 * THE FIRST CONFERENCE ON COMPUTERS, FREEDOM & PRIVACY *

(submitted by Tom Jennings, fidonet 1:125/111 
uucp ...hoptoad!kumr!anomaly!tom.jennings)

Pursuing Policies for the Information Age in the
Bicentennial Year of the Bill of Rights

Tutorials & Invitational Conference, Limited to 600 Participants

Monday-Thursday, March 25-28, 1991

Airport SFO Marriott Hotel, Burlingame, California (San Francisco 
Peninsula)

Co-sponsors & cooperating organizations include
 Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers-USA
 Association for Computing Machinery 
 Electronic Networking Association
 Electronic Frontier Foundation 
 Videotex Industry Association
 Cato Institute 
 American Civil Liberties Union
 ACM Special Interest Group on Software
 IEEE-USA Intellectual Property Committee
 ACM Special Interest Group on Computers and Society
 ACM Committee on Scientific Freedom and Human Rights
 IEEE-USA Committee on Communications and Information Policy
 Autodesk, Inc. 
 The WELL 
 Portal Communications

Sponsored by the Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility
 A nonprofit educational corporation
(415)322-3778, e-mail: cfp@well.sf.ca.us. fax: (415)851-2814


ABOUT COMPUTERS, FREEDOM & PRIVACY
----------------------------------

We are at a crossroads as individuals, organizations and
governments depend more and more on computers and computer
networks. Within ten years, most global information will be
collected and utilized electronically. The 1990's are the pivotal
decade in which statutes, policies and judicial precedents will
be developed for controlling access, use -- and abuse -- of
computerized information and electronic mail.

Current government and private-sector policies are an
uncoordinated jumble, created as each group evolves ways to
collect, manipulate, extract, share and protect computerized and
networked information and services. 

Data on individuals and groups is being computerized by numerous
agencies, organizations and special interests, often without the
knowledge or approval of those it concerns, and with varying
degrees of accuracy. 

Computers can greatly assist individuals, organizations and
government in making sound decisions based on efficient access to
adequate information -- for personal benefit, business
improvement and national well-being.

Or, inappropriate use and regulation can seriously threaten
fundamental freedoms, personal privacy, and the democratic
processes that are at the very foundation of this nation and of
any free society.

ABOUT THE CONFERENCE SESSIONS (Tuesday-Thursday, March 26th-28th)
-----------------------------------------------------------------

PLENARY SPEAKERS:

* Laurence H. Tribe, Professor of Constitutional Law, Harvard Law
School, offering major policy proposals in the opening Conference
session, "The Constitution in Cyberspace: Law & Liberty Beyond
the Electronic Frontier".

* Eli M. Noam, Director of the Center for Telecommunications and
Information Studies, Columbia University, and a recognized leader
in telecommunications regulation, international communications
policies and economics, will discuss, "Network Environments of
the Future: Reconciling Free Speech and Freedom of Association."

* William A. Bayse, Assistant Director, FBI Technical Services
Division, Washington DC, providing perspectives on "Balancing
Computer Security Capabilities with Privacy and Integrity" at the
Wednesday evening banquet.


THE CONFERENCE SESSIONS offer diverse speakers & panel
discussions:

Trends in Computers & Networks.
 Overview and prognosis of computing capabilities and networking
as they impact personal privacy, confidentiality, security, 
one-to-one & many-to-one communications, and access to
information about government, business and
society.

International Perspectives & Impacts.
 Other nationsU models for protecting personal information and
communications, and granting access to government information;
existing and developing laws; requirements for trans-national
dataflow and their implications; impacts on personal expression;
accountability.

Personal Information & Privacy.
 Government and private collection, sharing, marketing,
verification, use, protection of, access to and responsibility
for personal data, including buying patterns, viewing habits,
lifestyle, work, health, school, census, voter, tax, financial
and consumer information.

Law Enforcement Practices & Problems.
 Issues relating to investigation, prosecution, due process and
deterring computer crimes, now and in the future; use of
computers to aid law enforcement.

Law Enforcement & Civil Liberties.
 Interaction of computer crime, law enforcement and civil
liberties; issues of search, seizure and sanctions, especially as
applied to shared or networked information, software and
equipment.

Legislation & Regulation.
 Legislative and regulatory roles in protecting privacy and
insuring access; legal problems posed by computing and computer
networks; approaches to improving related government processes.

Computer-based Surveillance of Individuals.
 Monitoring electronic-mail, public & private teleconferences,
electronic bulletin boards, publications and subscribers;
monitoring individuals, work performance, buying habits and
lifestyles.

Electronic Speech, Press & Assembly.
 Freedoms and responsibilities regarding electronic speech,
public and private electronic assembly, electronic publishing,
prior restraint and chilling effects of monitoring.

