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Spatial Databases, Law, and Information Policy conference
Forwarded-by: Lee Tien <[email protected]>
Forwarded-by: [email protected] (Trotter Hardy)
From: Harlan Onsrud <[email protected]>
Date: Thu, 8 Sep 1994 11:10:08 -0400
Subject: Conf on Law, Information Policy and Spatial Databases
THE CONFERENCE on LAW and INFORMATION POLICY for
SPATIAL DATABASES
October 28-29, 1994
Arizona State University
College of Law
Tempe, Arizona
SPONSORS
National Center for Geographic Information and Analysis
Center for the Study of Law, Science and Technology, Arizona
State University College of Law
CONFERENCE OVERVIEW
Geographic information systems (GIS) and their associated
databases are gaining widespread use throughout government and
the commercial sector in our communities, the nation, and the
world. These automated mapping and analysis systems are
allowing the collection, integration and interrogation of vast
amounts of data. The data and processing capabilities supplied by
the technology will constitute a significant component of the
emerging national information infrastructure. This enabling
technology holds out the promise of increased efficiency in
commerce, improvements in the environment, health, and safety,
increased convenience for consumers, increases in participatory
government, and improved public and private decision-making
generally. However, increased use of detailed databases and
processing capabilities also poses threats to the ideals of
democracies and rights of individuals - the ideals of freedom,
security, privacy, and open and free access to government. As we
continue to move toward global economies and international
networked environments, the need to reconcile competing social,
economic, and political interests in digital geographic data will
greatly expand.
This conference brings together legal and information policy
experts with geographic information system specialists to explore
four interrelated aspects of information law critical to the handling
of geographic information: namely,
(1) intellectual property rights in spatial databases, with particular
emphasis on copyright;
(2) access rights of citizens to publicly held information, including
the policies of government agencies in charging for geographic
data;
(3) protecting personal privacy in using geographic information
systems; and
(4) liability in connection with the use, sharing, and distribution of
GIS data and analysis results.
PRELIMINARY PROGRAM
Friday, October 28
Welcome and Introduction (7:45 am - ASU Law School, Pedrick
Great Hall)
Access to Government's Spatial Information I (8:00 a.m.)
Moderator: Robert Reis, NCGIA and School of Law,
SUNY-Buffalo
Establishing a Legal Setting and Organizational Model for
Affordable Access to Government Owned Information
Management Technology
Hugh Archer, Executive Consultant
Plangraphics, Inc., Frankfurt, Kentucky
A Case for Commercialization of Government Information
Products and Services
Lori Peterson Dando, Esquire
County Attorney's Office (former), Hastings, MN
Spatial Databases and Information Policy: A British Perspective
David Rhind, Director
Ordnance Survey, United Kingdom
Question and Answer Session
Intellectual Property Rights in Spatial Databases I (9:00a.m.)
Moderator: Helen Sharretts-Sullivan, Office of the General
Counsel, Defense Mapping Agency
Copyright, Licensing, and Cost Recovery: A Legal, Economic, and
Policy Analysis
William Holland, Executive Director
Wisconsin Land Information Board, Madison, WI
Surveyors' Copyright in Plans of Survey: Law and Policy
John D. McLaughlin, Geographical Engineering and
Norman Siebrasse, College of Law, University of New
Brunswick, Fredericton Canada
Copyright in Electronic Maps
Dennis S. Karjala
College of Law, Arizona State University
Question and Answer Session
Break (Coffee, tea, etc.- College of Law Lobby) (10:00 am)
Intellectual Property Rights in Spatial Databases II (10:30 am)
Moderator: Elaine Albright, Chair, American Library
Association Committee on Telecommunications
Rights in Government-generated Data
Jessica Litman
School of Law, Wayne State University
Lessons from the Past: Legal and Medical Databases
Anne Wells Branscomb
Program on Information Resources Policy, Harvard
University
European Community Directive on Databases
Pamela Samuelson
School of Law, University of Pittsburgh
Question and Answer Session
Access to Government's Spatial Information II (11:30 a.m.)
