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Diffie, Blaze, Berman, Rivest, Bizdos
C-punks,
To those of you who are not members of the American Association for the
Advancement of Science (i.e. subscribers to SCIENCE Magazine) I thought I
would forward some information on their upcoming meeting in Atlanta.
Enclosed is a response I received in response to a query to the address
[email protected].
The response was from
[email protected]
and I quote:
You asked specifically about the "Privacy and Encryption in an Electronic
Environment" session. Organized by Alex Fowler of AAAS and Caroline Whitbeck of
MIT, this session is scheduled for Tuesday, February 21. There will be speakers
in both the morning and the afternoon.
>> Blurb in printed version I have includes the following:
>> Learn about the rapid deployment of encryption technologies, their use
>> in ensuring communications security, the legal and ethical
>> interpretations of privacy, and the ongoing debate between government
>> and non-government professionals
Morning speakers
Matt Blaze, AT&T Bell Labs
Topic: Deciphering the Mechanics of Encryption
George Trubow, John Marshall Law School
Topic: Privacy Issues in an Electronic Environment
Joan Winston*, U.S. Congress Office of Technology Assessment
Topic: Privacy, Encryption, and Public Policy
Jerry Berman*, Electronic Frontier Foundation
Topic: Clinton's Clipper Chip Proposal
Afternoon speakers
Marc Rotenberg, Electronic Privacy Info Ctr
Topic: The Responsibility of Computer Professionals
Ronald Rivest, MIT
Topic: Encryption and Scientific Freedom
Peter Szolovits*, MIT
Topic: Privacy, Encryption, and the Proposed Health Care Identifier
James Bidzos, RSA Data Security
Topic: Encryption and the Protection of Corporate Privacy
Jeffrey Ritter: Ohio Supercomputer Ctr
Topic: International Aspects of Privacy and Encryption
* Invited speaker, not yet confirmed
If you have any further questions, please feel free to contact us. We hope to
see you in Atlanta.
Robert Smariga
Registrar
AAAS Meetings
1333 H St, NW
Washington, DC 20005
phone: (202) 326-6410
fax: (202) 289-4021
end quote.
I note that I also asked for info regarding the Information Security
session which I guess I have to key in :-)
Information Security: Principles and Public Policy
Monday pm, Feb. 20th, 1995
Organized by Joan Feigenbaum, AT&T Bell Labs
To address concerns about the authenticity, integrity, and privacy of
electronic information: An overview of the mathematical theory of
information security, the social and legal structure in which the digital
society is emerging, anad the new service and products available.
Speakers:
Joan Feigenbaum, AT&T Bell Labs
The Mathematical Theory of Information Security
Stuart Haber, Surety Technologies, Inc.
Ensuring the Integrity of Digital Documents
Daniel Schutzer, Citicorp Tech. Office
Secure Consumer Banking over the Internet
Whitfield Diffey, Sun Microsystems
Rights and Responsibilities in a Digital World
ObCurrentThread: I'd sign this if it were a lot easier too.
But then, some Cypherpunks write genetic code.
C. J. Leonard ( / "DNA is groovy"
\ / - Watson & Crick
<[email protected]> / \ <-- major groove
( \
Finger for public key \ )
Strong-arm for secret key / <-- minor groove
Thumb-screws for pass-phrase / )