\n - Nvidia's Lubyanka: | |
1179 | prisoners of the GPU\n\n - Proprietary non-interoperable | |
1180 | tools as de-facto standards\n\n - The Internet of | |
1181 | Malthings which will only talk with a mobile phone via an | |
1182 | online dis-service\n\n - VR with nonfree platforms to run | |
1183 | only nonfree applications\n\n - Vaccination "passports" | |
1184 | could track people in daily life throuh restaurants, | |
1185 | theaters, gyms, buses...\n\n - Together they reduce your | |
1186 | computer to a platform for nonfree malware that will do | |
1187 | you a disservice. | |
1188 | URL=https://libreplanet.org/2021/speakers/#5442 | |
1189 | LOCATION:Jupiter | |
1190 | DTSTART:20210321T194000Z | |
1191 | DTEND:20210321T202500Z | |
1192 | CATEGORIES:Exploring Free Software concepts | |
1193 | ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;CUTYPE=INVIDIDUAL;CN="Richard Stallman": | |
1194 | invalid:nomail | |
1195 | END:VEVENT | |
1196 | BEGIN:VEVENT | |
1197 | METHOD:PUBLISH | |
1198 | DTSTAMP:20210316T000000Z | |
1199 | UID:6JCUOIMEMFW5QMMKMVPJ7A4QYMMSGN3Q | |
1200 | CLASS:PUBLIC | |
1201 | STATUS:CONFIRMED | |
1202 | SUMMARY:Empower users by asking them for money | |
1203 | DESCRIPTION:I've always been a free software programmer, a | |
1204 | contractor to the rich and already powerful so they could | |
1205 | use free software to its fullest. But, users, normal | |
1206 | everyday users, are left out, and their needs are often | |
1207 | different from business, universities and other large | |
1208 | organizations who can afford to pay developers.\n\nI | |
1209 | wanted to develop Inkscape for users, and to do this I | |
1210 | have started asking users to fund me directly. Four | |
1211 | Inkscape developers currently use a personal funding | |
1212 | platform to try and raise the money needed to make our | |
1213 | activities more stable and user-focused. Come hear about | |
1214 | my experiences setting up and operating in a federated and | |
1215 | fragmented system and how we can move free software | |
1216 | economics from business versus volunteers to a more | |
1217 | equitable settlement for users and developers. | |
1218 | URL=https://libreplanet.org/2021/speakers/#4686 | |
1219 | LOCATION:Saturn | |
1220 | DTSTART:20210321T194000Z | |
1221 | DTEND:20210321T202500Z | |
1222 | CATEGORIES:Community | |
1223 | ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;CUTYPE=INVIDIDUAL;CN="Martin Owens":inva | |
1224 | lid:nomail | |
1225 | END:VEVENT | |
1226 | BEGIN:VEVENT | |
1227 | METHOD:PUBLISH | |
1228 | DTSTAMP:20210316T000000Z | |
1229 | UID:OQBTGV3GYIKVRNURYKGTLXMTE7CLZZSK | |
1230 | CLASS:PUBLIC | |
1231 | STATUS:CONFIRMED | |
1232 | SUMMARY:Libre designers do exist (and survive) | |
1233 | DESCRIPTION:Libre designers do exist (and survive). Let's | |
1234 | explore the pros and cons, experiences, job opportunities | |
1235 | and more, from experiences gathered for over 15 years in | |
1236 | the field. | |
1237 | URL=https://libreplanet.org/2021/speakers/#4776 | |
1238 | LOCATION:Neptune | |
1239 | DTSTART:20210321T194000Z | |
1240 | DTEND:20210321T202500Z | |
1241 | CATEGORIES:Free Software in practice | |
1242 | ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;CUTYPE=INVIDIDUAL;CN="Maria Leandro":inv | |
1243 | alid:nomail | |
1244 | END:VEVENT | |
