FC: EFF Pioneer 2002 winners: Dan Gillmor, Beth Givens, Jon Johansen

From: Declan McCullagh (declanat_private)
Date: Thu Apr 11 2002 - 13:23:21 PDT

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    Electronic Frontier Foundation Media Advisory
    
    For Immediate Release: Thursday, April 11, 2002
    
    
    Contact:
    
    Katina Bishop
       Director of Education & Offline Activism
       Electronic Frontier Foundation
       katinaat_private
       +1 415 436-9333 x101
    
    
    Electronic Frontier Foundation Honors Pioneer Award Winners
    
    San Francisco Ceremony for Gillmor, Givens, DeCSS Writers
    
    San Francisco - The ceremony for the Electronic Frontier
    Foundation's 11th Annual Pioneer Awards will take place at
    the Cathedral Hill Hotel on April 17, 2002, in conjunction
    with the Computers, Freedom and Privacy conference in San
    Francisco.
    
    [Media professionals are invited to attend the ceremony
    at 8:00pm on April 17, 2002, at the Japanese Pavilion at
    the Cathedral Hill Hotel, 1101 Van Ness Ave., at Geary
    Boulevard in San Francisco. Please contact Katina Bishop at
    katinaat_private if you would like to attend.]
    
    The online civil liberties group chose to honor Dan Gillmor
    for his commitment to accurate and cutting edge reporting on
    cybertech issues; Beth Givens for her dedicated work in
    fighting for consumers' privacy rights and in raising public
    awareness on privacy issues; and the DeCSS Writers, to be
    accepted by Jon Johansen, for their pioneering work on the
    pivotal program that enabled the development of a DVD player
    that runs on the Linux operating system.
    
    Since 1991, the EFF Pioneer Awards have recognized
    individuals who have made significant and influential
    contributions to the development of computer-mediated
    communications or to the empowerment of individuals in using
    computers and the Internet.
    
    Dan Gillmor
    
    Dan Gillmor is a technology columnist for the San Jose
    Mercury News, Silicon Valley's daily newspaper. His column
    runs in many U.S. newspapers, and he appears regularly on
    radio and television, including National Public Radio's
    Morning Edition and CNN. He has been listed by industry
    publications as among the most influential journalists in
    his field. Gillmor is a reporter on the bleeding edge of
    cyber-technology issues. He has been known to spot a story
    and begin to cover it weeks before other reporters see its
    importance. He often educates his colleagues as well as the
    public and writes clearly about the intricacies of the
    complex and often esoteric conflicts facing cyberspace
    today.
    
    Beth Givens
    
    Beth Givens is founder and director of the Privacy Rights
    Clearinghouse, a nonprofit advocacy, research, and consumer
    education program located in San Diego, California.
    Established in 1992, The Clearinghouse maintains a
    complaint/information hotline on informational privacy
    issues - the only one of its kind in the country - and
    publishes a series of guides on a variety of informational
    privacy issues. Givens has been fighting for consumers'
    privacy rights long before the mainstream world recognized a
    problem. She frequently speaks and conducts workshops on the
    issue of privacy and has often testified on privacy-related
    public policy concerns. In addition, Givens has been a
    member of several task forces studying the privacy impacts
    of technology on society. She is the author of The Privacy
    Rights Handbook: How to Take Control of Your Personal
    Information (Avon Books, 1997). She is co-author of Privacy
    Piracy: A Guide to Protecting Yourself from Identity Theft.
    Preferring to focus on her work rather than her reputation,
    Givens keeps a low profile and just gets things done, day
    after day, year after year. She is a committed and
    pioneering activist.
    
    Jon Johansen and Writers of DeCSS
    
    In 1999, while on vacation in France, Norwegian teenager Jon
    Johansen bought a DVD-ROM and DVD movies. Frustrated by
    having to run Windows in order to watch his movies when he
    brought them back to his own country, he joined forces with
    two other programmers that he met online and together they
    created the proof-of-concept DeCSS application. The source
    code for DeCSS made it possible to play encrypted DVD movies
    on a Linux machine. The program spread quickly among Linux
    developers who were eager to create a DVD player for the
    Linux operating system.
    
    Jon received a national student merit award in Norway for
    his work on DeCSS. He was also included as a defendant in a
    lawsuit filed by the DVD CCA in California. The MPAA
    recently filed a complaint leading to charges in Norway, and
    Jon was indicted on criminal hacker charges. The trial is
    scheduled to take place in the beginning of June 2002. EFF
    recognizes the entire DeCSS team for their pioneering work
    on the program. As the rest of the DeCSS writers have
    decided to remain anonymous after witnessing the action
    against Jon, he has been chosen to accept the award as the
    public face of the work. He has willingly put himself at
    great risk to defend the rights of all of us, and EFF
    applauds his courage.
    
    "We, as a community of people respecting rights in
    technology, do not take enough opportunity to honor our
    own," stated Shari Steele, Executive Director of the
    Electronic Frontier Foundation. "Dan, Beth and Jon are
    shining examples of the spirit and energy that make the
    Internet great. We're proud to present them with this year's
    Pioneer Awards."
    
    The judges for this year's EFF Pioneer Awards were: Herb
    Brody (Deputy Editor, Technology Review), Moira Gunn (Host,
    "Tech Nation", National Public Radio), Donna L. Hoffman
    (Professor of Management and Co-Director, eLab, Vanderbilt
    University), Peter G. Neumann (Principal Scientist, SRI
    Intl.; Moderator, ACM Risks Forum), Drazen Pantic (Media &
    Tech. Director, NYU Center for War, Peace, & the News
    Media), Barbara Simons (past President, Association for
    Computing Machinery, & U.C. Berkeley Distinguished Alumnus),
    Karen G. Schneider (Coordinator of Librarians' Index to the
    Internet).
    
    The 11th Annual EFF Pioneer Awards ceremony will be held on
    the evening of April 17th, 2002, at the Cathedral Hill Hotel
    in the Japanese Pavilion. The ceremony and reception are
    made possible by contributions from the Berkeley Center for
    Law and Technology.
    
    For more information on the EFF Pioneer Awards, see:
    http://www.eff.org/awards/pioneer.html
    
    For this release:
    http://www.eff.org/awards/20020411_pioneer_pr.html
    
    
    About EFF:
    
    The Electronic Frontier Foundation is the leading civil
    liberties organization working to protect rights in the
    digital world. Founded in 1990, EFF actively encourages and
    challenges industry and government to support free
    expression, privacy, and openness in the information
    society. EFF is a member-supported organization and
    maintains one of the most-linked-to websites in the world at
    http://www.eff.org/
    
                                -end- 
    
    
    
    
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