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From: Adam Langley <agl () linuxpower ! org>
Date: 2000-08-30 20:11:18
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From: Ian Brown <I.Brown@cs.ucl.ac.uk>
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To: ukcrypto@maillist.ox.ac.uk
Subject: International Forum on Surveillance by Design
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Sender: "Adam Langley <agl@linuxpower.org>" <agl@linuxpower.org>
*** PLEASE REDISTRIBUTE WIDELY ***
http://www.cs.ucl.ac.uk/staff/I.Brown/ifsd.html
International Forum on Surveillance by Design
A one day public meeting on the development of global surveillance
strategies for law enforcement and national security
The Old Theatre
The London School of Economics
Houghton Street
London WC1A 2AE
Friday September 22, 2000
9.30 am
Hosted by the Department of Information Systems
The London School of Economics
Organised by Privacy International, the American Civil Liberties Union, and
Quintessenz
Sponsored by Zero Knowledge Systems, Securify, and the Electronic Privacy
Information Center
General Chair: Simon Davies
Admission : free
Communications surveillance is now a global business. Over the past three
decades, law enforcement and national security agencies have worked with the
private sector to ensure that all new forms of communications are capable of
being monitored. A range of new international legal agreements provide the
foundation for this activity.
Who are the key players in this new industry? What mechanisms are being
developed to build surveillance into the architecture of communications?
What forms of technology are being used to intercept communications - and to
resist interception?
This unique one-day conference will explore these technical and legal
questions, and provide a public forum for open discussion.
PROGRAMME
9.15 Chairman's welcome and introduction
9.25 Setting the landscape of engagement. A overview of the main players
and key initiatives
Tony Bunyan (Statewatch)
9.50 Technique 1: Developing the Telephone System
* An overview of global National Security arrangements
Steve Wright (Omega Foundation)
* Re-Designing the Plain Old Telephone System
Barry Steinhardt (American Civil Liberties Union)
* The International Law Enforcement Telecommunications Seminar
Tony Bunyan (Statewatch)
10.45 Technique 2: Re-Designing the Internet
Intercepting the Internet
* The Russian SORM system; Boris Pustinsev, Citizens Watch, Russia
* The Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act
* The Netherlands interception arrangements. Maurice Wessling (Bits of
Freedom)
* Unlawful conduct and the FBI Carnivore system
International Collaboration (G8, Council of Europe)
Global Protocols
* IETF (invited
* ETSI (invited)
11.30 BREAK
12.00 Technique 3: (De)Constructing Mobile Phone Security
* GSM surveillace techniques
* UMTS surveillance techniques
Erich Moechel (Quintessenz, Austria)
1.00 LUNCH
2.15 Technique 4: Imminent Technologies
* Convergence
* Mobile Telephony
- Advanced Services of UMTS (location tracking, interactive services)
- Bluetooth implications
* Infrastructures of Identity
* Privacy Risks of Public Key Infrastructures:
Stefan Brands (ZeroKnowledge)
3.15 BREAK
3.45 Fighting for Privacy
Industry Perspectives
* Peter Harter (Securify)
* Stephanie Perrin (ZeroKnowledge Systems)
Legislative and Constitutional Protections
Technical Countermeasures
* Secure telephony; Eric Blossom, Starium
* Secure internet communications; ZeroKnowledge
4.45 Action Plan
* Human Rights Organisations -- Simon Davies (PI)
* Industry Action
* Action through media
Places are strictly limited in number, so anyone wishing to attend should
email the conference chair, Simon Davies, at s.g.davies@lse.ac.uk
Telephone enquiries : 0207 955 6579
Organising Committee: Simon Davies (PI & LSE), Erich Moechel (Quintessenz),
Barry Steinhardt (ACLU), Ian Brown (UCL & Hidden Footprints), Stephanie
Perrin (ZKS), Gus Hosein (LSE).
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