From aef9aa0c9b3ccc664b0d77e5240f359997ea309c Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Zak Rogoff Date: Fri, 19 Feb 2016 11:10:17 -0500 Subject: [PATCH] Updating speakers and sessions, adding image attribution back where it was lacking. --- 2016/program/generated-bios.html | 418 +++++++++++++++++---------- 2016/program/generated-sessions.html | 353 +++++++++++++++------- 2016/speakers.ids | 45 +++ 2016/speakers.noids | 3 + 4 files changed, 550 insertions(+), 269 deletions(-) create mode 100644 2016/speakers.ids create mode 100644 2016/speakers.noids diff --git a/2016/program/generated-bios.html b/2016/program/generated-bios.html index 7657678b..b317fcc4 100755 --- a/2016/program/generated-bios.html +++ b/2016/program/generated-bios.html @@ -25,6 +25,17 @@

Daniel Kahn Gillmor is a technologist with the ACLU's Speech, Privacy and Technology Project, and a free software developer. He's a Free Software Foundation member, a member of Debian, a contributor to a wide range of free software projects, and a participant in protocol development standards organizations like the IETF, with an eye toward preserving and improving civil liberties and civil rights through our shared infrastructure. + + Photo license: + + Daniel Kahn Gillmor + + , + + Creative Commons Attribution ShareAlike 4.0 International License + + . +

@@ -50,6 +61,17 @@

Allison's first geek career was as a research linguist in eastern Africa. But eventually her love of coding seduced her away from natural languages to artificial ones. In over 25 years as a programmer, she has developed everything from games, linguistic analysis tools, websites, and shipping fulfillment, to compilers, database replication systems, deployment automation, mobile apps, and talking smart-home appliances, worked as a language designer, project manager, conference organizer, and editor, been a board member of several free software related non-profit foundations, written three books, and founded a tech publishing company. She collaborates in the Debian, Python, and OpenStack projects, and currently works at Hewlett Packard Enterprise, leading a team of engineers focused on contributing to OpenStack and Python. + + Photo credit: + + Cjcollier + + , + + Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 2.0 Generic License + + . +

@@ -100,6 +122,20 @@

Edward Snowden is a former intelligence officer who served the CIA, NSA, and DIA for nearly a decade as a subject matter expert on technology and cybersecurity. In 2013, he revealed the NSA was unconstitutionally seizing the private records of billions of individuals who had not been suspected of any wrongdoing, resulting in the largest debate about reforms to US surveillance policy since 1978. Today, he works on methods of enforcing human rights through the application and development of new technologies. He joined the board of Freedom of the Press Foundation in February 2014. + + Photo license: + + Screenshot of a Citizen Four by Praxis Films and + + Laura Poitras + + , + + Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 + + . + +

@@ -288,20 +324,24 @@ document magnification, and DIY woodworking.
- [ Molly de Blanc - Photo ] + [ Adrien Béraud - Photo ]
-
+

- Molly de Blanc + Adrien Béraud

- Molly de Blanc lives in Cambridge, MA. She is the community coordinator for the Open edX Project. In addition to free software, she likes bikes, plants, and playing the bassoon. + Passionate about distributed networks, Adrien Béraud (OpenDHT Developer and Free-Software Consultant) maintains the distributed hash table + + OpenDHT + + used for Ring. For Adrien, Ring is more than a communication tool. It is based on the community. Ring belongs to it and strengthens through it.

@@ -313,20 +353,20 @@ document magnification, and DIY woodworking.
- [ Scott Dexter - Photo ] + [ Molly de Blanc - Photo ]
-
+

- Scott Dexter + Molly de Blanc

- Scott Dexter is a Professor of Computer and Information Science at Brooklyn College and the Graduate Center of the City University of New York, where he has taught since 1998. He has written extensively on free software, including the book, co-authored with philosopher Samir Chopra, Decoding Liberation: The Promise of Free and Open Source Software. He is particularly interested in getting his students--of extremely diverse backgrounds--hooked on free software. + Molly de Blanc lives in Cambridge, MA. She is the community coordinator for the Open edX Project. In addition to free software, she likes bikes, plants, and playing the bassoon.

@@ -338,20 +378,20 @@ document magnification, and DIY woodworking.
- [ Placeholder - Photo ] + [ Scott Dexter - Photo ]
-
+

- Richard Fontana + Scott Dexter

- Richard Fontana is a lawyer at Red Hat. He leads support for Red Hat's engineering and research and development units and is Red Hat's lead counsel for legal issues relating to free software. Richard is also a board director of the Open Source Initiative. + Scott Dexter is a Professor of Computer and Information Science at Brooklyn College and the Graduate Center of the City University of New York, where he has taught since 1998. He has written extensively on free software, including the book, co-authored with philosopher Samir Chopra, Decoding Liberation: The Promise of Free and Open Source Software. He is particularly interested in getting his students--of extremely diverse backgrounds--hooked on free software.

@@ -363,21 +403,20 @@ document magnification, and DIY woodworking.
- [ Mike Gerwitz ] + [ Placeholder - Photo ]
-
+

- Mike Gerwitz + Richard Fontana

- Mike Gerwitz is a free software hacker and activist with a strong focus on security, privacy, and the Web. He is a volunteer for the GNU -project, an evaluator for software submissions to GNU, and author of GNU ease.js. + Richard Fontana is a lawyer at Red Hat. He leads support for Red Hat's engineering and research and development units and is Red Hat's lead counsel for legal issues relating to free software. Richard is also a board director of the Open Source Initiative.

@@ -389,23 +428,21 @@ project, an evaluator for software submissions to GNU, and author of GNU ease.js
- [ Judy Gichoya - Photo ] + [ Mike Gerwitz ]
-
+

- Judy Gichoya + Mike Gerwitz

- Judy is a medical doctor and health informatician who has worked with OpenMRS from its inception. She has contributed as a developer , with over 6 implementations of OpenMRS worldwide and continues to support openMRS leadership regarding strategy and maintenance of partnerships. -

-

- Judy brings a fresh look into open source systems for global health, challenging us to rethink systems and organizations as social enterprises that must manage resources efficiently in order to make an impact. + Mike Gerwitz is a free software hacker and activist with a strong focus on security, privacy, and the Web. He is a volunteer for the GNU +project, an evaluator for software submissions to GNU, and author of GNU ease.js.

