From: Greg Farough Date: Wed, 4 Mar 2020 21:09:02 +0000 (-0500) Subject: ran makefile for youth panel X-Git-Url: https://vcs.fsf.org/?a=commitdiff_plain;h=5f2b132cee6c5889c6f92d654cdb5a67b4a564b6;p=libreplanet-static.git ran makefile for youth panel --- diff --git a/2020/includes/generated-bios.html b/2020/includes/generated-bios.html index f7dd1016..87c18553 100644 --- a/2020/includes/generated-bios.html +++ b/2020/includes/generated-bios.html @@ -4,7 +4,7 @@

Keynote Speakers

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@@ -27,6 +27,32 @@ Will we allow ourselves to reinvent our concept of libraries and archives to exp

Brewster Kahle

Brewster Kahle is a passionate advocate for public Internet access, and a successful entrepreneur, and he has spent his career intent on a singular focus: providing Universal Access to All Knowledge. He is the founder and Digital Librarian of the Internet Archive, one of the largest libraries in the world. Soon after graduating from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he studied artificial intelligence, Kahle helped found the company Thinking Machines, a parallel supercomputer maker. In 1989, Kahle created the Internet's first publishing system, called Wide Area Information Server (WAIS), later selling the company to AOL. In 1996, Kahle co-founded Alexa Internet, which helps catalog the Web, selling it to Amazon.com in 1999. The Internet Archive, which he founded in 1996, now preserves 50 petabytes of data: the books, Web pages, music, television, and software of our cultural heritage, working with more than 600 library and university partners to create a digital library, accessible to all.
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Free the Future Youth Keynote Panel

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+: Saturday 09:45 - 10:30 - Opening Keynote +: Back Bay Grand +
+: Keynote +
+
The future of the free software movement depends upon the work of its youngest members, the developers and community members responsible for carrying on the legacy of its founding ideas. As all of us in the world of free software have something to learn from this generation of newcomers, the FSF will be presenting an interview panel with three rising members of the community: Alyssa Rosenzweig, Panfrost developer and former FSF intern; Taowa, the youngest (non-uploading) Debian Developer in the project's history; and Erin Moon, developer of the Rustodon implementation of ActivityPub.
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+The panel will focus on topics that are crucial to the movement's continuing success and "freeing the future," including keeping our focus on the principles of freedom, making a place for the youngest or historically excluded members of the community, and responding to the rise of surveillance capitalism. The panel will be moderated by Greg Farough, campaigns manager of the FSF.
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Alyssa Rosenzweig, Taowa, and Erin Moon

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Alyssa Rosenzweig is a free software hacker working at Collabora. Passionate about freedom at the lowest levels, she leads the Panfrost project to build a free graphics stack for Mali GPUs. She is studying Applied Mathematics at the University of Toronto as a Lester B. Pearson International Scholar. Outside school and software, she likes to make pony puns on XMPP, trot around Toronto, and horse around in the kitchen.
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+Taowa is a (non-uploading) Debian Developer, sysadmin, and free software enthusiast. His interests are in privacy and security tools (and making these accessible to everyone), as well as amateur radio, networking and electronics. Did we mention he's not old enough to vote yet?
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+Erin Moon is an engineer, student, musician, and very tired. She's used, contributed to, and developed free software since she was a small kid. Over the last three years, her open source work has focused on federated social media software, as a user, contributor, and maintainer. Her other personal work includes digital signal processing research for musical purposes, ROM hacking, operating system development, and electrical hardware engineering.

Speakers

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How to make more users love free software

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+: Sunday 13:35 - 14:20 +: Patriot +
+: Community +
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In the free software ecosystem most users end up being someone who has a technological background. Meanwhile, many regular software users stick to proprietary solutions.
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+This talk covers the love story between free software and usability and how easily we can improve the user experience on our products by running usability tests along different stages of the development cycle. Further, we will learn how to run these tests on our own, while commenting on experiences running usability tests on GNOME. We also discuss how to create ways for the community to start contributing.
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Clarissa Borges

