CVS update: openprivacy/htdocs/notes

From: cvs@openprivacy.org
Date: Wed Jan 03 2001 - 13:47:56 PST


Date: Wednesday January 3, 19101 @ 13:47
Author: fen
CVSWEB Options: -------------------

Main CVSWeb: http://openprivacy.org/cgi-bin/cvsweb/cvsweb.cgi

View this module: http://openprivacy.org/cgi-bin/cvsweb/cvsweb.cgi/openprivacy/htdocs/notes

-----------------------------------

Update of /usr/local/cvsroot/openprivacy/htdocs/notes
In directory openprivacy.org:/home/fen/projects/openprivacy/htdocs/notes

Modified Files:
        cfpcfp.txt
Log Message:
final versions sent

*****************************************************************
File: openprivacy/htdocs/notes/cfpcfp.txt

CVSWEB Options: -------------------

CVSWeb: Annotate this file: http://openprivacy.org/cgi-bin/cvsweb/cvsweb.cgi/openprivacy/htdocs/notes/cfpcfp.txt?annotate=1.6

CVSWeb: View this file: http://openprivacy.org/cgi-bin/cvsweb/cvsweb.cgi/openprivacy/htdocs/notes/cfpcfp.txt?rev=1.6&content-type=text/x-cvsweb-markup

CVSWeb: Diff to previous version: http://openprivacy.org/cgi-bin/cvsweb/cvsweb.cgi/openprivacy/htdocs/notes/cfpcfp.txt.diff?r1=1.6&r2=1.5

-----------------------------------

Index: openprivacy/htdocs/notes/cfpcfp.txt
diff -u openprivacy/htdocs/notes/cfpcfp.txt:1.5 openprivacy/htdocs/notes/cfpcfp.txt:1.6
--- openprivacy/htdocs/notes/cfpcfp.txt:1.5 Fri Dec 29 23:57:00 2000
+++ openprivacy/htdocs/notes/cfpcfp.txt Wed Jan 3 13:47:56 2001
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
-$Id: cfpcfp.txt,v 1.5 2000/12/30 07:57:00 fen Exp $
+$Id: cfpcfp.txt,v 1.6 2001/01/03 21:47:56 fen Exp $
 
 BOF proposal:
 
@@ -59,6 +59,8 @@
 
 
 ===========================================================================
+===========================================================================
+
 To:
 Simson Garfinkle <simsong@vineyard.net>,
 Barbara Simons <simons@acm.org>,
@@ -90,7 +92,9 @@
 
 Thanks for your consideration and I hope to see you in Boston this spring.
 
-========
+=========================================================================
+------------------- submitted 1:45pm, 2001.01.03 ------------------------
+=========================================================================
 
 Title: Is Privacy a Value-added Proposition in the Digital Marketplace?
 
@@ -100,16 +104,86 @@
 user privacy the next step toward making the digital economy the marketplace
 of choice? will the consumer, finally, truly be king? or will marketers
 continue to thwart reasonable privacy initiatives, fearing a loss of
-valuable profile segments and their ability to target same? will marketers
-continue to acquire invasive consumer data?
+valuable profile segments and their ability to target same?
 
 The answer may lie with strongly verifiable and authenticatable profiles
 that provide total user information while enabling novel data mining
 techniques that satisfy both the consumer's quest for privacy and the
-marketer's thirst for knowledge - and power. We will explore this and other
+marketer's thirst for knowledge. We will explore this and other
 alternatives in our panel discussion.
 
+Moderator:
+
+Fen Labalme
+<p>
+Fen Labalme is a primary developer of OpenPrivacy, an Open Source,
+cryptographically secure, transparent to the user, distributed platform for
+creating, maintaining, and selectively sharing profile information (e.g., a
+marketplace for anonymous demographic profiles). Since creating the first
+personalized information system in 1979 (NewsPeek, at the then-nascent MIT
+Media Lab), Fen has been continuously evolving his goal of privacy-enhanced
+personalization. As part of his research into personalized information, he
+coined the term broadcatch to describe a suite of "many-to-one" technologies
+designed to provide information the way people really want it: timely,
+trusted, and on target. Fen continued to push the
+personalization-with-privacy envelope as co-founder of Lumeria Inc., where
+he furthered his work in agent and infomediary technology; he is the
+co-author of Lumeria's SuperProfile white paper. He believes that current
+technologies such as Java, XML, and public key cryptography, combined with
+greater power and bandwidth at the desktop, will at last enable his vision
+to become a reality.
+<p>
+Confirmed panelists:
+<p>
+Lorrie Faith Cranor
+<p>
+Dr. Lorrie Faith Cranor is a Senior Technical Staff Member in the
+Secure Systems Research Department at AT&T Labs-Research Shannon
+Laboratory in Florham Park, New Jersey. She is chair of the Platform
+for Privacy Preferences Project (P3P) Specification Working Group at
+the World Wide Web Consortium, and co-creator of the Publius
+censorship-resistant publishing system. Her research has focused on a
+variety of areas where technology and policy issues interact, including
+online privacy, electronic voting, and spam.
+<p>
+Simson Garfinkle (author, Database Nation)
+<br>
+Deborah Pierce (privacy counsel for EFF)
+<p>
+Awaiting confirmation (3 will be added to the 6-member panel):
+<p>
+Ted Wham (president, "Database Marketing for the Internet")
+<br>
+Barbara Simons (ACM)
+<br>
+Tim O'Reilly (Open Source advocate)
+<br>
+Richard Purcell or Greg Hampson (Microsoft)
+<br>
+Craig Nathan (MEconomy)
+
 ========
+
+Contact information:
+
+Fen Labalme <br>
+1899 California Street #9 / San Francisco, CA 94109 <br>
+phone: 415-749-0499 <br>
+mailto:fen@openprivacy.org
+<p>
+Lorrie Faith Cranor <br>
+mailto: lorrie@research.att.com
+<p>
+Deborah Pierce <br>
+mailto:dsp@eff.org
+<p>
+Simson Garfinkle <br>
+mailto:slg@walden.cambridge.ma.us
+<p>
+More to follow when the rest of the panel firms up...
+
+=========================================================================
+=========================================================================
 
 Potential panelists and (for my reference only!) affiliations:
 



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