@@ -417,20 +454,23 @@ project, an evaluator for software submissions to GNU, and author of GNU ease.js
- [ Erin Glass - Photo ] + [ Judy Gichoya - Photo ]
-
+

- Erin Glass + Judy Gichoya

- Erin Glass just joined UCSD as Associate Director and Digital Humanities Coordinator of the Center for the Humanities. Prior to her move, she served as a Digital Fellow at The CUNY Graduate Center where she worked on developing software initiatives that fostered collaborative research while protecting user freedom. She is also co-founder of Social Paper, which received a NEH Digital Start-Up grant, and is currently at work on a dissertation which theorizes student writing as a site where political and technical consciousness is forged. + Judy is a medical doctor and health informatician who has worked with OpenMRS from its inception. She has contributed as a developer , with over 6 implementations of OpenMRS worldwide and continues to support openMRS leadership regarding strategy and maintenance of partnerships. +

+

+ Judy brings a fresh look into open source systems for global health, challenging us to rethink systems and organizations as social enterprises that must manage resources efficiently in order to make an impact.

@@ -442,20 +482,20 @@ project, an evaluator for software submissions to GNU, and author of GNU ease.js
- [ Shauna Gordon-McKeon - Photo ] + [ Erin Glass - Photo ]
-
+

- Shauna Gordon-McKeon + Erin Glass

- Shauna Gordon-McKeon is an independent researcher and developer who focuses on open technologies and communities. She runs a business, Galaxy Rise Consulting, providing web and mobile development and data science services to individuals and organizations. She can often be found using her skills as a writer, public speaker, and teacher to help free software and open science communities more accessible to newcomers. + Erin Glass just joined UCSD as Associate Director and Digital Humanities Coordinator of the Center for the Humanities. Prior to her move, she served as a Digital Fellow at The CUNY Graduate Center where she worked on developing software initiatives that fostered collaborative research while protecting user freedom. She is also co-founder of Social Paper, which received a NEH Digital Start-Up grant, and is currently at work on a dissertation which theorizes student writing as a site where political and technical consciousness is forged.

@@ -467,20 +507,20 @@ project, an evaluator for software submissions to GNU, and author of GNU ease.js
- [ Placeholder - Photo ] + [ Shauna Gordon-McKeon - Photo ]
-
+

- Molly Gott + Shauna Gordon-McKeon

- Molly Gott is an organizer and researcher at LittleSis, where she focuses on building teams of activist-researchers doing power analysis research in their communities. Previously, she organized in St. Louis with MORE, an economic and climate justice community organization. At MORE, she led the Power Behind the Police movement research team, which exposed the ties between St. Louis' corporate elite and the region's structural racism. + Shauna Gordon-McKeon is an independent researcher and developer who focuses on open technologies and communities. She runs a business, Galaxy Rise Consulting, providing web and mobile development and data science services to individuals and organizations. She can often be found using her skills as a writer, public speaker, and teacher to help free software and open science communities more accessible to newcomers.

@@ -492,10 +532,35 @@ project, an evaluator for software submissions to GNU, and author of GNU ease.js
- [ Sumana Harihareswara - Photo ] + [ Placeholder - Photo ]
+
+
+
+

+ Molly Gott +

+
+
+

+ Molly Gott is an organizer and researcher at LittleSis, where she focuses on building teams of activist-researchers doing power analysis research in their communities. Previously, she organized in St. Louis with MORE, an economic and climate justice community organization. At MORE, she led the Power Behind the Police movement research team, which exposed the ties between St. Louis' corporate elite and the region's structural racism. +

+
+ + + + +
+
+ + +
+ [ Sumana Harihareswara - Photo ] +
+ +
@@ -575,19 +640,19 @@ Source Citizen Award in 2013 and 2014.

- +
- +
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+
- - + +
[ Placeholder - Photo ]
- - + +
@@ -600,19 +665,19 @@ Source Citizen Award Parker Higgins is the Director of Copyright Activism at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, specializing in issues at the intersection of freedom of speech and copyright, trademark, and patent law. He previously lived and worked in Berlin, Germany.

- +
- +
-
+
- - + +
[ MJ Kaplan - Photo ]
- - + +
@@ -625,19 +690,19 @@ Source Citizen Award Based in Providence, RI, MJ Kaplan supports strategy and growth for Loomio, with a focus on the US. MJ joined Loomio in 2014 after spending 2013 as Ian Axford Fulbright Fellow researching social enterprise start-ups in New Zealand where Loomio is based. MJ is Adjunct Professor at Brown University, where she teaches an action learning class in social enterprise and organizational strategy. MJ founded Kaplan Consulting in 2000, a national firm focused on strategic alignment and partnerships. MJ was a consultant for the Institute for Conservation Leadership for over 20 years, supporting environmental agencies in board and leadership development, strategy and collaboration. MJ was honored as The Outstanding Mentor for the 2011 RI Business Women Awards. In 2012, MJ traveled to Guatemala with Leading Women to contribute support for Amigos de Santa Cruz, a rural center working on micro-enterprise. MJ is trustee of Commerce Rhode Island and Social Enterprise Greenhouse. MJ earned her M.Ed. from Harvard University and B.A. Brown University.

- +
- +
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- - + +
[ Bradley Kuhn - Photo ]
- - + +
@@ -707,31 +772,6 @@ Source Citizen Award .

- -
- -
-
-
- - -
- [ Bassam Kurdali - Photo ] -
- - -
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-
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- Bassam Kurdali -

-
-
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- Bassam is a 3D animator/filmmaker whose 2006 short, Elephants Dream, was the first "open movie." It established the viability of libre tools in a production environment and set precedent by offering its source data under a permissive license for learning, remixing and re-use. His character, ManCandy, began as an easily animatable test bed for rigging experiments. Multiple iterations have been released to the public, and Bassam demonstrates him in the animated tutorial video + short, The ManCandy FAQ. Under the sign of the urchin, Bassam is continuing to pursue a model of production that invests in commonwealth. He teaches, writes and lectures around the world on free production and free software technique. Raised in Damascus, Bassam trained in the United States as an electrical and software engineer. -

-
@@ -741,20 +781,20 @@ Source Citizen Award
- [ Jonathan Le Lous - Photo ] + [ Bassam Kurdali - Photo ]
-
+

- Jonathan Le Lous + Bassam Kurdali

- Jonathan has been involved with the Free Software Movement for ten years, in France and now in Canada. + Bassam is a 3D animator/filmmaker whose 2006 short, Elephants Dream, was the first "open movie." It established the viability of libre tools in a production environment and set precedent by offering its source data under a permissive license for learning, remixing and re-use. His character, ManCandy, began as an easily animatable test bed for rigging experiments. Multiple iterations have been released to the public, and Bassam demonstrates him in the animated tutorial video + short, The ManCandy FAQ. Under the sign of the urchin, Bassam is continuing to pursue a model of production that invests in commonwealth. He teaches, writes and lectures around the world on free production and free software technique. Raised in Damascus, Bassam trained in the United States as an electrical and software engineer.

