From Theory to Practice: Featured Projects: Difference between revisions

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==Overview==
==Overview==
'''[http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/ilaw/2011/Program_Schedule#Tuesday.2C_September_6.2C_2011 Tuesday, September 6], 5:00pm-6:00pm'''<br/>
'''[http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/ilaw/2011/Program_Schedule#Tuesday.2C_September_6.2C_2011 Tuesday], 5:00-6:00pm'''<br/>
''Format'': Round Table Discussion<br/>
''Format'': Round Table Discussion<br/>
''Lead'': [http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/people/jpalfrey John Palfrey]<br/>
''Lead'': [http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/people/jpalfrey John Palfrey]<br/>

Latest revision as of 10:58, 5 August 2011

iLaw Wiki Navigation
Pillar Themes of iLaw
Open Systems/Access · Online Liberty and FOE
The Changing Internet: Cybersecurity · Intellectual Property
Digital Humanities · Cooperation · Privacy
Cross-sectional Themes of iLaw
The History of the Internet
The Global Internet · Interoperability
The Study of the Internet: New Methods for New Technologies
The Future of the Internet
Case Studies
Digital Libraries, Archives, and Rights Registries
Exploring the Arab Spring · Minds for Sale
User Innovation · Mutual Aid
Misc
Program Schedule · Program Logistics
Evening Events · Student Projects · Participation
Old iLaw Videos · Mid-Point Check-in

Overview

Tuesday, 5:00-6:00pm
Format: Round Table Discussion
Lead: John Palfrey
Potential Participants: Colin Maclay (GNI), Wendy Seltzer (Chilling Effects), Ethan Zuckerman (Global Voices), Jonathan Zittrain, and Laura Miyakawa (Herdict)

The first day closing session will feature the founding members of a diverse set of projects – several of them incubated at the Berkman Center – that have taken on some of the key challenges related to openness and freedom agenda outlined in the earlier sessions. By bridging theory and practice of “cyberlaw”, this session will feature different platforms, strategies, and networks that leverage online tools as a means of both confronting challenges to liberty in the online space, and capitalizing on the new modes of connection, production, and distribution that it affords.

Featured projects will include:

  • Global Voices, which works with bloggers and translators from around the world to collect and curate reports from citizen media, with emphasis on voices that are not ordinarily heard in international mainstream media;
  • Chilling Effects, which provides an online clearinghouse for tracking and analyzing DMCA takedown notices and other cease-and-desist notices sent to Internet users;
  • Ushahidi, a platform which has been used as a tool to easily crowdsource information collection, interactive mapping, and data visualization, using multiple channels, including SMS, email, Twitter and the web, and others;
  • Global Network Initiative, a multi-stakeholder group of companies, civil society organizations, investors, and academics who have created principles and a collaborative approach to protect and advance freedom of expression and privacy in the ICT sector.
  • Herdict, an online platform that crowdsources Internet users’ real-time reports of website inaccessibility and outages around the globe.

Required Reading