Talking 'Heads

| | TrackBacks (0)

David Weinberger blogged the Bellhead-Nethead Conference at Cardozo earlier this week:

  • Bob Pepper, Chief of Poilicy Development at the FCC
  • Bruce Mehlman, Internet Innovation Alliance
  • Justification for Regulation, with Rebecca Arbogast, LeggMason; Daniel Benoliel, UC Berkeley, Law; Harold Feld, Media Access Project; James Gattuso, Heritage Foundation; Russell Hanser, FCC (speaking for himself and off the record [Blog off]); David Isenberg, isen.com; Eli Noam, Columbia U. economics; Christopher Savage, Cole, Raywid & Braverman
  • Ancillary Jurisdiction with Robert Blau, BellSouth; Jeffrey Carlisle, chief of Wireline Competition Bureau of FCC; Bill Hunt, Level 3; James Lewis, MCI; Randolph May, Progress & Freedom Foundation; Gigi Sohn, Public Knowledge; James Speta, Northwestern U., Law
  • Journalist Dan Gillmor
  • Universal service with Robert Frieden, Penn State, College of Communications; Jonathan Askin, Pulver.com; Jonathan Weinberg, Wayne State, Law; Kevin Werbach, Wharton School; Brad Ramsay, Nat'l Assoc. of Regulatory Utilities Comissioners; Matthew Brill, FCC
  • John Rogovin, FCC, discusses CALEA
  • Stewart Baker on CALEA
  • CALEA Panel with John Morris, Center for Democacy and Technology; Mike Godwin, Public Knowledge; Geraldine Matise, FCC; Christopher Murray, Vonage; John Morris; Douglas McCollum, Fiducianet; Timothy Wu, Columbia Law School; David Young, Verizon;

Conference reflections from organizer Susan Crawford, Assistant Professor of Law at Cardozo: "The big picture is the real news right now.  Big government wants to be in charge of the internet, and we have the opportunity to resist on a national level."

Related: News.com interview with FCC Policy Development Chief Robert Pepper: The technologist who has Michael Powell's ear

0 TrackBacks

Listed below are links to blogs that reference this entry: Talking 'Heads.

TrackBack URL for this entry: http://www.iptablog.org/emtee/mt-tb.cgi/2972

About this Entry

This page contains a single entry by Andrew Raff published on October 1, 2004 2:52 PM.

SSRN-Reconstructing Electronic Surveillance Law by Daniel Solove was the previous entry in this blog.

Suing Your Customers: Good Idea? is the next entry in this blog.

Find recent content on the main index or look in the archives to find all content.

Powered by Movable Type 4.01