Access to Government Information.
 Implementing individual and corporate access to federal, state &
local information about communities, corporations, legislation,
administration, the courts and public figures; allowing access
while protecting confidentiality.

Ethics & Education.
 Ethical principles for individuals, system administrators,
organizations, corporations and government; copying of data,
copying of software, distributing confidential information;
relations to computer education and computer law.

Where Do We Go From Here? [closing session]
 Perspectives, recommendations and commitments of participants
from the major interest groups, proposed next steps to protect
personal privacy, protect fundamental freedoms and encourage
responsible policies and action.

Also:
 Tuesday and Wednesday will include structured opportunities for
attendees to identify groups with whom they want to establish
contact and, if they wish, announce topics they would like to
discuss, one on one.


ABOUT THIS PREMIER EVENT
------------------------

This is an intensive, multi-disciplinary survey Conference for
those concerned with computing, teleconferencing, electronic
mail, computerized personal information, direct marketing
information, government data, etc. -- and those concerned with
computer-related legislation, regulation, computer security, law
enforcement and national and international policies that impact
civil liberties, responsible exercise of freedom and equitable
protection of privacy in this global Information Age.

For the first time, this four-day invitational event will bring
together representatives from all of these groups and more, all
in one place, all at one time.

Many of the recognized leaders and strongest advocates
representing the various groups having an interest in the issues
of the conference will discuss their concerns and proposals.

A maximum of 600 applicants will be invited to attend. Balanced
representation from the diverse groups interested in these issues
is being encouraged. Please see the enclosed Invitation
Application for details.

To inform participants about topics beyond their specialties,
half-day seminars are scheduled for the first day (Monday, March
25th). These parallel tutorials will explore relevant issues in
computing, networking, civil liberties, regulation, the law and
law enforcement. Each tutorial is designed for those who are
experienced in one area, but are less knowledgeable in the
subject of that tutorial.

To explore the interactions and ramifications of the issues,
conference talks and panel discussions are scheduled for the
remaining three days (Tuesday-Thursday, March 26th-28th). These
will emphasize balanced representation of all major views,
especially including probing questions and discussion.

Explicit Conference events to foster communication across
disciplines are planned. Working luncheons, major breaks and two
evening banquets will further encourage individual and small
group discussions.


ABOUT JUST *SOME* OF THE SPEAKERS IN THE 3-DAY CONFERENCE
---------------------------------------------------------

Ken Allen, Senior Vice President for Governmental Relations,
Information Industries Association (IIA).

Sharon Beckman, civil rights and criminal defense attorney and
Electronic Frontier Foundation litigation counsel, Silverglate &
Good.

Jerry Berman, Director of the ACLU's Project on Information
Technology and Communications Policy Fellow, Benton Foundation.

Paul Bernstein, columnist, Trial magazine; Electronic Bar Assn.
Legal Info. Network administrator; LawMUG BBS sysop; edits on
line lawyers' newsletter.

Sally Bowman, promotes responsible computing practices through
school teaching units; Director, Computer Learning Foundation.

David Burnham, author, *Rise of the Computer State*; former *New
York Times* investigative reporter; specialist in IRS & Freedom
of Information Act.

Mary Culnan, co-authored major credit reporting policies
presented to Congress; School of Business Administration,
Georgetown University.

Peter Denning, Editor, 1990 *Computers Under Attack*; past Pres.,
ACM; founding Director, RIACS; editor, *Communications of the
ACM*.

Dorothy Denning, received Aerospace's 1990 Distinguished Lecturer
in Computer Security award; author, *Cryptography & Data
Security*.

Dave Farber, co-founder, CSNET; member, National Research
Council's Computer Science & Telecommunications Board; University
of Pennsylvania.

Cliff Figallo, Chief Executive Officer and Director of the WELL
(the Whole Earth 'Lectronic Link).

David Flaherty, Canadian surveillance expert, Professor of
History & Law at the University of Western Ontario.

John Ford, Public Relations Director for Equifax, one of the
nation's largest maintainers of information on individuals.

Bob Gellman, Chief Counsel, U.S. House of Representatives
Governmental Information Subcommittee.

Janlori Goldman, Director, ACLU Project on Privacy & Technology,
Washington, DC.

Harry Hammit, Editor, *Access Reports*, focusing on access to
information.

Martin Hellman, identified potential hazards in federal DES
national encryption standard; co-invented public-key encryption;
Stanford University.

Evan Hendricks, Editor & Publisher of *Privacy Times* newsletter.

Lance Hoffman, public policy researcher and Professor of
Electrical Engineering & Computer Science at George Washington
University.

Don Ingraham, wrote the first-ever search warrant for magnetic
media, computer crime prosecutor; Asst. District Attorney,
Alameda County.

Bob Jacobson, former Principal Consultant, Calif. State Assembly
Utilities and Commerce Committee; drafted landmark comp.
communications legislation.