@@ -766,20 +806,20 @@ Source Citizen Award
- [ Placeholder - Photo ] + [ Jonathan Le Lous - Photo ]
-
+

- Matt Lee + Jonathan Le Lous

- Matt Lee is a free software hacker, film maker and artist living in Austin, TX. + Jonathan has been involved with the Free Software Movement for ten years, in France and now in Canada.

@@ -791,20 +831,20 @@ Source Citizen Award
- [ Lillian Lemmer - Photo ] + [ Placeholder - Photo ]
-
+

- Lillian Lemmer + Matt Lee

- Software engineer, leader of Hypatia Software Organization. Python developer, open source author; MIT licenses everything. FreeBSD enthusiast. + Matt Lee is a free software hacker, film maker and artist living in Austin, TX.

@@ -816,20 +856,20 @@ Source Citizen Award
- [ Placeholder - Photo ] + [ Lillian Lemmer - Photo ]
-
+

- Holger Levsen + Lillian Lemmer

- Holger Levsen is contributing to Debian since more than 10 years. He founded the DebConf videoteam and created the Debian video archive at video.debian.net, was heavily involved in Debian-Edu and has now shifted has focus on QA and lately security. He maintains piuparts.debian.org and jenkins.debian.net, and on the later he set up reproducible.debian.net which by now is not only testing Debian packages for reproducibility but also coreboot, OpenWrt, NetBSD, FreeBSD, Archlinux and soon Fedora. + Software engineer, leader of Hypatia Software Organization. Python developer, open source author; MIT licenses everything. FreeBSD enthusiast.

@@ -841,20 +881,33 @@ Source Citizen Award
- [ Placeholder - Photo ] + [ Holger Levsen - Photo ]
-
+

- M. C. McGrath + Holger Levsen

- M. C. is the founder of Transparency Toolkit, a free software project that helps people use open data to expose surveillance and human rights abuses. He is also a Thiel Fellow and an Echoing Green Fellow. Previously, M. C. graduated from Boston University with a degree in civic technology and did research at the MIT Media Lab. + Holger Levsen is contributing to Debian since more than 10 years. He founded the DebConf videoteam and created the Debian video archive at video.debian.net, was heavily involved in Debian-Edu and has now shifted has focus on QA and lately security. He maintains piuparts.debian.org and jenkins.debian.net, and on the later he set up reproducible.debian.net which by now is not only testing Debian packages for reproducibility but also coreboot, OpenWrt, NetBSD, FreeBSD, Archlinux and soon Fedora. + + Photo license: + + + Diégo Antolinos-Basso + + + , + + Creative Commons Attribution ShareAlike 4.0 International License + + . +

@@ -866,20 +919,20 @@ Source Citizen Award
- [ Evan Misshula - Photo ] + [ Placeholder - Photo ]
-
+

- Evan Misshula + M. C. McGrath

- Evan Misshula is the Project Manager for the NYC Tech Talent Pipeline Residency @ Queens College, an adjunct instructor at CUNY John Jay teaching network security and a PhD candidate at the CUNY Graduate Center in Criminal Justice. He is active in numerous free software meetups in NYC. He is interested in helping marginalized groups (particularly those stigmatized by contact with the criminal justice system) use Free Software to increase social and economic mobility. + M. C. is the founder of Transparency Toolkit, a free software project that helps people use open data to expose surveillance and human rights abuses. He is also a Thiel Fellow and an Echoing Green Fellow. Previously, M. C. graduated from Boston University with a degree in civic technology and did research at the MIT Media Lab.

@@ -891,20 +944,20 @@ Source Citizen Award
- [ Deb Nicholson - Photo ] + [ Evan Misshula - Photo ]
-
+

- Deb Nicholson + Evan Misshula

- Deb Nicholson wants to make the world a better place with technology and social justice for all. After many years of local political organizing, she became an enthusiastic free software activist. She is currently the Community Outreach Director at the Open Invention Network and the Community Manager at GNU MediaGoblin. She also serves on the board at Open Hatch, aka Free Software's Welcoming Committee. + Evan Misshula is the Project Manager for the NYC Tech Talent Pipeline Residency @ Queens College, an adjunct instructor at CUNY John Jay teaching network security and a PhD candidate at the CUNY Graduate Center in Criminal Justice. He is active in numerous free software meetups in NYC. He is interested in helping marginalized groups (particularly those stigmatized by contact with the criminal justice system) use Free Software to increase social and economic mobility.

@@ -916,20 +969,20 @@ Source Citizen Award
- [ Alexandre Oliva - Photo ] + [ Deb Nicholson - Photo ]
-
+

- Alexandre Oliva + Deb Nicholson

- FSF Latin America board member. GNU speaker. Free Software Evangelist. Maintainer of GNU Linux-libre, and co-maintainer of the GNU Compiler Collection, GNU binutils and GNU libc. GNU tools engineer at Red Hat Brasil. + Deb Nicholson wants to make the world a better place with technology and social justice for all. After many years of local political organizing, she became an enthusiastic free software activist. She is currently the Community Outreach Director at the Open Invention Network and the Community Manager at GNU MediaGoblin. She also serves on the board at Open Hatch, aka Free Software's Welcoming Committee.

@@ -941,20 +994,20 @@ Source Citizen Award
- [ Paige Peterson - Photo ] + [ Alexandre Oliva - Photo ]
-
+

- Paige Peterson + Alexandre Oliva

- While working towards a BFA in Interrelated Media from Massachusetts College of Art, Paige developed an interest in programming and a fascination in the complexity of natural systems. After graduation, Paige worked for mesh networking startup, Open Garden which helped to map her interest in natural decentralized systems onto concepts within technology. She previously organized San Francisco's bitcoin meetup and is fascinated by the freeing potential of cryptocurrencies. She currently fills various roles at MaidSafe with a focus on community and communication. + FSF Latin America board member. GNU speaker. Free Software Evangelist. Maintainer of GNU Linux-libre, and co-maintainer of the GNU Compiler Collection, GNU binutils and GNU libc. GNU tools engineer at Red Hat Brasil.

