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ANNOUNCE: Scientists for Labour encryption and escrow conf, Nov 14th,"Liberty on the Line"
- Subject: ANNOUNCE: Scientists for Labour encryption and escrow conf, Nov 14th,"Liberty on the Line"
- From: Caspar Bowden <[email protected]>
- Date: Sun, 27 Oct 1996 12:40:35 -0000
- Sender: [email protected]
Full details: http://www.shef.ac.uk/~sfl/meetings/itconf.html
PLEASE DISTRIBUTE AND LINK TO YOUR WEB-SITE:
Scientists for Labour - IT & Communications Group
Conference on Information Superhighway Policy
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"Liberty on the Line : Opportunities and Dangers of the Superhighway"
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Chaired by Geoff Hoon MP, Shadow Minister for IT
Thursday 14th November 1996, 9am - 5:30pm
MSF Centre, 33-37 Moreland Street, London EC1 (Angel tube)
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For further details or to reserve a place contact:
Caspar Bowden, SfL IT & Comms co-ordinator ([email protected])
The debate over Internet regulation in the UK has focused mainly on
censorship, but the standards for control of "encryption keys", currently
being formulated nationally and internationally, will lay the permanent
foundations on which the Information Society is built. The long-term
implications for civil liberties have received little public attention
outside the Internet community.
Scientists for Labour is hosting a conference to look at the data protection
and economic issues arising from the integration of digital signatures,
electronic copyright management, and digital cash. What kind of regulatory
apparatus will allow rapid growth of an information economy, but prevent
misuse of personal data ?
*) New government proposals on "Trusted Third Parties", which aim to preserve
law enforcement and national security capabilities for warranted
interception of communications (to fight crime and terrorism), place only
procedural not technical limits on the scope of Superhighway surveillance.
*) Super-computers have the potential to conduct random electronic "fishing
expeditions" against the whole population. Telephone and letter
interception cannot be automated : digital monitoring can.
Will legal safeguards against abuse offer adequate protection in perpetuity,
or can cryptographic protocols be designed which make Superhighway mass-
surveillance impossible, while still allowing criminals to be targeted ?
Computer and legal policy experts will explain the principles of the
different technologies, and the international and commercial context, in a
search for interdisciplinary solutions.
The attendance fee is ?5 (?2 unwaged ; SfL members free)
For press information please contact :
Bobbie Nicholls, SfL Press Officer, Fax: 01235 529172
The Scientists for Labour home page (http://www.shef.ac.uk/~sfl/)
has information on how to join SfL, or contact the Secretary :
Dr Robin Walters ([email protected])
Programme
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9.00-9.30 Registration SfL members free, non-members ?5 (?2 unwaged)
9.30-9.45 Geoff Hoon MP Introduction
9.45-10.45 Dr.John Leach Cryptography and developments in Trusted Third
Party policy
10.45-11.45 Dr.Ross Anderson Some problems with the Trusted Third Party
programme
11.45-12.00 Coffee
12.00-12.30 Simon Davies Escrow and the hidden threat to human rights
and privacy
12.30-1.00 Elizabeth France (Data Protection Registrar)
1.00-2.00 Buffet lunch
2.00-2.45 Prof. Charles Public policy and legal aspects of Intellectual
Oppenheim Property Rights
2:45-3.30 Alistair Kelman Electronic Copyright Management :
Possibilities and Problems
3.30-3.45 Tea
3:45-4:45 Andrew Graham Will the Information Superhighway enhance or
diminish democracy ?
4.45-5.30 Panel Session Discussion (inc. Robert Schifreen)
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