[Air-L] Suggested materials for Computers and Society course
Michela Ornati
michela.ornati at usi.ch
Sat Mar 12 00:11:36 PST 2022
Hi Douglas,
You may want to look into the research group of the Unesco Chair at USI, led by Prof. Lorenzo Cantoni. Their latest publication:
Handbook on Heritage, Sustainable Tourism and Digital Media
Silvia de Ascaniis and Lorenzo Cantoni, eds.
https://www.elgaronline.com/view/edcoll/9781788970075/9781788970075.xml
Best
Michela Ornati - MBA, MA
Professional Lecturer at University of Applied Sciences and Arts (SUPSI) Lugano
Ph.D. Student
–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Università della Svizzera italiana
Institute of Digital Technologies for Communication (ITDxC)
–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Ofc. 130
Via Giuseppe Buffi, 13
CH - 6904 Lugano
Phone: +41 058 6664649
Cell.: +41 79 7064230
Email: michela.ornati at usi.ch<mailto:michela.ornati at usi.ch>
_______________________
Recent publications (see ORCID<https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0641-6950>):
• Guest blogpost (2021), University College London IN-Touch Digital Communication<https://in-touch-digital.com/2021/02/24/lost-in-delivery-touch-fashions-inconsistent-communication-to-the-visually-impaired/>
• Ornati M.A. True Feel: Re-Embodying the Touch Sense in the Digital Fashion Experience. In: Cinque, T. and Vincent, J.B. (eds.) Materializing Digital Futures: Touch, Movement, Sound and Vision<https://www.bloomsbury.com/uk/materializing-digital-futures-9781501361258/>. Bloomsbury, London (2022)
• Ornati M., (2021). Touch in Text. The Communication of Tactility in Fashion E-Commerce Garment Descriptions<https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-030-81321-5_3> In: Sàdaba, Cominelli, Kalbaska & Cantoni (eds). FACTUM21 Proceedings. Springer, Cham.
On 11 Mar 2022, at 22:59, air-l-request at listserv.aoir.org<mailto:air-l-request at listserv.aoir.org> wrote:
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Today's Topics:
1. postdoc at Michigan, ICPSR re: social media data archiving
(Libby Hemphill)
2. Online Study - iScience Team of the University of Konstanz
(Isabel Helm)
3. Suggested materials for Computers and Society course for
Computer Science majors? (Douglas Zytko)
4. Reminder: CCDS Presents Ryan Scrivens, March 18th at Noon
(Jeff Hemsley)
5. CFP: "Cybercrime" at the 56th Hawaii International Conference
on System Sciences (Robert W Gehl)
6. Book Announcement: Social Engineering (MIT Press) (Robert W Gehl)
7. Re: Multistakeholder Imposition of Internet Sanctions
(Joly MacFie)
8. WEBCAST: FCC Broadband Labels Hearing 1 ? Transparency
(Joly MacFie)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Message: 1
Date: Thu, 10 Mar 2022 18:57:57 -0500
From: Libby Hemphill <libbyh at umich.edu>
To: air-l at listserv.aoir.org
Subject: [Air-L] postdoc at Michigan, ICPSR re: social media data
archiving
Message-ID:
<CABM-KiizsCjaAyRQXBe33O=_f6uMRz6DfG5KA1gXEGuXaLmB-g at mail.gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8"
Hi all,
Please forward widely and encourage people you know to apply!
https://careers.umich.edu/job_detail/213553/postdoctoral-research-fellow
The University of Michigan School of Information seeks to hire a
postdoctoral scholar to conduct research in the area of social media data
archiving.
This is a one-year appointment renewable up to two years, pending continued
funding, availability of work, and satisfactory job performance. This
position is estimated to begin in late summer/early fall, with some
flexibility to start date depending on the selected candidate.
This scholar will work with Dr. Libby Hemphill <http://www.libbyh.com/> at
the University of Michigan School of Information and the Inter-university
Consortium for Political and Social Research (ICPSR) on research projects
related to technical infrastructure, collection development policies, and
data provision policies for archives of social media data. Results from
this project will inform the development of the Social Media Archive
(SOMAR) at ICPSR. SOMAR will become the first data resource of its
kind?making social media data accessible to researchers who lack the
technical or computing resources to capture data independently and enabling
researchers to share and access data from social media while respecting
platforms? terms of service and users? privacy expectations.