@@ -966,20 +1019,20 @@ Source Citizen Award
- [ Cooper Quintin - Photo ] + [ Paige Peterson - Photo ]
-
+

- Cooper Quintin + Paige Peterson

- Cooper is a security researcher and programmer at EFF. He has worked on projects such as Privacy Badger, Canary Watch, Ethersheet, and analysis of state sponsored malware. He has also performed security trainings for activists, non profit workers and ordinary folks around the world. He previously worked building websites for non-profits, such as Greenpeace, Adbusters, and the Chelsea Manning Support Network. He also was a co-founder of the Hackbloc hacktivist collective. In his spare time he enjoys playing music and participating in street protests. + While working towards a BFA in Interrelated Media from Massachusetts College of Art, Paige developed an interest in programming and a fascination in the complexity of natural systems. After graduation, Paige worked for mesh networking startup, Open Garden which helped to map her interest in natural decentralized systems onto concepts within technology. She previously organized San Francisco's bitcoin meetup and is fascinated by the freeing potential of cryptocurrencies. She currently fills various roles at MaidSafe with a focus on community and communication.

@@ -991,23 +1044,20 @@ Source Citizen Award
- [ Felipe Correa da Silva Sanches - Photo ] + [ Cooper Quintin - Photo ]
-
+

- Felipe Correa da Silva Sanches + Cooper Quintin

- Felipe Sanches is a software freedom activist and developer who became a libre hardware designer when co-funding Metamaquina, a Brazilian 3d printing company. Felipe has contributed to the development of graphics design, CAD and 3D modelling & printing libre software such as Inkscape, OpenSCAD, Pronterface and GNU LibreDWG. He is also a co-founder of Garoa Hacker Clube, the first brazilian hackerspace, and of PoliGNU, the Free Software Studies Group of the engineering school at University of Sao Paulo. -

-

- During the last few years, Felipe has also engaged in hardware reverse engineering and in the development of emulation drivers, being a frequent code contributor to the MAME (Multiple Arcade Machine Emulator) and MESS (Multi Emulator Super System) projects. + Cooper is a security researcher and programmer at EFF. He has worked on projects such as Privacy Badger, Canary Watch, Ethersheet, and analysis of state sponsored malware. He has also performed security trainings for activists, non profit workers and ordinary folks around the world. He previously worked building websites for non-profits, such as Greenpeace, Adbusters, and the Chelsea Manning Support Network. He also was a co-founder of the Hackbloc hacktivist collective. In his spare time he enjoys playing music and participating in street protests.

@@ -1019,20 +1069,21 @@ Source Citizen Award
- [ Eric Schultz - Photo ] + [ Guillaume Roguez - Photo ]
-
+

- Eric Schultz + Guillaume Roguez

- Eric Schultz is an independent software engineer and open source consultant. Most recently he was the Community Manager at prpl Foundation with a particular focus on building the OpenWrt community. Prior to this, Eric worked as Developer Advocate at Outercurve Foundation where he managed and supported the foundation’s 25 open source projects. Eric has collaborated with employees from dozens of companies to create free and open source software that improves lives. He has a passion for the promise and reality of free software, with a focus on empowering individuals, particularly in marginalized groups, with more control over their everyday lives. Eric lives in Appleton, Wisconsin where outside of work he enjoys developing free software, watching the Green Bay Packers and Milwaukee Bucks, and tweeting about technology, cute animals, politics and sports. + Over the past 15 years, Guillaume Roguez (Ring Development Director and Free-Software Consultant) worked on different projects, like porting Blender and Python. He has also developed a deep knowledge in low-level software, multi-medias codecs, real-time constraints, and testing. +Now he leads the Ring project. He is convinced that Ring is a free tool for everyone on the planet.

@@ -1044,20 +1095,23 @@ Source Citizen Award
- [ Andrew Seeder - Photo ] + [ Felipe Correa da Silva Sanches - Photo ]
-
+

- Andrew Seeder + Felipe Correa da Silva Sanches

- Andrew Seeder is the Data Systems Manager at the Dudley Street Neighborhood Initiative in Roxbury, Boston. He is also a consultant for the Smart Chicago Collaborative, sits on the IT Working Group for Boston Ujima, and is a member of the young professionals committee for YMCA's Training, Inc. He helps organize cryptoparties and works with friends on the Boston Meshnet project. Tweet him at @ahseeder. + Felipe Sanches is a software freedom activist and developer who became a libre hardware designer when co-funding Metamaquina, a Brazilian 3d printing company. Felipe has contributed to the development of graphics design, CAD and 3D modelling & printing libre software such as Inkscape, OpenSCAD, Pronterface and GNU LibreDWG. He is also a co-founder of Garoa Hacker Clube, the first brazilian hackerspace, and of PoliGNU, the Free Software Studies Group of the engineering school at University of Sao Paulo. +

+

+ During the last few years, Felipe has also engaged in hardware reverse engineering and in the development of emulation drivers, being a frequent code contributor to the MAME (Multiple Arcade Machine Emulator) and MESS (Multi Emulator Super System) projects.

@@ -1069,20 +1123,20 @@ Source Citizen Award
- [ Placeholder - Photo ] + [ Eric Schultz - Photo ]
-
+

- Matthew Skomarovsky + Eric Schultz

- Matthew Skomarovsky is a co-founder of PAI and the lead engineer of LittleSis.org. Previously he was a creative and technical manager at Billionaires for Bush, a national street theater campaign, and developed web applications for Freelancers Union. + Eric Schultz is an independent software engineer and open source consultant. Most recently he was the Community Manager at prpl Foundation with a particular focus on building the OpenWrt community. Prior to this, Eric worked as Developer Advocate at Outercurve Foundation where he managed and supported the foundation’s 25 open source projects. Eric has collaborated with employees from dozens of companies to create free and open source software that improves lives. He has a passion for the promise and reality of free software, with a focus on empowering individuals, particularly in marginalized groups, with more control over their everyday lives. Eric lives in Appleton, Wisconsin where outside of work he enjoys developing free software, watching the Green Bay Packers and Milwaukee Bucks, and tweeting about technology, cute animals, politics and sports.