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Clarissa Borges is a Software Engineering student at the University of Brasília, where she learned to love free software. She always loved designing software architectures, programming, and automating tasks. But knowing all of this was not enough, because the whole point of creating software for her was to ease people's lives, and she didn't know how to make her software more usable.
+
+At this point, Clarissa heard about Outreachy and found a Usability Research project to GNOME. This was the perfect occasion to contribute to a software she has been using for so many years and learn how to improve usability on software products. From December 2018 to March 2019, she worked running usability tests to some important GNOME programs, such as Settings, Notes, Nautilus/ Files, Calendar and Gedit.
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+After the internship, she wanted to help GNOME with frequent usability tests contributions. To archieve that, she has been working on her undergraduate thesis to find a solution to facilitate to non-technical people to contribute with usability tests. She has also been contributing to GNOME, encouraging people to become contributors and being active on GNOME's Brazilian community.
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@@ -129,7 +181,7 @@ He lives and grew up in Austin, Texas. He enjoys a good strong stout, a hoppy IP
Prior to serving in the California state government, Tony was CIO at the City of Northglenn and CTO at Communication Service for the Deaf. He is currently the founder and executive director at Open Solutions For Government, a nonprofit organization.
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@@ -157,7 +209,7 @@ For the past five years, he has also been the project lead of Digital Storytelli
Ryan holds an Honours Bachelor of Arts from the University of Toronto, and a Bachelor of Education from the University of Windsor, along with years of experience managing small business IT infrastructure.
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@@ -177,7 +229,7 @@ Ryan holds an Honours Bachelor of Arts from the University of Toronto, and a Bac

Paul Gazzillo

Paul Gazzillo is an assistant professor of computer science at University of Central Florida. His research aims to make it easier to develop safe and secure software, and it spans programming languages, security, software engineering, and systems. Projects include analysis of configurable systems, side-channel attack detection, and concurrent smart contracts.
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@@ -197,7 +249,7 @@ Ryan holds an Honours Bachelor of Arts from the University of Toronto, and a Bac

Lucy Ingham

Lucy Ingham is a technology journalist and the editor of the Web site and digital magazine "Verdict." She is the former editor of the futurist site "Factor," and she specializes in exploring how technology is shaping the world we live in.
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@@ -217,7 +269,7 @@ Ryan holds an Honours Bachelor of Arts from the University of Toronto, and a Bac

Giselle Jhunjhnuwala

Giselle is an artist, self-taught programmer, and Outreachy alumna. They like to explore the intersections of art, science, and technology, and have been exclusively using free software in their practice for several years. They have worked in technology and at an import/export multinational company, which enabled them to travel back and forth between China and the US. They are a member of the Pittsburgh Restore the Fourth chapter, The Big Idea (a collectively run bookstore), and the Stranger Company Art Collective. In their spare time, they volunteer for various free software projects such as Mediawiki, and write songs about PGP. They have exhibited at a number of private and state galleries in China, as well as in the US.
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@@ -243,7 +295,7 @@ This talk will be co-presented with Fen Labalme, who loves to create solutions f
Fen is a Certified Information System Security Professional (CISSP) and a long-time advocate of handling information wisely. His computer science and electrical engineering thesis at MIT presaged the privacy concerns facing today’s Internet and social media platforms. His close-knit family enjoys traveling to historic locations, campaigning for a greener Earth, and playing/cheering at hockey games.
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@@ -264,7 +316,7 @@ Fen is a Certified Information System Security Professional (CISSP) and a long-t

Frank Karlitschek

Frank Karlitschek is a longtime free software contributor, and former board member of the KDE e.V. He founded ownCloud in 2010, and its successor, Nextcloud, in 2016, to create a fully free software and decentralized alternative to big centralized cloud companies. Frank was an invited expert at the W3C, to help to create the ActivityPub standard. Frank has spoken at MIT, CERN, Harvard, and ETH, and keynoted LinuxCon, Latinoware, FOSSASIA, Campus Party, and many other conferences. Frank is the founder and CEO of Nextcloud GmbH. He is also a fellow of Open Forum Europe, and an advisor to the United Nations.
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@@ -288,7 +340,7 @@ In this talk, I will explain how the campaign framework can be used to push for
He helps other organizations, companies, and governments to understand how they can benefit from free software -- which gives everybody the rights to use, understand, adapt and share software -- and how those rights help to support freedom of speech, freedom of press, and our right to privacy.
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@@ -314,7 +366,7 @@ This talk will be a mostly personal story of how I have personally reconciled my

Bradley Kuhn

Bradley M. Kuhn is the policy fellow and hacker-in-residence at Software Freedom Conservancy, and editor in chief of copyleft.org. Kuhn began his work in the software freedom movement as a volunteer in 1992, and was an early adopter of GNU/Linux systems. Kuhn's nonprofit career began in 2000 at the FSF. As FSF's executive director from 2001-2005, Kuhn led FSF's GPL enforcement, and invented the Affero GPL. Kuhn began as Conservancy's primary volunteer from 2006-2010, and was its first staff person. Kuhn holds a summa cum laude BS in computer science from Loyola University in Maryland, and an MS in computer science from the University of Cincinnati.
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@@ -336,7 +388,7 @@ This talk will cover the basics of a topic extensive enough to spend years study

