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Posts filed under 'Privacy'

MIT’s Deb Roy on “The Human Speechome Project”

QuickTime Video

Deb Roy, director of M.I.T Media Lab’s Cognitive Machines group, and Chair of the Academic Program in Media Arts and Sciences was the guest speaker this week at the Berkman Center’s Luncheon Series.

Roy’s presentation discussed The Human Speechome Project, an effort to observe and computationally model the longitudinal course of language development of one child at an unprecedented scale.

The Project is “collecting audio and video recordings for the first two to three years of one child’s life, in its near entirety, as it unfolds in the child’s home. To analyze the resulting massive audio-visual corpus, we are developing new data mining technologies to help human analysts rapidly annotate and transcribe recordings using semi-automatic methods, and to detect and visualize salient patterns of behavior and interaction.”

Runtime: 01:28:31, size: 320×240, 698.2MB, .MOV, H.264 codec

January 9th, 2008

UNIVERSITY and the RIAA

Suits brought against members of University by the RIAA bring up issues revolving around the role and identity of University and copyright. Universities are being asked to absorb financial and non-monetary costs of the record companies’ enforcement. Is this enforcement also compromising student privacy? Does this limit access to genuine educational resources? How do we provide opportunities for new creative expression through digital mediums?

Facilitator: Wendy Seltzer (Berkman Fellow), Doc Searls (Berkman Fellow), Lewis Hyde (Berkman Fellow)

Download the MP3 (time: 1:27:16).

To learn more about this working group session, visit the Internet & Society 2007 wiki.

June 13th, 2007

Access Denied: The Practice and Policy of Global Internet Filtering

Click To Play Video

Rob Faris, the OpenNet Initiative‘s Research Director and John Palfrey, one of the project’s Principal Investigators, lead a discussion of Internet filtering and provided a glimpse of the results of ONI’s first global survey of Internet censorship.

In the last year ONI has studied forty countries and found a substantial increase in Internet censorship, colored by complex and dynamic political, legal and social processes. The research will be documented in the forthcoming MIT Press book: Access Denied: the Practice and Policy of Global Internet Filtering.

The OpenNet Initiative is a partnership between the Citizen Lab at the Munk Centre for International Studies, University of Toronto, the Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard Law School, the Advanced Network Research Group at the Cambridge Security Programme at Cambridge University, and the Oxford Internet Institute at the University of Oxford.

Runtime: 1:08:57, size: 320×240, 188mb, QuickTime .MOV, H.264 codec

May 2nd, 2007

Access Denied: The Practice and Policy of Global Internet Filtering

Rob Faris, the OpenNet Initiative‘s Research Director and John Palfrey, one of the project’s Principal Investigators, lead a discussion of Internet filtering and provided a glimpse of the results of ONI’s first global survey of Internet censorship.

Download the audio podcast (time: 1:08:57).

In the last year ONI has studied forty countries and found a substantial increase in Internet censorship, colored by complex and dynamic political, legal and social processes. The research will be documented in the forthcoming MIT Press book: Access Denied: the Practice and Policy of Global Internet Filtering.

The OpenNet Initiative is a partnership between the Citizen Lab at the Munk Centre for International Studies, University of Toronto, the Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard Law School, the Advanced Network Research Group at the Cambridge Security Programme at Cambridge University, and the Oxford Internet Institute at the University of Oxford.

2 comments April 26th, 2007

Securing Human Rights Online

Click To Play Video

Ron Deibert, Associate Professor of Political Science and Director of the Citizen Lab at the Munk Centre for International Studies, University of Toronto. Prof. Deibert, who is also a principal investigator in the Open Net Initiative, discusses “Securing Human Rights Online: Addressing Long-term Problems of Sustainability, Coordination, and Resource.”

1 comment February 5th, 2007

ID Mashup 2006 Day Two: Code and Law: How Should and Might They Mix?

Closing Plenary Session: Code and Law: How Should and Might They Mix?

Download the MP3.

January 30th, 2007

ID Mashup 2006 Day Two: Towards and Open Identity Layer and Trusted Exchange

Open Plenary Session: Towards and Open Identity Layer and Trusted Exchange: What Might it Look Like?

Download the MP3.

1 comment January 30th, 2007

Stopbadware.org

Click To Play Video

Stopbadware.org is a Neighborhood Watch campaign aimed at fighting badware – spyware and other programs that can damage an internet user’s computer and lower citizen confidence in the internet itself. The project’s goal is to provide reliable, objective information about downloadable applications in order to help consumers to make better choices about what they download. The StopBadware team tests and reports on websites and software suggested by the public, noting as badware those programs that engage in potentially objectionable behaviors without adequately informing the user and seeking their consent.

Christina Olson, Berkman Center fellow and the project manager for StopBadware, led the lunch discussion. She recently graduated cum laude from Harvard Law School, where she worked at the Harvard Journal of Law and Technology as editor-in-chief, technical editor, production editor, and line editor. Christina was joined by the StopBadware staff team.

Video produced by Indigo Tabor and Colin Rhinesmith.

December 7th, 2006

Stopbadware.org

StopBadware.org presents at the Berkman Center on December 6, 2006.

Download the MP3 (time: 1:00:32).

Stopbadware.org is a Neighborhood Watch campaign aimed at fighting badware – spyware and other programs that can damage an internet user’s computer and lower citizen confidence in the internet itself. The project’s goal is to provide reliable, objective information about downloadable applications in order to help consumers to make better choices about what they download. The StopBadware team tests and reports on websites and software suggested by the public, noting as badware those programs that engage in potentially objectionable behaviors without adequately informing the user and seeking their consent.

Christina Olson, Berkman Center fellow and the project manager for StopBadware, led the lunch discussion. She recently graduated cum laude from Harvard Law School, where she worked at the Harvard Journal of Law and Technology as editor-in-chief, technical editor, production editor, and line editor. Christina was joined by the StopBadware staff team.

Produced by Indigo Tabor and Colin Rhinesmith.

2 comments December 7th, 2006

ID Mashup 2006 Day Two: Long Tail Markets, Social Commerce and Open Business Models

thumb-thumb-identity_mashup_small.jpgTrack C Breakout Two: Long Tail Markets, Social Commerce and Open Business Models

Download the MP3.

June 28th, 2006

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