Moderator: Dorthy Chambers, J.D., Chief, Branch of
Information Access Policy and Coordination, Bureau of
Land Management
A Review of Alaska's Public Information Access Laws
Representative Kay Brown
Alaska Legislature, Anchorage, Alaska
Issues Concerning Access to Electronic Records
Barbara Petersen, Staff Attorney
Florida Legislature Joint Committee on Information
Technology Resources
Federal Information Dissemination and Pricing Policy
Peter Weiss, Senior Policy Analyst
Office of Management and Budget, Washington, D.C.
Question and Answer Session
Lunch (12:30 pm - Several eating places within walking distance)
Access to Government's Spatial Information III (2:00 pm)
Moderator: Earl Epstein, J.D., School of Natural
Resources, Ohio State University
Effects of Data Policies on the Evolution of the National Spatial
Data Infrastructure
Nancy Tosta, Staff Director
U.S. Federal Geographic Data Committee
The Public Interest and the Cost of Government Information:
Experience Under the Federal FOIA
David Sobel, Legal Counsel
Electronic Privacy Information Center, Washington D.C.
Promoting a Free Access, Minimal Cost-recovery, Royalty
Arrangement for State Held Geographic Information Systems
Keene Matsunaga, Esquire, and Jack Dangermond,
President, Environmental Systems Research Institute and
Prudence Adler, Assistant Director, Association of
Research Libraries
Question and Answer Session
Access to Government's Spatial Information IV (3:00 p.m.)
Moderator: Frederick K. Ganyon, J.D., Deputy Chief,
Nautical Charting Division, NOAA
The Value of Geographic Information. A review of international
policies in cost recovery, privatization and commercialization of
information gathering and dissemination.
Krysia Rybaczuk and Michael Blakemore
Mountjoy Research Centre, University of Durham, United
Kingdom
Remote Sensing Law: Obstacle or Opportunity for GIS?
Joanne Gabrynowicz, Associate Professor - Remote
Sensing Law and Policy Department of Space Studies,
University of North Dakota
Implications of Increased Access to Geographic Information
Dr. Ronald Abler, Executive Director
Association of American Geographers
Question and Answer Session
Break (4:00 p.m. - coffee, tea, soft drink - College of Law lobby)
Liability for Spatial Data I (4:30 p.m.)
Moderator: Daniel Strouse, Director, Center for the Study
of Law, Science, and Technology, ASU College of Law
Tort and Criminal Liability as a Function of the Right to Control
Content
Henry Perritt, Professor of Law
Villanova University School of Law
Local Government Liability for Erroneous Data: Law and Policy in
a Changing Environment
R. Jerome Anderson, Esquire, and Alan R. Stewart, Esquire
Plangraphics, Inc., Frankfurt, Kentucky
A Case Study in the Misuse of GIS: Siting a Low-Level
Radioactive Waste Disposal Facility in New York State
Mark Monmonier, Department of Geography
Syracuse University
Question and Answer Session
Saturday, October 29
Liability for Spatial Data II (8:00 a.m.)
Moderator: t.b.a.
Liability for GIS Datasets as applied to the Commercial, Non-
profit and Other Private Sectors
Bishop Dansby, Esquire
GIS Law and Policy Institute
Exploitation of Intellectual Property: Liability, Retrenchment and a
Proposal for Change
Edward J. Obloy, General Counsel, and B. Helen Sharretts-
Sullivan, Defense Mapping Agency
Certification of GIS Databases: Reliance and Liability Implications
Lawrence Ayers, Executive Vice President and Cliff
Kottman, Exec. Manager of Federal Systems, Intergraph
Corporation
Spatial Data Analysis in the Formation of Public Policy and its
Acceptance as Evidence: A Litigator's Perspective on Geographic
Information and Analysis
Terry Simmons, PhD, Attorney at Law
Reno, Nevada
Question and Answer Session
Protecting Privacy in Using Geographic Information Systems I
(9:15 a.m.)