DeeDee Lavinder

DeeDee Lavinder currently works as a backend engineer, and is a director of Women Who Code Raleigh/Durham. The juxtaposition of analytical thinking and creative problem solving is where she is happiest, and she is particularly thrilled about working in that sweet spot while writing code. When something is hard, she goes deep to understand -- ask her about encoding! When not coding, you can find her listening to audiobooks, driving small people around town, or coordinating something somewhere.
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@@ -356,7 +408,7 @@ This talk will cover the basics of a topic extensive enough to spend years study

Charles Lehner

Charles E. Lehner (@cel) is a software developer building collaborative applications on the Secure Scuttlebutt Network.
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@@ -378,7 +430,48 @@ This presentation will explain effective strategies to teach the next generation

William Liggett

William Paul Liggett is a software engineering professor at the Northern Virginia Community College, where he teaches classes on Java, Python, HTML5/CSS3/JavaScript, Relational Databases, Cybersecurity, and GNU/Linux. He also is the owner and coder of junktext.com, where he does freelance development for others. William previously worked in the US defense and intelligence communities as a software developer, IT project manager, and systems administrator. He served in the US Marine Corps, where he was meritoriously promoted to Sergeant (E-5). He is also very skilled at amazing and very funny jokes!
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The Four Free-ums?

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+: Sunday 15:25 - 16:10 +: Back Bay Grand +
+: Licensing +
+
Software licenses that give people freedom are facing scrutiny
+from a variety of interests and organizations. This session seeks to
+articulate the core values of software freedom: how the tenets of GNU's
+Four Freedoms and the Open Source Definition's criteria enable networks
+of collaboration and co-creation. Current issues from a variety of
+interested parties are considered, not on their value as a movement,
+but rather their impact on the freedoms to run, study, modify, and
+redistribute works. Alternative approaches to licensing that can
+address concerns of communities will also be offered.
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+

Patrick Masson

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Patrick Masson joined the Open Source Initiative as General Manager in
+November of 2013 after working in higher education technology for over
+twenty years, including roles as Director of the UCLA Media Lab, CIO
+within The State University of New York, and most recently, CTO at
+UMassOnline. Patrick is an Adjunct Professor at the University at
+Albany, teaching Open Source Principles and Practices within the
+College of Engineering and Applied Sciences' Department of Informatics.
+Patrick has worked to promote the awareness and adoption of open
+source, particularly within education, throughout his career. He served
+on the Jasig Foundation's Board of Directors, and is currently on the
+Apereo Foundation's Advisory Council as well as Brandeis University's
+Graduate Professional Studies Advisory Board. He is the co-founder of
+the Educause Constituency Group on Openness. Patrick was also elected
+to his local Board of Education in 2014.
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@@ -400,7 +493,7 @@ This presentation will explain effective strategies to teach the next generation community building” movement, using free software tools like VOIP, Drupal, and GNU/Linux. She is a liaison between the US Solidarity Economy Network (SEN), a group devoted to ongoing dialogue on building the new economy network, and the US Federation of Worker Cooperatives (USFWC), the national grassroots organization of US worker-owners who are “building power
with national and international partners to advance an agenda for economic justice rooted in community-based shared ownership.” As a board member of the MayFirst Technology Movement cooperative, Micky works with technical activists to connect people with the information and tools they need to move from being a global network to becoming a global movement based on solidarity.
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@@ -422,7 +515,7 @@ with national and international partners to advance an agenda for economic justi

EC Monsen

Eva is a career software engineer and data consultant, as well as a startup advisor and an advocate for underrepresented founders, and is stoked to share projects that combine those passions.
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@@ -443,7 +536,7 @@ with national and international partners to advance an agenda for economic justi
Lori Nagel has worked on and off on the free software multi-player online role playing game project “Wograld,” which you can learn about at wograld.org. She has also written a free culture Web cartoon (see jastiv.com) and a free culture novel (see jastiv.blogspot.com/2019/03/free-culture-novels-where-to-post-them.html).
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@@ -465,7 +558,7 @@ This shift includes an increased focus on privacy and security, allowing GNU Hea

Sean O'Brien

Sean O'Brien is a lecturer in law at Yale Law School with expertise in cybersecurity and mobile device forensics. Sean founded Yale Privacy Lab, where his research includes privacy auditing of Android apps. His current focus is IoT device security, work that has culminated in the PrivacySafe appliance and the GNU Health Embedded effort for the platform.
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@@ -490,7 +583,7 @@ We'll pick the twelve talks that we feel are most interesting to our attend Add your name to the list!
https://libreplanet.org/wiki/LibrePlanet:Conference/Lightning_Talks
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https://libreplanet.org/wiki/LibrePlanet:Conference/Lightning_Talks
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@@ -537,7 +630,7 @@ This talk will be accompanied by a demonstration of physical devices that embody