In this project, we will leverage existing social media datasets at MIDAS
<https://midas.umich.edu/> and ICPSR <http://icpsr.umich.edu/> to
experiment with archival infrastructures that make social media data
findable, accessible, interoperable, and reusable (FAIR). We will also
explore other principles for data archives, such as the Feminist Data
Manifest-No <https://www.manifestno.com/> and The CARE Principles for
Indigenous Data Governance <https://www.gida-global.org/care>, that are
informed by feminist and Indigenous research and scholars. The postdoc will
work with Hemphill, her students, and staff at ICPSR to develop collection
development policies, survey social media users and researchers to
understand participant perceptions and preferences, and conduct field
experiments to evaluate data indexing and access systems. Key work elements
include: collecting and managing large datasets from social media
platforms; writing academic papers and grant proposals; and collaborating
with multidisciplinary teams on research projects.
The candidate may be responsible for supervising doctoral, masters, and
undergraduate students in various research activities.
Required Qualifications*
- A PhD in information, library or archival science, computational
social science, or a related discipline
- Expertise in using Python for collecting and analyzing data from
social media
- Experience generating metadata and documentation for research data and
code
Desired Qualifications*
- Experience working alongside, partnering with, and building strong
connections with research team members;
- Experience conducting independent and collaborative research;
- Experience writing and presenting research in professional settings,
such as conferences and academic journals;
- Administrative skills like scheduling, prompt email communications
with all partners, routine check-ins, keeping team members and partners up
to date on progress, monitoring and shifting project priorities as needed;
- Experience with one or more of the following: ElasticSearch, Spark,
Hadoop, SOLR
Take care,
Libby
--
Libby Hemphill
pronouns: she/her/hers
Director, Resource Center for Minority Data
<http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/RCMD>, ICPSR
<http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/icpsrweb/>
Research Associate Professor, Institute for Social Research
<http://home.isr.umich.edu/>
Associate Director, Center for Social Media Responsibility
<http://csmr.umich.edu/>
Associate Professor, School of Information <https://www.si.umich.edu/>
University of Michigan
------------------------------
Message: 2
Date: Fri, 11 Mar 2022 12:08:49 +0100
From: "Isabel Helm" <isabel.helm at uni-konstanz.de>
To: Air-L at listserv.aoir.org
Subject: [Air-L] Online Study - iScience Team of the University of
Konstanz
Message-ID: <149f-622b2e00-23-2e9cee80 at 159075541>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
Hi everyone!
The iScience team of the University of Konstanz is currently conducting an online survey.
We would really appreciate if you could spend a few minutes to answer the survey.
In this study we want to investigate human behavior in leisure situations.
It only takes about 5-10 minutes. Here is the link to the study:
http://wextor.eu:8080/iSciencecore/RepMA/index.html?so=airl
Thank you so much! And have a nice weekend.
Isabel Helm
------------------------------
Message: 3
Date: Fri, 11 Mar 2022 08:29:01 -0500
From: Douglas Zytko <zytko at oakland.edu>
To: air-l at listserv.aoir.org
Subject: [Air-L] Suggested materials for Computers and Society course
for Computer Science majors?
Message-ID:
<CAFsmzTrACtkfF6DN3rvoUXynavXA8WJ7=S9PoV+DFp+d89uyeg at mail.gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8"
Hello AoIR community,
Our Computer Science and Engineering department at Oakland University is
working on a new Computers and Society course and we're really excited
about bringing this type of course to Computer Science students. *We?re
looking for suggested course readings/materials* that broadly fit this
course objective: ?knowledge of the role that different cultural heritages
(past and present) play in forming values in another part of the world,
enabling the student to function in a global context.? Anything come to
mind?
We?ve also been constructing a list of topics that the course should cover;
we welcome suggestions for additional topics or
readings/materials/activities related to any of them that would be
accessible to computer science students who have never considered this side
of computing before.
Explore how computers can play a role in
? bringing different cultural heritages to others.
? preserving and communicating cultural heritages.
? preserving and promoting low resource languages.
? preserving and promoting music and performance.
? creating exhibits and 3D models of museum artifacts.
