Justice: What's The Right Thing To Do? Episode 02: "PUTTING A PRICE TAG ON LIFE"
d e v o n
Not today Justin

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Love Begins
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Janaina Medeiros
Stranger Things
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Kaledo Art

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NASA
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
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Kiana Khansmith

Product Placement
$LAYYYTER
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almost home
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@intelcloud
Justice: What's The Right Thing To Do? Episode 02: "PUTTING A PRICE TAG ON LIFE"
Justice: What's The Right Thing To Do?
Harvard "THE MORAL SIDE OF MURDER"
Future Science 193 videos
Science Cooking
Algorithms for Big Data (COMPSCI 229r)
Harvard i-lab | Startup Secrets: Getting Behind the Perfect Pitch
Harvard i-lab | Startup Secrets: Have You Got What It Takes?
Harvard i-lab | Tariq Trotter, aka Black Thought Freestyle at Other Side Speaker Series
Powering the Octobot: A chemical reaction
Introducing the Octobot
Ask the EFF: The Year in Digital Civil Liberties
(57 mins) Kurt Opsahl, Jacob Hoffman-Andrews, Vivian Brown, Parker Higgins - Get the latest information about how the law is racing to catch up with technological change from staffers at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, the nation's premiere digital civil liberties group fighting for freedom and privacy in the computer age. This session will include updates on current EFF issues such as surveillance online, encryption (and backdoors), and fighting efforts to use intellectual property claims to shut down free speech and halt innovation. The panel will also include a discussion on their technology project to protect privacy and speech online, updates on cases and legislation affecting security research, and much more. Half the session will be given over to question-and-answer, so it's your chance to ask EFF questions about the law and technology issues that are important to you.
The Onion Report
(51 mins) asn, Nima Fatemi, David Goulet -- The Tor community, network, and ecosystem are growing and evolving at a very fast pace - from new secure applications using Tor to deploying relays in public libraries around the world. Tor as a project, but first and foremost as a large community, is at the forefront of technical, social, economical, political, and cultural battles pertaining to anonymity and basic human rights. This talk will cover the state of Tor on all levels: organizational, community, and technical. Recent and upcoming software developments, movement in onion (aka hidden) services land, attacks on the network and how we are fighting back, community projects, and much more will be covered. This is not about the Dark Web but rather about a Secure Web (copyleft pending).
Crypto War II: Updates from the Trenches
(54 mins) Matt Blaze, Sandy Clark -- For several years, law enforcement has been complaining that legal wiretaps are "going dark" (especially when encryption is used), and has been lobbying lawmakers to mandate "surveillance-friendly" technology that allows the government to break encryption and unlock devices under certain circumstances. At the same time, computer and network security is universally recognized to be in an increasingly dangerous state of peril, and technologists worry that "backdoor" mandates will only make things worse. We've been here before, not long ago. In the 1990s, after the government proposed the "Clipper Chip" key escrow system, we had a similar debate with similar stakes. It was finally resolved when the government essentially gave up and finally allowed cryptography to proliferate. This talk will review the current cryptography debate, will examine the risks of the "keys under doormats" that the FBI is asking for, and will explore technical alternatives that could satisfy the needs of law enforcement without making computer security more of a mess than it already is. In particular, Matt and Sandy will examine the viability, and risks, of law enforcement exploitation of existing vulnerabilities in targets' devices to obtain wiretap evidence.
Privacy Badger and Panopticlick vs. the Trackers, Round 1
(52 mins) William Budington, Cooper Quintin - - Increasingly, as you navigate the web, your movements are being tracked. Even when you reject browser cookies, you transmit unique information that makes your browser personally identifiable. Ad tech and tracking companies are transforming the web into a platform where your user data is brokered and exchanged freely without your consent or even knowledge - and there is a true absence of limits to the methods trackers are willing to use to get that data from you. Luckily, there is hope. The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) has been developing technologies that let you know exactly how much of this data you are giving out as you browse, as well as releasing tools to help you protect yourselves against the trackers. Panopticlick and Privacy Badger help you keep your personal data private - and this talk will show you how.
LockSport Roadshow: Bring Your Oddities!
(120 mins) TOOOL and friends -- There have been plenty of talks at HOPE teaching you to pick conventional locks. But what about non-conventional locks? This panel - which will require much audience participation - is all about unique and interesting locks. Have a weird lock or even a strange key and want to know more about it? Bring it to the stage! If you can stump our esteemed panel, you'll win a prize! Don't be shy... bring out your unique and strange lock hardware and, if you're really brave, give the panel a chance to try to pick it!
SecureDrop: Two Years on and Beyond
(56 mins) Garrett Robinson -- Two years ago, Freedom of the Press Foundation introduced HOPE to their just-launched SecureDrop project, the open-source whistleblower submission system for journalists and news organizations that was originally created by the late Aaron Swartz. Now over three dozen news organizations around the world are using SecureDrop, and they've learned a ton about how journalists and sources interact securely. This talk will share a lot of this information for the first time. How is SecureDrop working in newsrooms? What challenges and threats does the system face? And what does the next generation SecureDrop look like?
Hacking Machine Learning Algorithms
(50 mins) Kyle Polich -- Algorithms control more and more of the systems we interact with on a daily basis. Critical decisions are executing without direct oversight by machine learning models. These systems, like any system, should be continuously taken apart and inspected to see how they work. Examining a machine learning model is not as easy as examining source code. This talk goes into detail on how to hack machine learning models and similar systems. Could an algorithm be racist? How can we detect it? Live examples in Python will be demoed and available on GitHub, and only basic programming knowledge is required to understand the talk and reproduce the example