Robert Read

Robert L. Read, PhD (computer science), after serving in director-level software engineering architecture and management positions, was a Presidential Innovation Fellow in 2013, where he advocated free software in the US federal government. He is a champion of Agile software development methods, an inventor, and a thought-leader. He holds two patents in optics. His most popular publication is “How to be a Programmer.” He began Public Invention in 2015 to produce free-libre hardware inventions and mathematical progress, and the project has mentored about eight students and produced two peer-reviewed papers so far. Rob is also the chief scientist of Skylight Digital, and CTO of Wacuri, Inc. He speaks Esperanto fluently.
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@@ -563,7 +656,7 @@ Join me in an exploration of excitement, engineering, and freedom as we take thi

. Salt

Wm “Salt” Hale is a kilted globetrottter, a free software advocate, lifelong hacker, and Seattle local who studies technology and society at the University of Washington (UW) Department of Communication, and is the community director at Snowdrift.coop. He attends, organizes, and speaks worldwide at conferences, conventions, events, festivals, and faires, and he speaks on various topics including communication, crowdmatching, Internet technologies, GNU/Linux, music, sci-fi/fantasy, security, and windsports. Salt is very approachable, and will always be found wearing a kilt.
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@@ -585,7 +678,7 @@ This talk will discuss the challenges in gathering font engineering knowledge, a

Felipe Sanches

Felipe Sanches is a software freedom activist and developer with contributions to the development of graphic design, CAD, 3D printing, and 3D modeling libre software such as Inkscape, OpenSCAD, and GNU LibreDWG. During the last few years, Felipe has provided professional libre software development services focused on font engineering and quality assurance for fonts. You can learn more about his work at https://www.fsf.org/working-together/profiles/felipe-sanches.
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@@ -612,7 +705,7 @@ Nishant was lead translator for Debian Installer l10n to Hindi during 2006-07, a
These days, he tries to build awareness for building network equipment and self-hosting among students and enterprise decision makers.
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McCoy Smith

McCoy Smith is the founding attorney at Lex Pan Law, a technology and intellectual property law firm in Portland, Oregon, USA. He also is on the editorial committee of the Journal of Open Law, Technology, & Society (JOLTS). For more than fifteen years, he acted as the primary support attorney for free software matters at Intel Corporation. Prior to joining Intel, he was in private practice in New York, NY and Washington, DC, specializing in IP litigation and patent prosecution. He was also a patent examiner in the US Patent and Trademark Office prior to law school. He is admitted to practice in New York, California, Oregon, and the US Patent & Trademark Office.
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All three presenters are members of the Gathering for Open Ag Tech (GOAT / goatech.org).
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Katheryn Sutter

Katheryn Sutter is an indefatigable DIY tinkerer, and a user of free software and Debian OS for day-to-day computing since 2003. She holds a PhD in community development and policy analysis, and a BS in human resources and family studies. Her fields of expertise include consensus-building, nonprofit board training, qualitative data analysis, and democratic theory.
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Italo Vignoli

Italo Vignoli is a founding member of The Document Foundation, the chairman emeritus of Associazione LibreItalia, an emeritus member of the OSI board, and co-chair of the ODF Advocacy OASIS Open Project. He co-leads LibreOffice marketing, public relations, and media relations, co-chairs the certification program, and is a spokesman for the project. He has contributed to large migration projects to LibreOffice in Italy, and is a LibreOffice certified migrator and trainer. From 2004 to 2010, he has been involved in the OOo project. In his professional life, he is a marketing consultant with decades of experience in high tech, and a visiting professor of marketing, public speaking, and public relations post-graduate courses. He has a degree in humanities at the University of Milan, and MBAs in marketing, public relations, and journalism.
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Todd Weaver

Todd Weaver is a hardcore geek and digital rights activist who believes the best method of saving humanity is to create convenient products that fully respect people.
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diff --git a/2020/includes/generated-sessions.html b/2020/includes/generated-sessions.html index 463ba152..e03097cd 100644 --- a/2020/includes/generated-sessions.html +++ b/2020/includes/generated-sessions.html @@ -45,6 +45,21 @@ +
+ + + +
: Back Bay Grand
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: Keynote
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+ Alyssa Rosenzweig, Taowa, and Erin Moon +
+
+ + + + +
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-
TBA
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How to make more users love free software
: Patriot
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-
- TBA TBA +
: Community
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+ Clarissa Borges
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TBA
+
: Back Bay Grand
-
-
- TBA TBA +
: Licensing
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+ Patrick Masson