--
Douglas Zytko, PhD
Assistant Professor of Human-Computer Interaction
Director of Oakland HCI Lab
Oakland University
Department of Computer Science and Engineering
dougzytko.com
Engineering Center 544
115 Library Drive,
<https://maps.google.com/?q=115+Library+Drive,%C2%A0+Rochester,+MI+48309&entry=gmail&source=g>
Rochester, MI 48309
<https://maps.google.com/?q=115+Library+Drive,%C2%A0+Rochester,+MI+48309&entry=gmail&source=g>
------------------------------
Message: 4
Date: Fri, 11 Mar 2022 14:34:49 +0000
From: Jeff Hemsley <jjhemsle at syr.edu>
To: List Aoir <air-l at listserv.aoir.org>, "FACADJUN at LISTSERV.SYR.EDU"
<FACADJUN at LISTSERV.SYR.EDU>, "PHD-DPS at LISTSERV.SYR.EDU"
<PHD-DPS at LISTSERV.SYR.EDU>
Subject: [Air-L] Reminder: CCDS Presents Ryan Scrivens, March 18th at
Noon
Message-ID:
<CH0PR01MB71550EE3F847DB064655AF63C20C9 at CH0PR01MB7155.prod.exchangelabs.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
Just a reminder, please register (if you haven't) using the link below for Dr. Ryan Scrivens virtual talk titled Examining Right-Wing Extremist Posting Behaviors Online with Machine Learning.
From: Jeff Hemsley
Sent: Thursday, March 3, 2022 12:02 PM
To: List Aoir <air-l at listserv.aoir.org>; FACADJUN at LISTSERV.SYR.EDU; PHD-DPS at LISTSERV.SYR.EDU
Subject: CCDS Presents Ryan Scrivens, March 18th at Noon
The Center for Computational and Data Sciences presents Dr. Ryan Scrivens, Friday, March 18th 12:00-1:00 PM EST, titled Examining Right-Wing Extremist Posting Behaviors Online with Machine Learning.
This talk is free and open to the public. Please do register for the event using the link below and feel free to forward:
https://forms.gle/wvZMTCpTZjYYsHsLA
Examining Right-Wing Extremist Posting Behaviors Online with Machine Learning
Despite the ongoing need for researchers, practitioners, and policymakers to develop advanced information technologies, machine learning algorithms, and risk assessment tools to identify and assess the online activities of violent right-wing extremists prior to their engagement in violence offline, little is empirically known about their online behaviors generally or differences in their posting behaviors compared to non-violent extremists who share similar ideological beliefs particularly. In this presentation, Ryan Scrivens will discuss his empirical research on right-wing extremist posting behaviors and highlight various machine learning techniques to identify behaviors that may inform future risk factor frameworks used by law enforcement and intelligence agencies to identify credible threats online. He will also discuss a novel and unique strategy that he has used to collect online content from violent and non-violent right-wing extremists for large-scale data analyses. He will c
onclude with a discussion of future trends in examining right-wing extremist posting behaviors with machine learning.
Ryan Scrivens is an Assistant Professor in the School of Criminal Justice at Michigan State University. He is also an Associate Director at the International CyberCrime Research Centre at Simon Fraser University in Canada and a Research Fellow at the VOX-Pol Network of Excellence in Ireland. Ryan conducts problem-oriented interdisciplinary research with a focus on terrorists' and extremists' use of the Internet, right-wing terrorism and extremism, and hate crime. Many of his research projects are derived from his engagements with front-line practitioners in law enforcement and intelligence agencies, as well as in social media and tech companies. A hallmark of his research is employing advanced quantitative methods and machine learning tools to better understand right-wing extremists' use of the Internet and associated technologies. He complements this approach by also conducting in-depth interviews with current and former violent extremists, as well as law enforcement and community a
ctivists. As a result, he has become a leading international expert on right-wing terrorism and extremism, known among his peers for conducting innovate and cutting-edge empirical research. Ryan has published over 40 peer-reviewed journal articles, books and book chapters, conference proceedings, and policy notes in the past five years. His recent work appears in Terrorism and Political Violence, Studies in Conflict & Terrorism, New Media & Society, and Deviant Behavior. He also has book contracts with Oxford University Press and Palgrave. Ryan has presented his findings before practitioners and policymakers at the UK Home Office in London, the Department of Defence in Ottawa, the Swedish Defence Research Agency in Stockholm, and the United Nations in New York and in Vienna.
------------------------------
Message: 5
Date: Fri, 11 Mar 2022 09:13:34 -0600
From: Robert W Gehl <lists at robertwgehl.org>
To: air-l at listserv.aoir.org
Subject: [Air-L] CFP: "Cybercrime" at the 56th Hawaii International
Conference on System Sciences
Message-ID: <a45162a1-032a-aa04-e33e-e50f790780e5 at robertwgehl.org>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8; format=flowed
# CALL FOR PAPERS: CYBERCRIME AT THE 56TH HAWAII INTERNATIONAL
CONFERENCE ON SYSTEM SCIENCES
Research of the Internet as a site for communication and networking has
focused mostly on legal practices. Recent years have nevertheless seen a
significant increase in cybercrime, including illegal commerce being
conducted on various platforms. In the public eye, much of it is
associated with the non-indexed Dark Web, but research tells us that it
is likewise present on many clear web sites and being conducted via
numerous social media and instant messaging services.