1245 | BEGIN:VEVENT | |
1246 | METHOD:PUBLISH | |
1247 | DTSTAMP:20210316T000000Z | |
1248 | UID:IWNBLMUHK5VQTM3NZS7WBE2M66RC7ESL | |
1249 | CLASS:PUBLIC | |
1250 | STATUS:CONFIRMED | |
1251 | SUMMARY:Free/libre solutions to address the shortage of ventilators | |
1252 | DESCRIPTION:Over 100 teams attempted to create free/libre | |
1253 | solutions to address the shortage of ventilators caused by | |
1254 | the COVID-19 pandemic; we created a large spreadsheet | |
1255 | evaluating all of them along many coordinates. Slowly, | |
1256 | teams coalesced into a global community and began | |
1257 | cooperating. There were many successes, failures, and | |
1258 | learnings. The community had pioneered techniques that | |
1259 | were re-used inconsistently to organize teams. The overall | |
1260 | effect was mixed in terms of its success developing | |
1261 | ventilators, but very successful in advancing the global | |
1262 | free hardware community. We present this story from the | |
1263 | point of view of a full-time active participant in many | |
1264 | organizations. | |
1265 | URL=https://libreplanet.org/2021/speakers/#4737 | |
1266 | LOCATION:Jupiter | |
1267 | DTSTART:20210321T203500Z | |
1268 | DTEND:20210321T212000Z | |
1269 | CATEGORIES:Free Software in practice | |
1270 | ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;CUTYPE=INVIDIDUAL;CN="Robert Read":inval | |
1271 | id:nomail | |
1272 | ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;CUTYPE=INVIDIDUAL;CN="Marc Jones":invali | |
1273 | d:nomail | |
1274 | END:VEVENT | |
1275 | BEGIN:VEVENT | |
1276 | METHOD:PUBLISH | |
1277 | DTSTAMP:20210316T000000Z | |
1278 | UID:WTFPX7XNKMHMLYK6AHQA3AHKNXH6W3PQ | |
1279 | CLASS:PUBLIC | |
1280 | STATUS:CONFIRMED | |
1281 | SUMMARY:How to make more users love free software: Double the love, do | |
1282 | uble the freedom | |
1283 | DESCRIPTION:In past years, free software projects have | |
1284 | increased their usability considerably. Still, one of the | |
1285 | main reasons users with no technical background don't use | |
1286 | many free software projects in their daily routine is that | |
1287 | some projects don't offer good usability, which drives | |
1288 | them into choosing proprietary solutions. This talk is a | |
1289 | more mature follow-up to my talk "How to make more users | |
1290 | love free software," where I'll give realistic ideas and | |
1291 | applicable and simple solutions to improve free software | |
1292 | projects' usability.\n\nThis session is a continuation on | |
1293 | Clarissa's presentation from LibrePlanet 2020. | |
1294 | URL=https://libreplanet.org/2021/speakers/#4889 | |
1295 | LOCATION:Saturn | |
1296 | DTSTART:20210321T203500Z | |
1297 | DTEND:20210321T212000Z | |
1298 | CATEGORIES:Community | |
1299 | ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;CUTYPE=INVIDIDUAL;CN="Clarissa Borges":i | |
1300 | nvalid:nomail | |
1301 | END:VEVENT | |
1302 | BEGIN:VEVENT | |
1303 | METHOD:PUBLISH | |
1304 | DTSTAMP:20210316T000000Z | |
1305 | UID:LQHVLFQSQ4W2S44JTG6W24MKBKUEK3HI | |
1306 | CLASS:PUBLIC | |
1307 | STATUS:CONFIRMED | |
1308 | SUMMARY:Beyond "learning to code": How Tech Learning Collective merges I | |
1309 | T training with emancipatory political action | |
1310 | DTSTART:20210321T203500Z | |
1311 | DTEND:20210321T212000Z | |