Mitch Kapor, co-founder, Electronic Frontier Foundation; founder,
Lotus Corp.; received DPMA's 1990 Distinguished Information
Science Award.

Tom Mandel, Director of the Leading Edge Values & Lifestyles
Program at SRI International.

John McMullen, well-known on-line journalist; co-authors
"Newsbytes" column on GEnie and Online America.

Peter Neumann, member, National Research Council's 1990
*Computers at Risk* committee; Chair, ACM Comm.on Computers &
Public Policy; hosts RISKS Forum.

Donn Parker, perhaps the best-known international consultant and
author on information security and computer crime, SRI
International.

Ron Plesser, former majority party congressional committee
counsel; privacy expert; attorney, Piper & Marbury.

John Quarterman, author, Digital Press' definitive *The Matrix:
Computer Networks and Conferencing Systems Worldwide*; networking
consultant.

Jack Rickard, Editor of *Boardwatch* magazine, perhaps the best
news source about computer bulletin boards; Online Information
Service.

Tom Riley, Canadian specialist in international computing and
privacy issues; Riley & Associates.

Lance Rose, co-author of *Syslaw*, about the law applied to 
on-line situations; attorney, Wallace & Rose.

Marc Rotenberg, expert in federal computer and privacy law;
Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility, Washington
office Director.

Noel Shipman, attorney for plaintiffs in electronic-mail privacy
landmark 1990 litigation against Epson America.

Harvey Silverglate, Electronic Frontier Foundation litigation
counsel, specialist in criminal defense and civil rights,
Silverglate & Good.

Gail Thackeray, computer crime prosecutor; involved in Secret
Service's 1990 "Operation Sun Devil", Arizona Asst. State
Attorney General.

Robert Veeder, Acting Chief, Information Policy Branch, Office of
Information Regulatory Affairs, OMB (Office of Management &
Budget).

Willis Ware, computer security expert; Fellow, RAND Corporation.

Sheldon Zenner, former federal prosecutor in Chicago; defended
*Phrack* electronic publisher, Craig Neidorf; Katten, Muchin &
Zavis.


ABOUT THE LOW-COST TUTORIALS (Monday, March 25th)
-------------------------------------------------

Seminars on the first day offer introductions to the different
disciplines that intersect in this conference. These are surveys
for individuals not already expert in the topics presented. 
These half-day tutorials are scheduled in four parallel tracks:

Global Communications & the Worldwide Computer Matrix. 
[morning*]
 Survey of electronic-mail & teleconferencing services, global
information access, remote services and the matrix of networks.

Low-Cost Computer Networking & Computer Bulletin Board Systems. 
[afternoon*]
 Reviews e-mail, bulletin board and teleconferencing alternatives
on personal computers; outlines low-cost PC-based networks and
their gateways to the global matrix. -- Mark Graham*, co-founder
of Institute for Global Communications, PeaceNet and EcoNet;
Pandora Systems

Current & Proposed International Policies. [morning*]
 Law and regulation that will or may impact trans-border 
data-flow and computer communications, impacting U.S. information
practices and international business.

Federal Legislation Impacting Computer Use. [afternoon*]
 Detailed review of landmark federal statutes impacting access to
information, privacy of information, computer security and
computer crime. -- Marc Rotenberg*, former congressional counsel
and expert on federal legislation, CPSR, Washington DC.

How Computer Crackers Crack! [morning*]
 Suggested by a deputy district attorney specializing in 
high-tech crime, this is for law enforcement officials,
prosecutors, systems administrators and Bulletin Board System
(BBS) sysops. -- Russell Brand*, computer security specialist;
programmer with Reasoning Systems, Palo Alto CA.

How Computer Crime is Investigated.
 [afternoon*] This reviews investigation, search, seizure and
evidence requirements for pursuing computer crime. It is for
computer users, computer owners, BBS sysops and investigators
unfamiliar with computer crime practices.

Information Security. [afternoon*]
 Survey for systems managers of internal and external threats,
security measures, alternatives and other computer and data
security issues. -- Donn Parker*, a leading consultant in
information security and computer crime, SRI International.

* - Lecturers, descriptions and times were confirmed as of
1/8/91, but may be subject to change.