Rarely a day goes by without cybercrime being reported in the media.
Examples include online trading in narcotics and other illicit goods and
services, the hijacking of individual accounts and organizational
systems, extortion, exit scams, fake investments in cryptocurrencies and
even blatant information manipulation for financial gain.
This minitrack aim is to give insights and develop a theoretical and
practical understanding of issues related to cybercrime without
excluding any methodological approaches. We welcome conceptual,
theoretical, empirical and methodological papers that enrich our
understanding of illegal online practices. Topics of interest include,
but are not limited to:
* Trading in illicit goods and services online
* The use of the Dark Web as a marketplace or information sharing
environment
* Using social media and instant messaging services for illicit trading
* Ransomware
*Phishing and scamming
*Cryptomarkets and cryptocurrencies
*Information manipulation for commercial gain
*Dark Web deception, risk, security, and privacy
* Differences between legal and illegal online trading
* Regional differences in cybercrime
* Investigative techniques and methods for cybercrimes
# SUBMISSION GUIDELINES:
Author Instructions: https://hicss.hawaii.edu/authors/
Minitrack website:
https://hicss.hawaii.edu/tracks-55/internet-and-the-digital-economy/#cybercrime-minitrack
# IMPORTANT DATES:
* April 15, 2022: Paper submission begins (through HICSS systems:
https://hicss-submissions.org/)
* June 15, 2022: Paper submission deadline (11:59 pm HST)
* August 17,2022: Notification of acceptance/rejection
* September 22, 2022: Deadline for authors to submit final manuscript
for publication
* October 1, 2022: Deadline for at least one author for each paper to
register for the conference
# MINITRACK CO-CHAIRS:
Tuomas Harviainen (Primary Contact)
Tampere University
tuomas.harviainen at tuni.fi
Piotr Siuda
Kazimierz Wielki University in Bydgoszcz
piotr.siuda at ukw.edu.pl
Robert W. Gehl
Louisiana Tech University
rgehl at latech.edu
Juho Hamari
Tampere University
juho.hamari at tuni.fi
------------------------------
Message: 6
Date: Fri, 11 Mar 2022 09:53:53 -0600
From: Robert W Gehl <lists at robertwgehl.org>
To: air-l at listserv.aoir.org
Subject: [Air-L] Book Announcement: Social Engineering (MIT Press)
Message-ID: <7bfa764b-bcaf-c579-181e-730932883849 at robertwgehl.org>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8; format=flowed
On behalf of my co-author, Sean Lawson, I'm happy to announce that our
book Social Engineering: *How Crowdmasters, Phreaks, Hackers, and Trolls
Created a New Form of Manipulative Communication* is now available from
MIT Press. It's available as a paperback as well as open access -- see
https://mitpress.mit.edu/books/social-engineering for more details.
AOIR has influenced my career tremendously, and I think this book
demonstrates how. The book starts with what we're all stressed about
right now -- disinformation, misinformation, conspiracy theories, and
manipulative communication in digital media. We then use critical
genealogical methods to help pick apart manipulative communication. We
turn to two moments in 20th century history -- early 20th century
propaganda and public relations, and mid-20th century phone phreak and
hacker con artistry -- to glean concepts. We ultimately argue that
today's digital media disinformation is a mix of mass and interpersonal
manipulation, what we call "masspersonal social engineering" (MPSE).
The book is, for better or worse, focused largely on American media and
hacker history. It's the context the two of us know best. That said,
we've observed elements of MPSE in the response to the pandemic,
Canadian truck convoy protests, and the disinformation campaigns
happening during the Russian invasion of the Ukraine, so I believe the
book's concepts can travel to other contexts.
