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June 9-June 10, 2011 Harvard Law School & Maxwell Dworkin Hall, SEAS, Harvard University
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Concept
Technology is transforming privacy and reshaping what it means to be in public. Our interactions—personal, professional, financial, etc.—increasingly take place online, where they are archived, searchable, and easily replicated. Our activities in the physical worlds are digitized by the ubiquitous cameras operated by store-owners, government agencies and our friends, who post and tag pictures of us. We share our location both deliberately, via social media updates, and inescapably, via our location-aware telephones.
Discussions of privacy often focus solely on the question of how to protect privacy. But a thriving public sphere, whether physical or virtual, is also essential to society. The balance of social mores and personal freedom in these spaces is what makes cooperation and collective action possible.
Design reflects a society’s beliefs about private and public life. A city with welcoming parks, plazas and verandas expresses a public culture – and one where blank garage-door walls line empty streets does not. Yet design is also an agent of change. New media are our new public forums and the design of their interfaces affects what people reveal, wittingly or not. Design is essential in making legible the line between private and public, and in showing people the significance of the information they are revealing. Most importantly, in an era in which technology is collapsing the boundaries that maintained our privacy, we must understand how design can promote tolerance. For as our world becomes more public, it is only with heightened tolerance that we can maintain the freedom we value in privacy.
This symposium will bring together computer scientists, ethnographers, architects, historians, artists and legal scholars to discuss how design influences privacy and public space, how it shapes and is shaped by human behavior and experience, and how it can cultivate norms such as tolerance and diversity.
About the Conference
Resources
Please add links to papers, articles, blogposts, and other items related to privacy and of interest to symposium participants to this page. Users need to create an account to edit this wiki -- click on the link in the top right corner of this page to obtain a username/password.
- boyd, danah. rctiSocial Privacy in Networked Publics: Teens’ Attitudes, Practices, and Strategies
- Donath, Judith. e991Invisible Walls and All-Seeing Eyes chapter from book-in-progress. (Comments welcome!)
- a few pieces by Jerry Kang
- indo terbaruPervasive Computing: Embedding the Public Sphere, Washington and Lee Law Review (2005) (with Dana Cuff) (computing and public sphere in the mall).
- Out of the Woods: Urban Sensing, CACM (2008) (with Dana Cuff & Mark Hansen).
- Self-Surveillance Privacy, Iowa Law Review (forthcoming 2012) (calling for Personal Data Guardians and who manage Personal Data Vaults).
- Information Privacy in Cyberspace Transactions, Stanford Law Review (1998) (default rules of engagement on information collection).
- Cyber-race, Harvard Law Review (2000) (encouraging integration spaces).
- harga hpBerkman Youth and Media Policy Working Group Initiative
- Madejsk, Johnson, Bellovin (Columbia), The Failure of Online Social Network Privacy Settings (PDF)
- Nemeth, Jeremy Using Benkler and Lessig's Commons Framework for Measuring 'Freedom' in Public Space blog
- Palfrey, John The Public and Private at the United States Border with Cyberspace
- Seltzer, Wendy Privacy, Attention, and Political Community wseltzer notes
- Soghoian, Chris An End to Privacy Theater: Exposing and Discouraging Corporate Disclosure of User Data to the Government
- Stalder, Laurent Turning Architecture Inside Out: Revolving Doors and Other Threshold Devices (PDF)
- Stalder, Laurent Von Abspergitter bis Zeitmaschine (PDF)
- Symposium at Harvard in 2008 on Privacy - http://www.privacysummersymposium.com/
- Weinberger, David Rebooting Library Privacy in the Age of the Network
- Zittrain, Jonathan Lost in the Cloud, Op-Ed in the NYTimes
- a few pieces by Aaron Zinman
- Recap from CHI 2011 Workshop on Networked Privacy: http://networkedprivacy.wordpress.com/[1]
Attendees
If you have registered (http://www.hyperpublic.org/register/) for the symposium, you can add your name to this list to connect with other attendees. Please note registration for the symposium is now closed (and adding your name to this wiki without registering via the link will not constitute a registration itself):
- Amar Ashar, Berkman Center
- Assaf Biderman, MIT SENSEable City Laboratory
- Nell Breyer, Harvard University Graduate School of Design
- danah boyd, Microsoft Research
- Herbert Burkert, University of St. Gallen
- Gerhard Buurman, Zurich University of the Arts
- Beatriz Colomina, Princeton University
- Cody Damon, Common Sense NMS
- Judith Donath, Berkman Center
- Paul Dourish, University of California, Irvine
- Karen Druffel, Framingham State University
- Urs Gasser, Berkman Center
- Adam Greenfield, Urbanscale LLC
- Jef Huang, Berkman Center
- Trevor Hughes, International Assoc. of Privacy Professionals
- Airi Lampinen, Helsinki Institute for Information Technology HIIT & UC Berkeley
- Thomas Lowenhaupt, Connecting.nyc Inc.