@@ -1094,20 +1148,20 @@ Source Citizen Award
- [ Placeholder - Photo ] + [ Andrew Seeder - Photo ]
-
+

- David Thompson + Andrew Seeder

- David Thompson is a professional web developer, core developer for the GNU Guix project, contributor to GNU Guile, functional programming enthusiast, and free software activist. + Andrew Seeder is the Data Systems Manager at the Dudley Street Neighborhood Initiative in Roxbury, Boston. He is also a consultant for the Smart Chicago Collaborative, sits on the IT Working Group for Boston Ujima, and is a member of the young professionals committee for YMCA's Training, Inc. He helps organize cryptoparties and works with friends on the Boston Meshnet project. Tweet him at @ahseeder.

@@ -1119,20 +1173,20 @@ Source Citizen Award
- [ Christopher Webber - Photo ] + [ Placeholder - Photo ]
-
+

- Christopher Webber + Matthew Skomarovsky

- Christopher Allan Webber is lead developer of the GNU MediaGoblin project, a longtime free culture and free software activist, hacker of various languages (especially Python and various lisps), contributor to GNU Guix, and occasional author to various goblin-themed drawings. + Matthew Skomarovsky is a co-founder of PAI and the lead engineer of LittleSis.org. Previously he was a creative and technical manager at Billionaires for Bush, a national street theater campaign, and developed web applications for Freelancers Union.

@@ -1144,20 +1198,20 @@ Source Citizen Award
- [ Marina Zhurakhinskaya - Photo ] + [ Placeholder - Photo ]
-
+

- Marina Zhurakhinskaya + David Thompson

- Marina Zhurakhinskaya is a Senior Outreach Specialist focused on community diversity and inclusion at Red Hat. She co-organizes Outreachy, a mentorship and internships program that helps people from groups underrepresented in free software get involved; 244 people have so far participated in the program's paid, remote internships. Marina is a coordinator for GNOME's participation in Google Summer of Code and a creator of GNOME's newcomers tutorial and workshop. She served as a board member at the GNOME Foundation and at the Ada Initiative. Prior to her diversity outreach and community engagement roles, Marina developed software for GNOME. Marina is a recipient of an O'Reilly Open Source Award and of a GNOME Foundation Contributor of the Year Award "the Pants". She is a co-recipient of the Free Software Foundation Award for Projects of Social Benefit on behalf of the Outreach Program for Women. + David Thompson is a professional web developer, core developer for the GNU Guix project, contributor to GNU Guile, functional programming enthusiast, and free software activist.

@@ -1169,10 +1223,60 @@ Source Citizen Award
- [ Stefano Zacchiroli - Photo ] + [ Christopher Webber - Photo ]
+
+
+
+

+ Christopher Webber +

+
+
+

+ Christopher Allan Webber is lead developer of the GNU MediaGoblin project, a longtime free culture and free software activist, hacker of various languages (especially Python and various lisps), contributor to GNU Guix, and occasional author to various goblin-themed drawings. +

+
+ + + +
+
+
+ + +
+ [ Marina Zhurakhinskaya - Photo ] +
+ + +
+
+
+

+ Marina Zhurakhinskaya +

+
+
+

+ Marina Zhurakhinskaya is a Senior Outreach Specialist focused on community diversity and inclusion at Red Hat. She co-organizes Outreachy, a mentorship and internships program that helps people from groups underrepresented in free software get involved; 244 people have so far participated in the program's paid, remote internships. Marina is a coordinator for GNOME's participation in Google Summer of Code and a creator of GNOME's newcomers tutorial and workshop. She served as a board member at the GNOME Foundation and at the Ada Initiative. Prior to her diversity outreach and community engagement roles, Marina developed software for GNOME. Marina is a recipient of an O'Reilly Open Source Award and of a GNOME Foundation Contributor of the Year Award "the Pants". She is a co-recipient of the Free Software Foundation Award for Projects of Social Benefit on behalf of the Outreach Program for Women. +

+
+ +
+ +
+
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+ + +
+ [ Stefano Zacchiroli - Photo ] +
+ +
@@ -1185,9 +1289,9 @@ Source Citizen Award Stefano Zacchiroli is Associate Professor of Computer Science at University Paris Diderot. His research interests span formal methods and their applications to improve software quality and user experience in the context of Free Software distributions. He has been an official member of the Debian Project since 2001, taking care of many tasks from package maintenance to distribution-wide Quality Assurance. He has been elected to serve as Debian Project Leader for 3 terms in a row, over the period 2010-2013. He is a Board Director of the Open Source Initiative (OSI). He is a recipient of the 2015 O'Reilly Open Source Award.

- +
- +
diff --git a/2016/program/generated-sessions.html b/2016/program/generated-sessions.html index 46496b19..06f73257 100755 --- a/2016/program/generated-sessions.html +++ b/2016/program/generated-sessions.html @@ -77,13 +77,41 @@

- Your workplace can exert a lot of control over how much free software you use, what you're allowed to work on in your own time and what kinds of tools you become an expert in. New employees don't always negotiate their contracts to make sure they can continue contributing to free software and current employees aren't always successful at advocating for using free software tools, choosing free software technologies or contributing changes back upstream when they do rely on free software. We'll address what's possible, what your legal department is likely to be concerned about and how to be a smooth negotiator at work. Many companies could benefit tremendously from using Free and Open Source Software, but free software enthusiasts and institutional gatekeepers are coming from very different perspectives. Free software developers and users tend to be most familiar with free software's benefits when compared to proprietary solutions; user freedom, reusing code, public code review for bugs, increased project capacity and cost. The uninitiated may -- unfortunately -- be most familiar with the risks, some real and some perceived. Employers also benefit from having workers who are passionate about their work, are well-connected to the free software community and are constantly learning about new technologies from their peers outside the company, but new employee contracts rarely recognize this unless you ask. Conversations about contracts, choosing new technologies and sharing an employee's work with another entity are high stakes negotiations. With a solid understanding of what worries and motivates the other parties, you can become a savvy advocate for free software at work. This talk will help you gather information, frame the conversation and make the best possible case for using and contributing to free software at work. + Your workplace can exert a lot of control over how much free software you use, what you're allowed to work on in your own time and what kinds of tools you become an expert in. New employees don't always negotiate their contracts to make sure they can continue contributing to free software and current employees aren't always successful at advocating for using free software tools, choosing free software technologies or contributing changes back upstream when they do rely on free software. We'll address what's possible, what your legal department is likely to be concerned about and how to be a smooth negotiator at work. Many companies could benefit tremendously from using FOSS, but free software enthusiasts and institutional gatekeepers are coming from very different perspectives. Free software developers and users tend to be most familiar with free software's benefits when compared to proprietary solutions; user freedom, reusing code, public code review for bugs, increased project capacity and cost. The uninitiated may -- unfortunately -- be most familiar with the risks, some real and some perceived. Employers also benefit from having workers who are passionate about their work, are well-connected to the free software community and are constantly learning about new technologies from their peers outside the company, but new employee contracts rarely recognize this unless you ask. Conversations about contracts, choosing new technologies and sharing an employee's work with another entity are high stakes negotiations. With a solid understanding of what worries and motivates the other parties, you can become a savvy advocate for free software at work. This talk will help you gather information, frame the conversation and make the best possible case for using and contributing to free software at work.

