Vote Now For i2Coalition 2018 SXSW Panels
The time has come for the SXSW Picker voting to open! The i2Coalition is proposing a discussion around important, worldwide privacy issues. We’ll also be updating with panels from members, partners, and peer organizations below. All SXSW 2018 community voting will take place between Aug 7 – Aug 25, 2017. Vote now for your favorite panels from the i2Coalition and others!
How EU Privacy Law Will Change The Global Internet
How EU Privacy Law Will Change The Global Internet
On May 25, 2018, the EU’s General Data Protection Regulation goes into effect, changing requirements about how digital privacy is handled. Listen to global Internet providers explain what is changing in the Internet’s ecosystem as a result of the introduction of these laws.
On May 25, 2018, the EU’s General Data Protection Regulation goes into effect, changing requirements about how digital privacy is handled. Listen to global Internet providers explain what is changing in the Internet’s ecosystem as a result of the introduction of these laws.
Additional Supporting Materials
Congress gets a lesson on the importance of privacy
For a group of people who presumably understand the importance of messaging, this Congress appears to be clueless about how technology impacts our everyday lives and how constituents interpret any action to limit their rights.
Dismantling the Privacy vs Security Myth
An encryption backdoor is an oxymoron. The mathematics behind cryptography and the realities of modern cybercrime mean that the presence of a single
Questions
- What does the GDPR cover?
- How will it impact European Internet users?
- How will it affect the rest of the global Internet?
Speakers
- Sunday Yokubaitis, President, Golden Frog
- Rafael Laguna de la Vera, CEO, Open-Xchange
Organizer
- Christian Dawson, Executive Director, Internet Infrastructure Coalition (i2Coalition)
Hacking Back: The Ethics of Cyber Vigilantism
Hacking Back: The Ethics of Cyber Vigilantism
Malicious hacking threatens the Internet and its infrastructure. Stakeholders are looking for new options beyond traditional defensive measures and “Hacking Back” is the latest idea to battle malicious hacking. This panel will discuss implications of this vigilante approach. The panelists: Tech policy leader Congressman Will Hurd, GoDaddy’s Dir.
Malicious hacking threatens the Internet and its infrastructure. Stakeholders are looking for new options beyond traditional defensive measures and “Hacking Back” is the latest idea to battle malicious hacking. This panel will discuss implications of this vigilante approach. The panelists: Tech policy leader Congressman Will Hurd, GoDaddy’s Dir. of Digital Crimes Ben Butler, the Center For Democracy & Technology’s Chief Technologist Joe Hall and Chani Wiggins of TwinLogic Strategies as moderator.
Additional Supporting Materials
Letting Cyberattack Victims Hack Back Is a Very Unwise Idea
As the rate of cybercrime increases, so too does the intensity of those attacks. Now, companies like the UK’s Pervade Software are exploring new digital weapons with the goal of better protecting themselves and recovering stolen data. These include turnkey denial-of-service attacks and actions that damage the accused hackers’ computers and data.
Questions
- What is “Hacking Back” and what is the federal oversight on this potential tool to fight back against cyber hackers?
- What are the risks and benefits in allowing victims to use the same methods to combat malicious hackers?
- What are the current options for victims – individuals, businesses, and government – to defend against malicious cyber hacking, and are they enough?
Speakers
- Joe Hall, Chief Technologist, Center for Democracy and Technology
- Ben Butler, Director of Digital Crimes Unit, GoDaddy
- Chani Wiggins, Principal, TwinLogic Strategies
- Will Hurd, Congressman, United States House of Representatives
Organizer
- Ben Butler, Director of Digital Crimes Unit, GoDaddy