<h3>Free Your JavaScript</h3>
<p><em>Room 123 | Thread: Activism</em> <br />
-<strong><em>Zachary Wick</em></strong> <br />
+<strong>Zachary Wick</strong> <br />
This 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>
<h3>What Does This Program Do? Reproducible Builds, Transparency, and Freedom</h3>
-<p><em>Room 141 | Thread: Projects</em> <br />
-<strong><em>Seth Schoen</em></strong> <br />
+<p><em>Seth Schoen</em> <br />
+<strong>Room 141 | Thread: Projects</strong> <br />
Today 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>
<h3>Building an open digital archive in India: Knowledge, access and other issues</h3>
-<p><em>Room 155 | Thread: Applied free software</em> <br />
-<strong><em>Noopur Raval</em></strong> <br />
+<p><strong>Room 155 | Thread: Applied free software</strong> <br />
+<em>Noopur Raval</em> <br />
This 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 collaborating possibilities and licensing issues faced in India.</p>
<h3>11:40 AM - 11:50 AM: Break</h3>