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Scrambling for Safety 8 conference details

Scrambling for Safety 8 conference details:

We've finally sorted out the details of the eighth Scrambling for Safety meeting on the Home Office access to keys and communications data code of practice consultations.

It is being held from 2-5pm on Monday 14 August 2006, at the Gustave Tuck Lecture Theatre, South Wing, UCL, Gower St, London WC1
[campus map].

Street Map location.

The nearest Tube stations are Warren Street and Euston Square.

Admission is free but space is limited, so if you wish to attend please subscribe to the meeting mailing list.

Please e-mail sfs8@fipr.org with requests for any other information.

The agenda is as follows:

PLEASE REDISTRIBUTE THIS FLYER UNTIL 14 AUG 2006.

The UK Home Office is currently consulting over plans to give the police powers to require the production of decryption keys and of plaintext.

They have also produced a draft code of practice on government access to "communications data" -- phone numbers and e-mail addresses contacted, web sites visited, locations of mobile phones, etc.

What impact will this have on privacy and security in the UK? Could you go to jail for forgetting your password? Who in the 500+ agencies with access to communications data will be looking at records of your Internet and phone use? Will organisations with highly sensitive cryptographic keys (such as financial institutions) move their operations offshore?

"Scrambling for Safety 8" will bring together representatives from government, industry and human rights organisations to discuss these consultations with interested members of the public. This is the only such meeting during the consultation period, and is free to attend.

Come along and make sure your voice is heard!


14:00   WelcomeDr Ian Brown, UCL Computer Science
14:05  The Home Office consultationsSimon Watkin, Home Office
14:20  Government access to communications dataDr Richard Clayton, Cambridge University Computer Laboratory
14:35  Government access to decryption keysCaspar Bowden, ex-director, FIPR
14:50  Questions  
15:05Risks to safety and securityDr Brian Gladman, MoD and NATO (retired)
15:20  Errors of judgment and integrity in presenting computer-based evidenceDuncan Campbell, expert witness and investigative journalist
15:45  Parliamentary scrutiny of RIPA and its OrdersThe Earl of Erroll, House of Lords (crossbencher)
16:00  Questions  
16:15Compatibility with human rights lawProf. Douwe Korff, London Metropolitan University
16:30  Do the police need longer detention periods to investigate encrypted evidence?Prof. Ross Anderson, Cambridge University Computer Laboratory
16:45  The changing public mood on privacyLord Phillips of Sudbury, House of Lords (Liberal Democrat)
16:55  Questions and conclusionsSimon Davies, Privacy International and LSE
17:00  Close  

Useful background information is at Privacy International's wiretap page and FIPR's "Surveillance and security" pages.

See our www.spy.org.uk/ripa3 blog if you want to comment on each section of the

"Consultation on the Draft Code of Practice for the Investigation of Protected Electronic Information - Part III of the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act 2000"

See our www.spy.org.uk/ripa1 blog if you want to comment on each section of the

"Consultation on the Revised Statutory Code for Acquisition and Disclosure of Communications Data - Chapter II of Part I of the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act 2000"

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