+
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+

+ Beyond reproducible builds +

+
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+ + Holger Levsen, + Debian + +

+ +

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+

+ The presentation will describe how the Debian reproducible builds team made 85% of the Debian archive reproducible, what steps are left to reach 100% and what steps are needed beyond reproducible builds, so that every user can easily and meaningful benefit from them. +

+

+ The presentation will be largely about the the Debian work on the area, but it will also portrait other projects work on reproducible builds, as our goal is to make reproducible builds the norm for Free Software. ""It's not free software if it's not reproducible." +

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@@ -99,19 +127,19 @@ MaidSoft

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+

Shifting perspectives on the value of Free/Libre software development and Creative Commons content creation would open up opportunities for individuals working in these fields as we finally see a push towards an economy that makes sense for the Internet. This will be an overview of some platforms creating these new opportunities and ways we can think about how an economy can exist in the digital world beyond the artificial scarcity that comes with keeping code and content locked down or secret. The session should include group discussion about platforms, philosophies and experiences folks working in free/libre software and creative commons content.

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@@ -127,19 +155,19 @@ Kat Walsh (moderator)

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+

An 'intermediate' panel designed to provide a working overview of diversified libre media communities blended with per-project technical development updates, organizational adoption challenges, community-centric user-experience goals and other novel discussions regarding video production both generally and as it relates to conference video production (e.g., session recording and live-streaming).

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@@ -157,19 +185,19 @@ IRILL

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The license compliance industry purportedly helps information technology companies and other actors to use publicly available software, and in particular free software, in a way that is compliant with the relevant free software licenses. In this talk we will review why the license compliance industry exists and discuss, from an external point of view, how it operates. We will then highlight some potential ethical issues on the current best practices for license compliance in the industry, and propose community-oriented alternatives that we can build, today, on top of the existing corpus of publicly available free software.

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+ +

@@ -185,19 +213,19 @@ Dudley Street Neighborhood Initiative

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- This strategic action session is for anyone interested in the solidarity economy and asset-based community development. We'll compare notes, network, and outline the ecosystem of services needed to support the operations of community land trusts, worker co-operatives, sharing networks, and other democratic economic initiatives. We'll also explore how open source technology can help activists organize and manage investments, alliances, and information resources. Hopefully both hardware and software solutions will be discussed. I'll facilitate the session and am open to the "unconference" style, where the content of the session is decided by whoever shows up. I'll prepare an overview of the topic, with an emphasis on designing tactics for people without a background in technology. Security, control, and sustainability will be core concepts. + This strategic action session is for anyone interested in the solidarity economy and asset-based community development. We'll compare notes, network, and outline the ecosystem of services needed to support the operations of community land trusts, worker co-operatives, sharing networks, and other democratic economic initiatives. We'll also explore how free software technology can help activists organize and manage investments, alliances, and information resources. Hopefully both hardware and software solutions will be discussed. I'll facilitate the session and am open to the "unconference" style, where the content of the session is decided by whoever shows up. I'll prepare an overview of the topic, with an emphasis on designing tactics for people without a background in technology. Security, control, and sustainability will be core concepts.

- +

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@@ -213,19 +241,19 @@ Red Hat

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The full potential of free software is to break down the barriers to technology and to participation, and to include users and contributors from a wide range of backgrounds. There are four key steps for making communities diverse and inclusive: creating a welcoming environment, teaching skills, fostering connections, and increasing visibility of contributors from underrepresented backgrounds. Whether you are a prospective contributor wondering what an inclusive community looks like, a project contributor wanting to take concrete steps to improve your project's outreach, or a project leader looking to create a diversity strategy for your community, this talk will have the information you need. Marina will share best practices and inspiring stories from her years of experience in free software diversity outreach in roles including outreach specialist at Red Hat, co-organizer of Outreachy, advisor and director for the Ada Initiative, and outreach lead for GNOME.

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@@ -241,11 +269,11 @@ EFF

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Modern websites incorporate large amounts of third party resources. While these third parties can provide a better browsing experience all too often they abuse their inclusion on sites to be able to track information about your website's visitors. This type of non-consensual tracking must stop.

@@ -253,10 +281,10 @@ I'll cover how users can protect themselves while browsing, why some solutions are better than others, and why free software licenses have helped provide a rich ecosystem of non-proprietary tools. From Ad Block Plus, to Firefox's Tracking Protection, to the EFFs Privacy Badger extension I'll discuss how these tools work and how users can protect themselves from online surveillance.

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@@ -270,19 +298,19 @@

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Projects with a significant number of contributors and users will face decisions where they are no longer able to fulfill the needs and desires of all stakeholders. When this happens some people become upset. A subset of those people become so upset they vent their frustrations on Twitter. I have collected tweets that express a negative sentiment towards decisions made within free software communities and by decision makers for free software projects. These were then categorized based on the decision type (e.g. licensing) and outcome (e.g. switching licenses). I hope to create a greater community understanding of decision making processes, develop a discussion about how communities and decision makers can move forward to better balance the wants and needs of stakeholders, and make a few crass jokes that possibly violate the Code of Conduct.

- +

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@@ -337,19 +365,19 @@ GNU Project

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A look back at free software history, with a live demonstration of software from the past being used to deliver a presentation in 2016.

