Montag, 10. Dezember 2018

[HIForum] [Kolloquium] ERINNERUNG / REMINDER - Informatisches Kolloquium 10.12.2018, 17:15, B201, Informatikum/Stellingen

May we kindly remind you of the today's talk at 17:15 in room B-201. 

Wir möchten an den heutigen Vortrag um 17:15 in Raum B-201 erinnern. 

 

The colloquium committee is looking forward to sharing this talk with you.

Das Kolloquiumkomitee würde sich freuen, Sie begrüßen zu dürfen.

 

Best regards/ MfG

On behalf of the colloquium committee/ i.A. des Kolloquiumkomitees

Stephanie Schulte Hemming

Universität Hamburg

 

 

Von: Fbi-alle <fbi-alle-bounces@mailhost.informatik.uni-hamburg.de> im Auftrag von "Schulte Hemming, Stephanie" <schulte@informatik.uni-hamburg.de>
Datum: Dienstag, 27. November 2018 um 10:20
An: "kolloquium@informatik.uni-hamburg.de" <kolloquium@informatik.uni-hamburg.de>
Betreff: [Fbi-alle] [Kolloquium] EINLADUNG / INVITATION - Informatisches Kolloquium 10.12.2018, 17:15, B201, Informatikum/Stellingen

 

Dies ist eine Einladung zum Informatischen Kolloquium am Montag, den 10.12.2018 um 17:15 auf dem Universitätsgelände "Informatikum/Stellingen", im Konrad-Zuse-Hörsaal B-201. Der Vortrag mit dem Titel "Exploring Server-side Blocking of Regionswird von Frau Sadia Afroz, PhD, tätig an der Universität UC Berkeley (USA) und am International Computer Science Institute (ICSI, USA), gehalten. Die Vortragssprache ist Englisch.

 

This is an invitation to the next informatics colloquium on Monday, 10 December 2018, at 17:15, on university campus Stellingen, lecture hall B-201. The talk is entitled "Exploring Server-side Blocking of Regionsand will be given in English by Mrs. Sadia Afroz, PhD, from the university UC Berkeley (USA) and the International Computer Science Institute (ICSI, USA).

 

Nähere Informationen zu allen in diesem Semester geplanten Vorträgen finden Sie unter:

Please use the following link for more information on all talks planned in this semester:

https://www.inf.uni-hamburg.de/home/kolloquium/wise18-19.html

 

Im Namen des Kolloquiumkomitees

On behalf of the colloquium committee

Stephanie Schulte Hemming

Universität Hamburg

 

 

Abstract

One of the Internet's greatest strengths is the degree to which it facilitates access to any of its resources from users anywhere in the world. The Internet has already become a crucial part of our life. People around the world use the internet to communicate, connect, and do business. Yet various commercial, technical, and national interests constrain universal access to information on the internet.

 

I will discuss three reasons for the closed web that are not caused by government censorship: blocking visitors from the EU to avoid GDPR compliance, blocking based upon the visitor's country, and blocking due to security concerns. These decisions can have an adverse effect on the people of the blocked regions, especially for the developing regions. With many key services, such as education, commerce, and news, offered by a small number of web-based Western companies who might not view the developing world as worth the risk, these indiscriminate blanket blocking could slow the growth of blocked developing regions.

 

As we are building the future web, we need to discuss the implication of such blocking practices and build technologies that ensure an open web for users around the world.

 

Bio

Sadia Afroz is a research scientist at the International Computer Science Institute (ICSI) and a visiting scholar at UC Berkeley. Her work focuses on anti-censorship, anonymity and adversarial learning. Her work on adversarial authorship attribution received the 2013 Privacy Enhancing Technology (PET) award, the best student paper award at the 2012 Privacy Enhancing Technology Symposium (PETS) and the 2014 ACM SIGSAC dissertation award (runner-up).  

 

Contact

Prof. Dr. Hannes Federrath