Regards,
Rob
--
Robert W. Gehl (he/him/his)
F Jay Taylor Endowed Research Chair of Communication, Louisiana Tech
Fulbright Scholar
www.robertwgehl.org | @robertwgehl
PGP Key:
https://keyserver.ubuntu.com/pks/lookup?op=get&fingerprint=on&search=0xE4E010ADF0D6CC5F
Sent from our OS on our Internet
------------------------------
Message: 7
Date: Fri, 11 Mar 2022 12:04:08 -0500
From: Joly MacFie <joly at punkcast.com>
To: aoir list <air-l at aoir.org>
Subject: Re: [Air-L] Multistakeholder Imposition of Internet Sanctions
Message-ID:
<CAM9VJk204ds8xqcib3NE3oBYZ6gHo8R6tANqeho2kxNmBLPj5g at mail.gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8"
There is discussion on this on the IETF HRPC (Human Rights Protocol
Considerations) list
https://mailarchive.ietf.org/arch/msg/hrpc/O9OyvXaJQYYObKNFZ5OMwFeLJqg/
On Thu, Mar 10, 2022 at 5:18 AM Joly MacFie <joly at punkcast.com> wrote:
Via Bill Woodcock of PCH on NANOG, a founding statement + technical paper
on '*Multistakeholder Imposition of Internet Sanctions*' signed by a
bunch of people, including former ISOC trustee John Levine.
https://www.pch.net/resources/Papers/Multistakeholder-Imposition-of-Internet-Sanctions.pdf
EXCERPT
*We believe it is now incumbent upon the Internet community to
deliberate and make decisions in the face of humanitarian crises. We may
not responsibly dismiss such crises without consideration, nor with
consideration only for the self-interest of our community?s own direct
constituents; instead, maturity of governance requires that self interests
be weighed in the balance with broader moral and societal considerations.
This document is the beginning of a global Internet governance conversation
about the appropriate scope of sanctions, the feasibility of sanctions
within the realm of our collective responsibility, and our moral imperative
to minimize detrimental consequences. *
*Principles for Internet Infrastructure Governance Sanctions *
*We, the undersigned, agree to the following principles: *
*? Disconnecting the population of a country from the Internet is a
disproportionate and inappropriate sanction, since it hampers their access
to the very information that might lead them to withdraw support for acts
of war and leaves them with access to only the information their own
government chooses to furnish. *
*? The effectiveness of sanctions should be evaluated relative to
predefined goals. Ineffective sanctions waste effort and willpower and
convey neither unity nor conviction. *
*? Sanctions should be focused and precise. They should minimize the
chance of unintended consequences or collateral damage. Disproportionate or
over-broad sanctions risk fundamentally alienating populations. *
*? Military and propaganda agencies and their information infrastructure
are potential targets of sanctions. *
*? The Internet, due to its transnational nature and consensus-driven
multistakeholder system of governance, currently does not easily lend
itself to the imposition of sanctions in national conflicts. *
*? It is inappropriate and counterproductive for governments to attempt to
compel Internet governance mechanisms to impose sanctions outside of the
community?s multistakeholder decision-making process. *
*? There are nonetheless appropriate, effective, and specific sanctions
the Internet governance community may wish to consider in its deliberative
processes. *
*Recommendations *
*We believe it is the responsibility of the global Internet governance
community to weigh the costs and risks of sanctions against the moral
imperatives that call us to action in defense of society, and we must
address this governance problem now and in the future. We believe the time
is right for the formation of a new, minimal, multistakeholder mechanism,
similar in scale to NSP-Sec or Outages, which after due process and
consensus would publish sanctioned IP addresses and domain names in the
form of public data feeds in standard forms (BGP and RPZ), to be consumed
by any organization that chooses to subscribe to the principles and their
outcome. *
*This process should use clearly documented procedures to assess
violations of international norms in an open, multistakeholder, and
consensus-driven process, taking into account the principles of
non-overreach and effectiveness in making its determinations. This system
mirrors existing systems used by network operators to block spam, malware,
and DDoS attacks, so it requires no new technology and minimal work to
implement. *
*We call upon our colleagues to participate in a multistakeholder
deliberation using the mechanism outlined above, to decide whether the IP
addresses and domain names of the Russian military and its propaganda
organs should be sanctioned, and to lay the groundwork for timely decisions
of similar gravity and urgency in the future. *
Bill writes:
*Now we can focus on operationalization. Mailing list, web site, etc. are
in the process of being set up.The goal is to have a minimal, lightweight
mechanism with BGP and RPZ feeds that networks can voluntarily subscribe
to. 99% of the time, they?d be empty. Occasionally, when the Internet
community believes that a military or propaganda agency is problematic
enough to be worth sanctioning, IPs and domains would be added to the feed.