CONFERENCE CHAIR
Jim Warren, Autodesk, Inc. & *MicroTimes*
 415-851-7075, jwarren@well.sf.ca.us / e-mail

PROGRAM COMMITTEE
Dorothy Denning, Digital Equipment Corporation
Peter Denning, Research Institute for Advanced Computer Science
Les Earnest, SF Peninsula ACLU & Stanford University, ret.
Elliot Fabric, Attorney at Law
Mark Graham, Pandora Systems
Don Ingraham, Alameda County District AttorneyUs Office
Bruce Koball, Motion West
Marc Rotenberg, Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility
Glenn Tenney, Fantasia Systems & Hacker's Conference

ADVISORS
Ron Anderson, ACM SIGCAS & University of Minnesota
John Perry Barlow, Electronic Frontier Foundation
Jerry Berman, ACLU & Benton Foundation
Dave Caulkins, USSR GlasNet
Vint Cerf, Corporation for National Research Initiatives
Margaret Chambers, Electronic Networking Association
Steve Cisler, Apple Computer, Inc.
Whit Diffie, Northern Telecom
Mary Eisenhart, *MicroTimes*
Dave Farber, University of Pennsylvania
Cliff Figallo, The WELL
John Gilmore, Cygnus Support
Adele Goldberg, ParcPlace Systems
Terry Gross, Rabinowitz, Boudin, Standard, et al
Keith Henson, consultant & Alcor
Lance Hoffman, George Washington University
Dave Hughes, Chariot Communications
Bob Jacobson, Human Interface Technology Laboratory
Mitch Kapor, Electronic Frontier Foundation
Roger Karraker, Santa Rosa College
Tom Mandel, SRI International
John McMullen, NewsBytes
Peter Neumann, SRI International
Dave Redell, Digital Equipment Corporation
Ken Rosenblattt, Santa Clara County District Attorney's Office
Paul Saffo, Institute for the Future
Gail Thackeray, Arizona Attorney GeneralUs Office
Jay Thorwaldson, Palo Alto Medical Foundation
Terry Winograd, CPSR & Stanford University
Sheldon Zenner, Katten, Muchin, & Zavis

 Affiliations listed only for identification

 ============================
 = Request for Invitation =
 ============================
 First Conference on Computers, Freedom & Privacy
 March 25-28, 1991
 Monday: Tutorials, Tuesday-Thursday: Conference Sessions
 SFO Marriott Hotel, 1800 Old Bayshore Hwy., Burlingame CA 94010
For hotel reservations at Conference rates, call: (800)228-9290
#3

** Invitational Conference, limted to 600 participants. ** To
facilitate useful dialogue and balanced participation by
representatives from all of the diverse groups interested in
these issues, attendance is limited. (The capacity of the
Conference facility is similarly limited).

 All interested individuals are encouraged to request an
invitation. Invitations will be primarily issued on a first-come,
first-served basis within each major interest group.

Fees if payment is received by: Jan.31 -Mar.15 after Mar.15
Tutorials (full day) $ 95 $ 145 $ 195
Conference (3 days) $ 295 $ 350 $ 400

Conference Registration fee includes three luncheons, two banquet
meetings and selected handouts. Please make checks payable to
"Computers, Freedom & Privacy/CPSR". Please don't send cash. 
Invitations will be promptly issued, or the uncashed check will
be voided and promptly returned.

Please type or print. Thank ye, kindly.
name:
title:
organization:
mailing address:
city, state ZIP:
phone(s):
fax:
e-mail:

Comments to assist in evaluating this request:



To aid in balancing participation among groups,
 please check all significantly applicable items.
[ ] user of computers or computer networking
[ ] user of electronic-mail services
[ ] user of teleconferencing services
[ ] user of direct marketing services
[ ] user of computerized personal information
[ ] user of government information
[ ] computer professional
[ ] BBS sysop (bulletin board system operator)
[ ] systems administrator / infosystems manager
[ ] network administrator
[ ] computer / communications security specialist
[ ] provider of data communications services
[ ] provider of electronic-mail services
[ ] provider of teleconferencing services
[ ] provider of direct marketing services
[ ] provider of computerized personal information
[ ] provider of government information
[ ] legislative official      [ ] federal  [ ] state
[ ] regulatory official or staff  [ ] federal  [ ] state
[ ] law enforcement offi [ ] federal  [ ] state  [ ] local
[ ] prosecutor      [ ] federal  [ ] state  [ ] local
[ ] judicial representat [ ] federal  [ ] state  [ ] local
[ ] criminal defense attorney
[ ] corporate or litigation attorney
[ ] civil liberties specialist
[ ] journalist [ ] newspaper [ ] television [ ] radio [ ] other
[ ] other:
[ ] other:
<<1/7/91>>

Please mail form and payment to:
 CFP Conference, 345 Swett Road, Woodside CA 94062

Privacy Notice: This information will not be sold, rented,
loaned, exchanged or used for any purpose other than official
CPSR activity. CPSR may elect to send information about other
activities, but such mailings will always originate with CPSR.

Sponsor: Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility,
(415)322-3778 A nonprofit, educational corporation [ Internal
Revenue Code 501(c)(3) ] 
e-mail: cfp@well.sf.ca.us;      fax: (415)851-2814
Chair: Jim Warren, (415)851-7075

Please copy, post & circulate!
