EFF at 36c3 (Chaos Communications Congress)
Find EFF in Leipzig at the 36th year of one of the largest technology, security, and activism conferences in the world, Chaos Communication Congress. Learn how our team of lawyers, technologists, and activists are working to protect online rights, and connect with the larger international digital freedom community. We’ll be part of the About:Freedom Assembly in the Rights & Freedoms Cluster, floor 0 in the CCL building, just after exiting the tube from the central Glass Hall, alongside other groups protecting freedom of expression and human rights around the world.
EFF’s Schedule
Day 1 (Friday, 27 December)
- 14:00 – 16:00 EFF Booth Office Hours, about:freedom
Come by the EFF booth in the about:freedom assembly to say hello, get or renew your EFF membership or ask about EFF’s work.
Day 2 (Saturday, 28 December)
-
14:00 – 16:00 EFF Booth Office Hours, about:freedom
-
20:00-20:30 in Lecture room M1
Decentralized and Centralized Control: Global Trends in Network Censorship. EFF Staff Technologist Mona Wang will review the proliferation of network censorship in countries around the world in the past two years, and talk about where we can push back, including battles to fix Internet privacy leaks.
Day 3 (Sunday, 29 December)
-
15:00-15:30 in Lecture room M1
Alternatives to Google Apps on Android. EFF Staff Technologist Alexis Hancock will go over her experience with finding and implementing alternatives to decentralize your digital life and the pros and cons of doing such. -
16:00 – 18:00 EFF Booth Office Hours, about:freedom
-
19:00-20:00 in Lecture room M1
Ask the EFF. Panel presentation and question-and-answer session with the Electronic Frontier Foundation, featuring Kurt Opsahl, Deputy Executive Director and General Counsel; and Staff Technologists Alexis Hancock and Mona Wang.
Day 4 (Monday, 30 December)
-
14:00 – 16:00 EFF Booth Office Hours, about:freedom
Published December 24, 2019 at 08:34PM
Read more on eff.org
More Stories
Expanding Broadband in Portland The Time Is Now
The U.S. Patent Office Should Drop Proposed Rules That Favor Patent Trolls
Nurturing the Internet Freedom Movement