- Colin Maclay, Berkman Center
- Betsy Masiello, Google
- John Miller, Intel
- Nicholas Negroponte, MIT
- Charles Nesson, Berkman Center
- Caroline Nolan, Berkman Center
- John Palfrey, Berkman Center
- Vivien Park, Motorola, Polis
- Diwa Ram, Jiyer
- Geanne Rosenberg, Baruch College and CUNY Journalism
- Julia Scher, Academy of Media Arts Cologne
- Jeffrey Schnapp, Harvard Metalab
- Laurent Stalder, ETHZ
- Tom Stites, Berkman Center
- David Weinberger, Berkman Center
- Jonathan Zittrain, Berkman Center
- Ethan Zuckerman, Berkman Center
- Hong Joo Lee, MIT CCI & The Catholic University of Korea
- Andrew Sempere, IBM Research (Center for Social Software / Collaborative User Experience)
- Lorraine Kisselburgh, Purdue University (Brian Lamb School of Communication)
- Jeremy Nemeth, University of Colorado (College of Architecture and Planning)
- Perry Hewitt, Digital Communications, Harvard University
- Mike M. Rook, Krause Innovation Studio, Penn State University
- Debbie Chachra, Franklin W. Olin College of Engineering
- Germaine Halegoua, Microsoft Research
- Neha Narula, MIT CSAIL
- Mike Gotta, Cisco
- Zeynep Tufekci, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
- Irina Baraliuc, Law Science Technology & Society, Vrije Universiteit Brussel
- David Bollier, [2], Commons Strategy Group and Commons Law Project
- Brady Kriss, Law Office of Brady Kriss, Esq.
- John Taysom, 2011 Harvard ALI Fellow. "3 is a crowd" project
- Jeff Jarvis, Tow-Knight Center for Entrepreneurial Journalism at the City University of New York Graduate School of Journalism.
- Aaron Zinman, MIT Media Lab
- Simon Columbus, Amsterdam University College / Berkman Center intern
- Sara Marie Watson, Web Ecology Project / Harvard
- Maryann Hulsman, MIT, Department of Urban Studies and Planning
Food for Thought Dinners
Food for Thought dinners are self-organized gatherings allow conference attendees to engage in informal, themed conversation with other conference participants, and would take place after the symposium ends, on the evening of Friday, 6/10. artikel hanya dibuat untuk menaikkan serp saja yah, silahkan tidak usah dibaca jika tidak suka,neon box adalah bentuk promosi iklan dengan menggunakan media flexy backlite digital printing / cutting sticker / acrylic. Neon box lebih terkesan menarik. neon box adalah salah satu dari bagian sarana publikasi yang fungsinya mempromosikan, mengenalkan, mengingatkan produk yang terpampang… bgitu juga dengan huruf timbul dan tiket pesawat murah tiket pesawat murah
If you would like to propose / organize a food for thought dinner:
- Please add the proposal the one of the slots below, with your name and contact information
- Choose a restaurant and make a reservation (here's a handy list of restaurants we've used in the past: http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/berkmanat10/Food_for_Thought_Dinners) by 3PM on Friday, 6/10.
If you would like to join one of the dinners:
- Add your name to one of the slots below by 3PM ET on Friday, 6/10
Please note that attendees will pay their own dinner costs. No more than 6 people (including the organizer) should sign up for the dinners.
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