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@@ -375,19 +403,19 @@ UCSD

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Academic Institutions and their researchers are some of the biggest beneficiaries of free software development. While individual researchers have contributed greatly to free software, they usually do so outside of the scope of their regular jobs and to the detriment of their academic careers. At CUNY, we have taken steps to change this unacceptable situation. Please come to this session and exchange ideas and strategies for having contribtions to free software valued by the University.

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@@ -401,19 +429,19 @@

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Being a free software user isn't easy, especially when you're a college student. I spent a year at a school that taught Visual Basic as its primary programming language for freshmen and sophomores, where "Introduction to Programming" was an overview of the Windows OS, and where most of the professors would only accept papers typed in Times New Roman -- and I survived. In this session, I'll give students tips for making it through college while still adhering to the values we hold as free software users -- including alternative fonts, making a GNU/Linux live disk for use on public computers, avoiding the "Netflix and Chill" dilemma, and most importantly, ways to discuss free software with professors and fellow students. After leaving this session, students will feel empowered and able to hold their own as free users in a proprietary campus.

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@@ -429,11 +457,11 @@ MAME

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The MAME Project's main stated goal is to preserve historical computer hardware. The strategy for achieving that objective is to inspect the devices and then to develop emulators for them. While most hardware is undocumented and relies on proprietary firmware, the MAME development community has nurtured strong reverse engineering practices since its origins back in 1997.

@@ -441,10 +469,65 @@ The techniques that we need to master in order to develop new emulators include reverse engineering procedures that are also very useful for aiding in the creation of free firmware solutions to replace the non-free blobs used in a broad variety of daily-use devices. These skills are also useful for the development of free drivers for undocumented devices and in the porting of operating systems and BIOSes to new hardware platforms. We need to strengthen a community of skillful hardware reverse engineers so that we can solve the freedom issues denounced by projects such as Linux-Libre and Libreboot.

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+ Inessential Weirdnesses in Free Software +

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+ + + Sumana Harihareswara + + +

+ +

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+ I'll discuss aspects of our behavior and jargon that stop or slow down some new users and contributors in free software, so that in outreach efforts, we can be better at bridging the gap. These include git's terrible UI, our in-person conference structures, and widespread scorn of and dismissiveness towards team sports, Top 40 music, patriotism, religion, small talk, and Microsoft Windows. In getting rid of unnecessary barriers, we need to watch out for disrespectful oversimplification, so I'll outline ways you can know if one of our weirdnesses is necessary. And I'll talk about how to mitigate the effects of an inessential weirdness in your outreach efforts. +

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+ Introduction to Python in Blender +

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+ + + Bassam Kurdali + + , + Urchin + +

+ +

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+ Blender is a versatile Free 3D animation program that is most famously used as an artist tool. However, it also has a rich, pythonic and consistent api that allows extending and controlling the application. We'll explore techniques to use this api for creating 3D meshes, that could be a foundation/ inspiration for generative architecture or art. +Familiarity with Blender is not required (but recommended) and at least a basic knowledge of Python would be helpful for this workshop. +

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@@ -458,19 +541,19 @@

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LittleSis is a free software, wiki-style database that tracks connections between the world's most powerful people and organizations. In the workshop, participants will be trained in the site's basic functions (e.g. editing profile pages and searching for interlocks between corporations) and advanced functions (e.g using the site's Oligrapher tool to create maps of information stored in the database). We will also share stories about the ways in which LittleSis and power analysis research have been used in movement and organizing contexts, including how activists in St. Louis used LittleSis to map and challenge the local corporate Powers Behind the Police and how activists in Philadelphia are using LittleSis to research the corporate entities behind education privatization. Participants will leave with an understanding of how to use LittleSis, as well as inspiration for how they can start their own movement research teams to map the powers that be in their communities.

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@@ -486,19 +569,19 @@ Loomio

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Loomio is free software that we created after experiencing the transformative potential of participatory decision making, and its limitations, during the Occupy movement in New Zealand. Scaling is impossible if people have to be in the same place at the same time so we developed software that allows online groups to be inclusive and fast, enabling deliberative discussion that taps the collective intelligence of the group while moving actively to shared agreement and action. Loomio is free to maximize access and inclusion, knowing that people who are on the margins of power are the least likely to have a voice. This session will engage participants in how Loomio works -- in fact they can sign up ahead of time to inform the session! I'll share lessons and challenges from cases across the 95 countries where citizen activists and workers are experimenting with better, fast platforms to collaborate. Participants will be inspired to use Loomio to support their groups.

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@@ -514,11 +597,11 @@ GNU Project

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Imagine a world where surveillance is the default and users must opt-in to privacy. Imagine that your every action is logged and analyzed to learn how you behave, what your interests are, and what you might do next. Imagine that, even on your fully free operating system, @@ -531,10 +614,10 @@ computing -- your actions and your data might be in control by a remote entity, that propagates to nearly every aspect of the average users' lives -- from their PCs to their phones, to their TVs and beyond. But before we can stand up and demand back our freedoms, we must understand what we're being robbed of, how it's being done, and what can (or can't) be done to stop it.

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@@ -548,11 +631,11 @@ that propagates to nearly every aspect of the average users' lives -- from their

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By sheer luck and opportunity, a group of four doctors in 2004 at a restaurant used napkins to sketch the data model of what they thought would be a simple electronic medical records system.

@@ -563,10 +646,10 @@ that propagates to nearly every aspect of the average users' lives -- from their This session shares a decade of running a lean organization to provide free medical records software, what has worked and what threatens our sustainability.

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@@ -582,20 +665,20 @@ that propagates to nearly every aspect of the average users' lives -- from their FSF Latin America

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In fiction, we have often faced our fear that man-made creatures will become smart enough to subjugate us. As technology evolves, the Singularity may seem an inevitable looming future, but such intelligent beings have actually been with us for a very long time. Over many decades, they disabled the checks intended to keep them under our control, and turned most of us into their much-needed servants, who now live in an artificial reality they created to control us, while our planet can hardly support our life much longer. These creatures grew more powerful and smarter with our technological advances, but then they sent their agents back to disable our defenses and the leaders of our resistance, turning many of our tools and much of our infrastructure against us. They vaporized our freedoms, and a dark cloud now covers most of the planet. We still have one card left up our sleeves to tame these creatures, but we need more Neos and Connors to play it successfully. Are you up for it?