Moderator: Lawrence Winer, College of Law, ASU
In Plain View: Geographic Information Systems and the Problem
of Privacy
Michael R. Curry
Department of Geography, UCLA
Privacy and the Intersection of Geographic Information and
Intelligent Vehicle Highway Systems
Sheri Alpert and Kingsley Haynes
The Institute of Public Policy, George Mason University
Privacy: Alternative Protection Scenarios
Dr. David Flaherty
Information and Privacy Commissioner of British
Columbia
Question and Answer Session
Break (10:15 - Coffee, tea, juice & rolls - College of Law Lobby)
Protecting Privacy in Using Geographic Information Systems II
(10:45 am)
Moderator: t.b.a.
Fair Information Practices of the Information Industry
Steven Metalitz
Information Industry Association, Washington DC
Marketing Community Perspectives on Protecting Privacy
Tom Gordon, President and General Manager
Equifax National Decision Systems, San Diego CA
European Perspectives on Protection of Privacy
Charles D. Raab, Department of Politics
University of Edinburgh, Scotland
Question and Answer Session
Protecting Privacy in Using Geographic Information Systems III
(11:45 a.m.)
Moderator: t.b.a.
Some Information Age Techno-fallacies and Some Principles for
Protecting Privacy
Gary Marx, Chair
Department of Sociology, University of Colorado-Boulder
Protecting Indigenous Peoples' Privacy from "Eyes in the Sky"
Wayne Madsen
Computer Sciences Corporation, Fairfax, VA
Protecting Privacy in Using Geographic Information Systems
Harlan J. Onsrud, Jeff Johnson, and Xavier Lopez
NCGIA, University of Maine, Orono, Maine
Question and Answer Session
Closing Announcements (12:45 p.m.)
******************************************************
REGISTRATION FORM
Maximum registration will be 250 participants
NO ON-SITE REGISTRATION
[ ] Full Registration
(before October 3) $145
(after October 3) $195
[ ] Student Registration $70
Name: __________________________________
Title: ___________________________________
Affiliation: ______________________________
Address: ________________________________
________________________________________
________________________________________
________________________________________
Phone: __________________________________
FAX: ___________________________________
Email: __________________________________
Make check payable (in US dollars) to:
University of Maine
and send to:
Conference on Law and Information Policy for Spatial Databases
NCGIA
5711 Boardman Hall, Rm. 348
University of Maine, Orono, Me 04469-5711
******************************************************
LOCATION & TRANSPORTATION
The conference will take place on October 28 and the morning of
October 29, 1994 in the Pedrick Great Hall at the Arizona State
University College of Law. The conference has been scheduled to
follow immediately GIS/LIS '94 in Phoenix, Arizona. Those
attending GIS/LIS and then staying on for this conference should
be able to take advantage of reduced airfares because of the
Saturday night stay over. The College of Law in Tempe is located
approximately ten miles from downtown Phoenix or five miles
from the airport. Taxis and hotel shuttles are convenient and
moderately priced. For those traveling by car, take the University
Avenue exit on Interstate 10 and head east to the ASU campus.
The campus is immediately adjacent to Old Town Tempe which
contains numerous restaurants and shops within easy walking
distance.
COOPERATING ORGANIZATIONS
American Bar Association Section of Science and Technology
American Congress on Surveying and Mapping
American Society of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing
AM/FM International
Association of American Geographers
Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility
Federal Geographic Data Committee
Information Industry Association
National States Geographic Information Council
Urban and Regional Information Systems Association
CONFERENCE SUPPORTERS
Federal Agencies:
Bureau of Land Management
Coast and Geodetic Survey
Defense Mapping Agency
Federal Geographic Data Committee
Environmental Systems Research Institute
Equifax National Decision Systems
Intergraph Corporation
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
Conference on Law and Information Policy for Spatial Databases
5711 Boardman Hall, Rm 348
University of Maine, Orono, Maine 04469-5711
Phone: (207) 581-2149
Fax: (207) 581-2206
E-mail: [email protected]
___________________________________________
Harlan J. Onsrud
National Center for Geographic Information and Analysis
5711 Boardman Hall, Rm. 348
University of Maine
Orono, Maine 04469-5711
Phone (207) 581-2175
FAX (207)581-2206
E-mail: [email protected]