/ / News

A couple days ago, I posted about my schedule in Boston — talks at MIT, Harvard, Olin College and Boskone, the northeastern regional science fiction convention. The organizers of Boskone have just alerted me to another event I’m scheduled to do there:

I’ll be hosting a “Kaffeeklatsch” at the con on Sunday, 19 March, from 10AM-11AM. These are small, informal coffee-and-cake roundtables where we just talk about whatever’s on your mind. The signup for the Kaffeeklatsch will be at the con, and space is limited, so if you’re interested, be sure to put your name down as early as possible.

/ / News, Podcast

On Tuesday night, I gave a talk about DVB-CPCM, Europe’s version of the Broadcast Flag, a plan to make sure that digital TVs don’t do anything to disrupt the entertainment industry’s business-model. The talk was part of the Open Rights Group’s second meeting and it also included a great talk by Phil Booth of the No2ID campaign.

Improbulus, a digital rights activist, recorded both speeches and uploaded them to the Internet Archive. The recording of my talk cuts just a few words off the beginning and end, but nothing major. Hope you enjoy it!

MP3 of my talk

/ / News

I’m going to be in Boston next week for a gig as an MIT artist-in-residence, a bunch of meetings, some public talks and Boskone, the northeastern regional science fiction convention, where I’m going to be a special guest. I hope to see you there! Here are the public events I’ll be at:

Monday, February 13, 2006, 5PM
Down and Out at MIT: An Evening with Cory Doctorow
MIT Bartos Theater (E15), 20 Ames Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139
Sponsored by MIT Comparative Media Studies, MIT Office of the Arts

Wednesday, February 15, 2006, 6PM
Set Top Cop:
Hollywood’s Secret War on Your Living Room

Harvard Emerson Hall, Rm 105
Sponsored by Harvard Berkman Center for Internet and Society, Harvard Computer Society, Harvard FreeCulture

Thursday, February 16, Noon
0WNED — How Hollywood Plans on Making the Future Subservient to the Past
Olin Auditorium, Olin College, Needham, MA

Friday, February 17, 2006, 7PM
Trends in SF Publishing: Technology
Panel at Boskone with James Patrick Kelly, Clayton L. McNally, Steve Miller and Don Sakers

Saturday, February 18, 2006, 10AM
Special guest talk at Boskone

Saturday, February 18, 2006, 1PM
Reading at Boskone

Saturday, February 18, 2006, 4PM
Technology Today!
Panel at Boskone with Tobias Buckell, Ernest Lilley, Edie Stern and Alicia Kestrel Verlager

Saturday, February 18, 2006, 5PM
Blogs, Boing Boing, and Beyond
Panel at Boskone with Kathryn Cramer, Daniel P. Dern, MaryAnn Johanson, Teresa Nielsen Hayden

Sunday, February 19, 2006, 10AM
Kaffeeklatsch

Sunday, February 19, 2006, 11AM
Booksigning at Boskone

Sunday, February 19, 2006, Noon
Intellectual Property: Public Domain Issues
Panel at Boskone with Deb Geisler and Patrick Nielsen Hayden

Sunday, February 19, 2006, 2PM
Cyborgs: After Man, and Beyond
Panel at Boskone with Robert I. Katz, Karl Schroeder, Charles Stross and Alicia Kestrel Verlager

/ / News

The Locus Awards ballot is online, where science fiction fans can vote on their favorite works of 2005. I’m proud to report that I’m eligible in three categories: Best Fantasy Novel (Someone Comes to Town, Someone Leaves Town), Best Novella (Human Readable) and Best Novelette (I, Robot).

The ballot is drawn from the Locus Recommended Reading List, which is an excellent way to familiarize yourself with the best work published in the field this year.

/ / News

I’ll be speaking at the LIFT conference later this week in Geneva. My session is on Thursday, 2 February, at 1:30PM, on DRM and the European Broadcast Flag. Also at the event are Bruce Sterling, Robert Scoble, Euan Semple, Bruno Giussani, Xavier Comtesse, Régine Debatty, Anina, Jeffrey Huang, Matt Jones, Chris Lawer, Hugh Macleod, David Galipeau, Aymeric Sallin, Paul Oberson, Jean-Luc Raymond and a ton of other amazing people. Hope to see you there, too!

When: 2006, February 2 and 3 (that would be Thursday and Friday)

Where: The conference will be held at the International Conference Center (CICG) of Geneva, Switzerland.

The attendee list is full, but there’s a waiting list if you’re game.

LIFT is organized around five major topics, or tracks.

Big ideas — From co-creation to citizen journalism via the copyright-less economy, technology and communications are changing the rules. Big ideas are those that concern us all.

Design — Design is about making the life of people better. We’ve invited designers from across the spectrum of design, from strategy to pixels, from screens to devices, from business structures to experiences.

Emerging technologies — From RFID (the identification chips embedded in all objects) to nano tech, we are going to discuss technologies that are just starting to create an impact on our world. Folks from the labs are going to take off their white coats and tell us what’s coming.

Global Solidarity — Geneva is not only the place that saw the web come to life. It is also a major humanitarian center of excellence with hundreds of organizations having their headquarters around the lake. We invited speakers representing this constantly evolving field, in which solutions to complex problems don’t merely improve lives, but save them.

Internet — Last but not the least, the spine of all of the above. It gave many of us our careers, our passions, and it sustains much of our daily life. We are inviting speakers who are pushing the evolving definition of what the Internet is and can be.