The mechanism is exactly the same as is currently used for blackholing
abuse IPs and domains, so doesn?t take anything new on the subscribing
network?s side, just one more feed.We?re anticipating that debate over what
goes into the list will only happen very occasionally, and the discussion
list will be quiet the rest of the time. A lot like NSP-Sec and Outages.
And there?ll probably be a lot of overlap with those groups. All are
welcome, look for an announcement in a few more days.*
--
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Joly MacFie +12185659365
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Joly MacFie +12185659365
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Joly MacFie +12185659365
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Message: 8
Date: Fri, 11 Mar 2022 14:01:16 -0500
From: Joly MacFie <joly at punkcast.com>
To: aoir list <air-l at aoir.org>
Subject: [Air-L] WEBCAST: FCC Broadband Labels Hearing 1 ?
Transparency
Message-ID:
<CAM9VJk2A1gC8E5-z5usNnTPW2snaP+UGG0R3g3Tu_6BtpmS7-g at mail.gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8"
This has just kicked off. The idea is to provide for Internet access the
same kind of labeling that is already mandatory on food ingredients and
nutrition values. This US initiative is something that, if successful, may
be emulated in many countries.
Captions and ASL are provided, and presenters include Dr. Margaret Nygren *of
the* American Association on Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities
ISOC Live posted: "On Friday March 11 2022 starting from 1:30pm-3:30pm EST
(16:30-20:30 UTC) the United States Federal Communications Commission (FCC)
will hold the first of a series of virtual public hearings as a part of its
broadband consumer labels rulemaking proceeding"
[image: YouTube]On *Friday March 11 2022* starting from *1:30pm-3:30pm EST*
(16:30-20:30 UTC) the United States *Federal Communications Commission
<https://www.fcc.gov/>* (FCC) will hold the first of a series of virtual
public hearings as a part of its *broadband consumer labels rulemaking
<http://www.fcc.gov/broadbandlabels>* proceeding. The purpose of these
hearing is to assess how consumers evaluate internet service plans and
whether current disclosures are sufficient. Specifically, the first hearing
will evaluate the effectiveness of the *current transparency rule
<https://www.fcc.gov/document/fcc-acts-empower-broadband-consumers-through-transparency>*
and provide necessary background for the new label requirement, including
whether additional disclosure requirements are necessary. The meeting will
stream with open captioning and American Sign Language. Questions can be
submitted by sending an email to *BroadbandLabelsHearing at fcc.gov
<BroadbandLabelsHearing at fcc.gov>*.
*AGENDA* (EST = UTC-5)
*13:30* *Welcoming Remarks and Introductions*
*13:45* *Testimony from Grassroots Navigators*
*Maribel Martinez*, Consultant, Digital Access to All
*Matt Sayre*, Onward Eugene
*14:00* *Panel Presentations*
*Deb Berlyn* and *Ann Berkowitz* (FCC 2015/2016 Consumer Advisory Committee)
*Diana Eisner*, U.S. Telecom
*Dr. Margaret Nygren*, American Association on Intellectual and
Developmental Disabilities
*Joshua Stager*, Open Technology Institute, New America Foundation
*Greg Guice*, Public Knowledge
*Crystal Rhoades*, Commissioner, Nebraska Public Service Commission
*15:10 Panel Q&A*
*LIVESTREAM https://youtu.be/K3tW_JGWnWQ <https://youtu.be/K3tW_JGWnWQ>*
*REAL TIME TEXT https://bit.ly/3pUzB9O <https://bit.ly/3pUzB9O>*
*TWITTER #broadbandlabels <https://bit.ly/34Dh3U2> #transparency #fcclive
@fcc @AnnBerkowitz1 @MMartConsult @msayre @OnwardEugene @DianaLaurenESQ
@USTelecom @MaggieNygren1 @_aaidd @joshuastager @OTI @greg_guicepk
@publicknowledge Crystal Rhoades @NEB_PSC #captioned*
*SIMULCASTS*
*https://www.twitter.com/ISOC_Live/ <https://www.twitter.com/ISOC_Live/>*
*https://www.twitch.tv/isoclive <https://www.twitch.tv/isoclive>*
*https://www.facebook.com/liveisoc/ <https://www.facebook.com/liveisoc/>*
*https://www.linkedin.com/in/punkcast/
<https://www.linkedin.com/in/punkcast/>*
*ARCHIVE*
*https://archive.org/details/fcclabels1
<https://archive.org/details/fcclabels1>*
*Permalink*
https://isoc.live/15228/
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Joly MacFie +12185659365
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Subject: Digest Footer
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End of Air-L Digest, Vol 212, Issue 11
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