FC: Call for Papers: Chaos Communication Club Camp 2003 in Germany

From: Declan McCullagh (declanat_private)
Date: Thu Apr 24 2003 - 09:02:33 PDT

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    [Anyone going? I'm thinking about it. --Declan]
    
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    Date: Wed, 23 Apr 2003 20:56:00 +0200
    Subject: Call for Papers: Chaos Communication Club Camp 2003
    From: Frank Rieger <frankat_private>
    To: declanat_private
    
    Please distribute widely to intersting / interested people.
    
    Greetings
    
    Frank
    
    ----
    
    Call for Papers
    Chaos Communication Camp 2003
    The International Hacker Open Air Gathering
    7/8/9/10th August 2003
    near Berlin, Germany (Old Europe)
    
    Papers are being solicited for the second Camp of the
    Chaos Computer Club e.V., Germany, to be held near Berlin, Germany, on 
    7/8/9/10th August 2003. The Camp is intended to promote the interchange of 
    technical, social and political ideas and concepts to find ways to make 
    this world a little bit more friendly to intelligent beings.
    
    The conference language is english, therefore all lectures and workshops 
    have to be held in english. For especially interesting topics, a on-stage 
    translation might be available, but this service will be strictly limited 
    to a few instances of special importance.
    
    In general, all papers, lectures and workshops from the field of 
    technology, security, art, philosophy, politics and cooking are welcome. We 
    try, however to create a certain focus on a number of topics that we regard 
    as important for the near future. These are:
    
    Technology:
    - mobile phone security (e.g. OTA attacks)
    - distributed, cryptographical secure storage and peer-to-peer networking 
    technology
    - semantic web (xml, wdsl, rss and related technologies)
    - complex network attack methods, detection and defense
    - advanced wireless networking and security
    - autonomous systems and robotics
    - attacks on cryptosystems
    - even more ways of breaking biometry
    - Open Source Security (code audits and "who reads the open source anyway?")
    - instant messaging
    - surveillance, wiretapping and crowd controll: state of the art
    - reengineering hands-on workshops and publication standards
    - using print on demand to anhance the availability of interesting content
    - satellite imagery analysis for non-state actors
    - monitoring sat-feeds and other interesting sat-related stuff
    - groups that want to held special interest gatherings (like coordination 
    of a open-source software project) on the Camp are very welcome
    
    Philosophy & Politics:
    - over-analysis of the world and the resulting problems, interdepencies and 
    next-order complexities
    - power-politics and the economic roots of todays bizarre world
    - military vs. civilian R&D and the resultung moral problems
    - truth, trust, perception-management and propaganda
    - legal situation in relevant areas of interest
    - lobbying and influence politics
    
    Art:
    - every creative use of modern technology in art is welcome
    - poetry, performances, music, DJs, optics, paintings, sculptures
    - movies, flash-films, animations and demo-competitions
    - there will be a camp radio station (both local broadcast and internet 
    streaming) that is looking for content, especialy radio drama and documentary
    
    Lectures are expected to be highly relevant in practice or better be
    darn funny. Sales droids have been known to disappear without traces
    on past events. Interactive Workshops welcome. Hands-On anything even
    more welcome.
    
    Abstracts and papers should be submitted in English to mailto: 
    contentat_private as soon as possible, latest on 1. July 2003 17:00 GMT. 
    There will be a very limited number of slots reserved for presentations 
    covering stuff that happens between the submission deadline and the start 
    of the Camp, but we will be extremly discriminate regarding the allocation 
    of these slots.
    The submission should inlcude references and URLs, a short biography
    of the speaker, contact information (e-mail) and any time constrains or
    preferences the speaker might have.
    
    Notice of acceptance will be sent out as soon as possible. Final
    presentations should be in English and be up to 60 or up to
    120 minutes long, including a question-and-answer period. Followup 
    discussions and hands-on workshops are strongly encouraged, there will be 
    space for such activities available outside the main lecture tents (if you 
    dont prefer a nice sit-in on the gras in the sun).
    
    As this is a non-profit event organised by non-profit organisation, the CCC
    will not be able to compensate travel costs let alone a
    speaker honorarium. Well, maybe travel costs in a few cases. The event is 
    outdoor, that means you will need to bring a tent or camping car for 
    accomodation.
    
    The preliminary agenda will be published on the web in
    the near future. Registration information will be posted, too.
    
    Attractive timeslots in the agenda might get filled up before 1. July, so 
    please dont wait too long with your submission. 
    
    
    
    
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