Schedule

From Mozilla Internet as a Public Good Event
Revision as of 13:50, 11 July 2007 by Zak Greant (talk | contribs) (Moving Civil Society discussion for Ellen Miller)
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Overview

Each session (with the exception of the welcoming and wrapup sessions) is split into two parts of equal length.

The first half of a session is a mix of brief edge case presentations, followed by group discussion. The edge cases are meant to help seed the discussions. If needed, the session coordinators will keep the discussion on topic.

The second half of a session is structured as a breakout - people self-organize into groups to work on particular issues or areas of interest. During the breakout sessions, participants should work to polish the relevant parts of this wiki.

During each session, we'll work to record and otherwise document what we learn. In particular, we want to capture things like:

  • what was discussed?
  • what needs to be researched?
  • what do the discussions make us want to do?
  • who should we share this information with?
  • what things are urgent and critical?

Schedule

Day One (Monday, July 30th)
Time Session
12:00-13:00 Registration

Grab your badge and information kit. If you are running late, you can pick up the materials in any session.

13:00-13:30 Symposium Welcome ( Hecker, Lakhani, Maclay)

Colin, Frank and Karim set the stage for the symposium.

13:30-14:00 Self Introductions

One minute self-introductions from each participant.

14:00-15:30 In What Sense is the Net a Public Good? ( ..., Searls)
15:30-15:45 Break
15:45-17:15 Access, Infrastructure and the Net as a Public Good
17:15-18:30 Break
18:30-22:30 Evening Breakout Session (Greant)

Fueled by whatever takeout we can get our hands on, this time is set aside for unstructured discussions. Attendance is optional but encouraged.


Day Two (Tuesday, July 31st)
Time Session
09:00-09:15 Day Two Welcome
09:15-10:45 Civil Society and the Net as a Public Good
10:45-11:00 Break
11:00-12:30 Art, Culture and the Net as Public Good

Is culture a public good? What does it mean when cultural artifacts cost nothing to copy? Is remixing art? How does mega-publishing of content change the idea of derivative works? Does the Net mean that we will return to being active co-creators of culture?

12:30-13:15 Lunch
13:15-14:45 Business, Commerce and the Net as Public Good
14:45-15:00 Break
15:00-16:30 Science, Innovation and the Net as a Public Good
16:30-17:00 Symposium Wrapup (Hecker, Lakhani, Maclay)

A summary of the event. Concrete ideas on doing meaningful work with the discussions.

17:00-18:30 Break
18:30-22:30 Delivery-Fueled Evening Breakout Session (Greant)

Fueled by whatever takeout we can get our hands on, this time is set aside for unstructured discussions. Attendance is optional but encouraged.