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@@ -616,19 +699,69 @@ Singularity may seem an inevitable looming future, but such intelligent beings h GNU Guix

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User freedom is threatened by the growing complexity of current deployment and packaging directions. Running software (especially server/networked software) is becoming too hard for the average user, so many users are turning to the dangerous path of relying on large corporations to do their computing for them. What can GNU do to turn the tide here? Enter GNU Guix and GuixSD! This talk will walk through Guix's unique positioning to provide totally free and reproducible systems. A path will be laid out on how Guix could be used as a foundation for easy to run and maintain computing for everyone, how you can get Guix and GuixSD running, and how to get involved in the most hacking-friendly package manager/distro duo ever!

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+ Take control of your communication with Ring! +

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+ + + Adrien Béraud + + and + + Guillaume Roguez + + , + Savoir-faire Linux + +

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+ Do you know + + Ring + + ? It's a free software for real-time communication. Developed by + + Savoir-faire Linux + + and a community of contributors, it operates in peer-to-peer - so + + without a central server + + . Communication is tightly coupled to the sense of liberty. Ring let users keep control of their exchanges. +

+

+ It allows to make audio or video calls, and to send messages - in confidence and safely. Currently in an alpha version, Ring is even more than that! Available on GNU/Linux, Windows, Mac OSX, and Android, it can be associated with a conventional phone service, integrated with any connected device, and adapted to the specific needs of users. It is a combination of technologies and innovations opening all kinds of perspectives for everyone! +

+

+ During this presentation, you will understand how Ring is built to respect privacy and how you can use it. You will also discover why it is an essential tool for the future and how Ring defends freedom. +

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The surveillance state is driven by secrecy. But everything leaves a data trail and the intelligence community itself is no exception -- even the NSA is vulnerable to surveillance. Transparency Toolkit is a free software project that helps anyone investigate surveillance programs.

@@ -654,10 +787,10 @@ Singularity may seem an inevitable looming future, but such intelligent beings h By making tools to help collect and analyze publicly available data like resumes, job listings, social media, and government contracts, we are using free software and open data to track and expose the surveillance state. In this talk, I'll discuss some of the interesting things we've found, how Transparency Toolkit's software works, and how people can use our tools to investigate issues they care about.

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@@ -673,27 +806,23 @@ Singularity may seem an inevitable looming future, but such intelligent beings h Hampshire College

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- The free software movement has done well in the last few years, and has even inspired a new generation of activists advocating for software -freedom. However, in a software-driven society where everything from cars, watches, and even medical devices run on non-free software, the free software community has its work cut out for it. In order to enact significant social change, we need to work with legislators, other + The free software movement has done well in the last few years, and has even inspired a new generation of activists advocating for software freedom. However, in a software-driven society where everything from cars, watches, and even medical devices run on non-free software, the free software community has its work cut out for it. In order to enact significant social change, we need to work with legislators, other activists, and local community leaders. Their help is crucial.

- How do we connect our community to other groups? In order to gain support, the first step we must take is to engage with the public on how -non-free software can affect their everyday lives negatively. Even the most non-technical person can become engaged with the social and -technical benefits to free software, if given the chance. This session will discuss how each and every one of us in the free software movement -can engage with others, promoting the ideals of a society running on free software in a way that each person can personally appreciate. + How do we connect our community to other groups? In order to gain support, the first step we must take is to engage with the public on how non-free software can affect their everyday lives negatively. Even the most non-technical person can become engaged with the social and technical benefits to free software, if given the chance. This session will discuss how each and every one of us in the free software movement can engage with others, promoting the ideals of a society running on free software in a way that each person can personally appreciate.

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@@ -707,18 +836,18 @@ can engage with others, promoting the ideals of a society running on free softwa

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What could possibly make thousands of free software advocates, ham radio operators, researchers and physicians stand together? One obscure FCC rulemaking proposal on wireless radios. Eric Schultz, one of the leaders of the Save Wifi Initiative, discusses the details of the extreme proposals of FCC to control how you use your devices. You'll learn the history of regulators quietly locking down wireless radios and how it's unintentionally extending to a lockdown of the operating systems of devices. Finally, you'll find out some of the problems with proposed workarounds for the the FCC lock down proposals.

- +

- + diff --git a/2016/speakers.ids b/2016/speakers.ids new file mode 100644 index 00000000..c6f1fbba --- /dev/null +++ b/2016/speakers.ids @@ -0,0 +1,45 @@ +{ + "Daniel Kahn Gillmor": "gillmor", + "Allison Randal": "randal", + "Karen Sandler": "sandler", + "Edward Snowden": "snowden", + "Richard Stallman": "stallman", + "Emmanuel": "emmanuel", + "Michaela R. Brown": "brown", + "Brian Callahan": "callahan", + "George Chriss": "chriss", + "Marianne Corvellec": "corvellec", + "Adrien Béraud": "beraud", + "Molly de Blanc": "blanc", + "Scott Dexter": "dexter", + "Richard Fontana": "fontana", + "Mike Gerwitz": "gerwitz", + "Judy Gichoya": "gichoya", + "Erin Glass": "glass", + "Shauna Gordon-McKeon": "gordon-mckeon", + "Molly Gott": "gott", + "Sumana Harihareswara": "harihareswara", + "Parker Higgins": "higgins", + "MJ Kaplan": "kaplan", + "Bradley Kuhn": "kuhn", + "Bassam Kurdali": "kurdali", + "Jonathan Le Lous": "lous", + "Matt Lee": "lee", + "Lillian Lemmer": "lemmer", + "Holger Levsen": "levsen", + "M. C. McGrath": "mcgrath", + "Evan Misshula": "misshula", + "Deb Nicholson": "nicholson", + "Alexandre Oliva": "oliva", + "Paige Peterson": "peterson", + "Cooper Quintin": "quintin", + "Guillaume Roguez": "roguez", + "Felipe Correa da Silva Sanches": "sanches", + "Eric Schultz": "schultz", + "Andrew Seeder": "seeder", + "Matthew Skomarovsky": "skomarovsky", + "David Thompson": "thompson", + "Christopher Webber": "webber", + "Marina Zhurakhinskaya": "zhurakhinskaya", + "Stefano Zacchiroli": "zacchiroli" +} \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/2016/speakers.noids b/2016/speakers.noids new file mode 100644 index 00000000..4fafa09b --- /dev/null +++ b/2016/speakers.noids @@ -0,0 +1,3 @@ +[ + "Kat Walsh" +] \ No newline at end of file -- 2.25.1