Articles in the CFP Category
CFP, Surveillance »
If you share my appreciation for the ctrl[space]: Rhetorics of Surveillance exhibit and book, linking surveillance, theory, and art, you might be interested in this call for papers for a special issue of Surveillance & Society on “Performance, New Media, and Surveillance”:
Special Issue of Surveillance & Society | www.surveillance-and-society.org
Performance, New Media, and Surveillance | guest editorsJohn E. McGrath and Robert W. Sweeny
The relationship between the visual arts and surveillance has been explored through large scale exhibitions (e.g.: CTRL [Space], ZKM), and texts such as Loving Big Brother (McGrath, 2004) have …
CFP, Privacy, Publications »
Consumer attention to privacy is seemingly on the rise. We witnessed renewed concern about the tracking of user behavior online, medical privacy as Web-based storage solutions are being proposed, the tracking and selling of television viewing patterns, the merging of vast databases of user activity owned by Google and Doubleclick, and much, much more.
The open question in much of this privacy advocacy is what do consumers actually know about possible threats to their privacy, how much do they care, and how do they act on any concerns that arise?
To help …
CFP, CFP08, Conferences, Law, Privacy, Technology »
The call for papers for the 2008 Computers, Freedom & Privacy conference has been released. This year’s theme is “Technology Policy ’08“. Details below:
COMPUTERS, FREEDOM, AND PRIVACY: TECHNOLOGY POLICY ’08
http://cfp2008.org/
18th Annual CFP conference
May 20-23, 2008
Omni Hotel
New Haven, CT
CALL FOR PROPOSALS
This election year will be the first to address US technology policy in the information age as part of our national debate. Candidates have put forth positions about technology policy and have recognized that it has its own set of economic, political, and social concerns. In the areas of privacy, intellectual …