1312 | DESCRIPTION:What good is a pen if the paper it touches can | |
1313 | refuse to show its ink? What good is your app when your | |
1314 | API key is revoked? Through metaphor and with a unique | |
1315 | apprenticeship-based pedagogy, Tech Learning Collective | |
1316 | (TLC) is empowering users by doing exactly what code boot | |
1317 | camps and corporate-funded "learn to code" programs don't: | |
1318 | TLC tells students to ignore new Web frameworks and focus | |
1319 | instead on the lowest layers of an IT stack like physical | |
1320 | network and hardware storage devices. At TLC, | |
1321 | infrastructure is the heart of a free software curriculum | |
1322 | eschewing common rush-to-employment training paradigms in | |
1323 | favor of Socratic classrooms where practicing Bash | |
1324 | commands seamlessly meld with lectures about Gnostic | |
1325 | influences on Ethernet, the relationship between Gregorian | |
1326 | chants and bootloaders, and more. Come see why and how | |
1327 | TLC's holistic approach to IT education is creating | |
1328 | communities of activist sysadmins out of people who | |
1329 | wouldn't otherwise have called themselves "techies." | |
1330 | URL=https://libreplanet.org/2021/speakers/#4763 | |
1331 | LOCATION:Neptune | |
1332 | CATEGORIES:Education | |
1333 | ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;CUTYPE=INVIDIDUAL;CN="Tech Learning Coll | |
1334 | ective":invalid:nomail | |
1335 | END:VEVENT | |
1336 | BEGIN:VEVENT | |
1337 | METHOD:PUBLISH | |
1338 | DTSTAMP:20210316T000000Z | |
1339 | UID:CBVCSHRNGGBPTXO3Z6WWF6GXFD5SEDIO | |
1340 | CLASS:PUBLIC | |
1341 | STATUS:CONFIRMED | |
1342 | SUMMARY:Ten years of empowering activists AND everyday people through f | |
1343 | ree mobile software | |
1344 | DESCRIPTION:From bringing OTR, Tor, GnuGP, FFMPEG and | |
1345 | SQLCipher to Android, to developing and supporting apps | |
1346 | like Orbot, Tor Browser for Android, Onion Browser, | |
1347 | F-Droid, ChatSecure, Haven and more, we at Guardian | |
1348 | Project have been pretty busy for the last decade. Through | |
1349 | ups and downs, iterations and improvements, we have a lot | |
1350 | of interesting stories to tell about where we've been, and | |
1351 | where we are headed. | |
1352 | URL=https://libreplanet.org/2021/speakers/#5428 | |
1353 | LOCATION:Jupiter | |
1354 | DTSTART:20210321T213000Z | |
1355 | DTEND:20210321T221500Z | |
1356 | CATEGORIES:Keynote | |
1357 | ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;CUTYPE=INVIDIDUAL;CN="Nathan Freitas":in | |
1358 | valid:nomail | |
1359 | END:VEVENT | |
1360 | BEGIN:VEVENT | |
1361 | METHOD:PUBLISH | |
1362 | DTSTAMP:20210316T000000Z | |
1363 | UID:NXZO4DPUHQDLRQIN2KBLSDWS4XHOHETZ | |
1364 | CLASS:PUBLIC | |
1365 | STATUS:CONFIRMED | |
1366 | SUMMARY:Closing remarks by FSF | |
1367 | DESCRIPTION:There's no description available | |
1368 | for this session yet - sorry! | |
1369 | URL=https://libreplanet.org/2021/speakers/#5432 | |
1370 | LOCATION:Jupiter | |
1371 | DTSTART:20210321T222000Z | |
1372 | DTEND:20210321T223000Z | |
1373 | CATEGORIES:LibrePlanet special sessions | |
1374 | ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;CUTYPE=INVIDIDUAL;CN="LibrePlanet 2021": | |
1375 | invalid:nomail | |
1376 | END:VEVENT | |
1377 | END:VCALENDAR |