At long last! The attached .txt and .pdf are the result of the Berlin meeting on
the weekend September 24/25 and intensive post-processing. Additional
supporters, who either would like to sign with a nym are welcome as well as
those, who would like to have the "unnamed" counter incremented.

The task ahead of us is huge, and the wind is strong, and the energy that
several people are putting into it is encouraging. And we'll have to try it 
anyways.

Therefore: Join us at 30C3 between Xmas und Newyear in Hamburg.

:)

Klaus "Tom Twiddlebit" Schleisiek,
for the [email protected] organizing team,
use 0x4FC9BCE4.asc as public group key.
And let us know early on when you intend to come.

Wau-Holland-Stiftung                   W
Postfach 65 04 43              H O L L A N D
22364 Hamburg/Germany        S T I F T U N G
http://www.wauland.de
#youbroketheinternet - we'll make ourselves a new one

Social networking is a means of direct, group based, and international 
communication that became a basic commodity of life for very many people. For 
those born after 1990 it is the normal state of the world. 

Both individuals and companies want to keep informational self determination 
(sovereignty) and ownership of their data not only in social networks. Social 
and environmental activists are dependent on trustworthy communication via 
secure and linked-up channels.

 "Trustworthiness" encompasses features such as end-to-end encryption, social 
graph obfuscation, forward secrecy, self determined data storage, free and open 
software and, in the very end, self determined communication meshes, 
independent from hierarchically managed networks, as well as free and open 
hardware that is unlikely to be equipped with backdoors.

#youbroketheinternet is an initiative to create a scalable social 
communications and data exchange network that brings all the things you need to 
share to just the people that are intended to have it. Already, a substantial 
number of projects exist that purport to fullfill these goals. Looking closer 
at those projects during the past four years made it clear that they all have 
serious deficiencies as regards either privacy, scalability, or usability. But 
the existing projects all have their merits. Therefore, #youbroketheinternet 
will not try to build the ideal system from scratch, but rather it will try to 
integrate, re-use, and re-orient existing projects to work towards a common 
goal.

To this end we want to organize a cluster of events at 30C3. An introductory 
panel presentation as kick-off, and a series of workshops with introductory 
talks on the following topics:

- Social Net Politics and Political Attack Vectors
- Usability and Adoption Threshold
- Scalability and Architecture
- Crypto Routing Cores
- (Wireless) Mesh Networks
- Open Hardware
- Fincancing and Business Models

* Social Net Politics and Political Attack Vectors

Using communication technology as a tool for solving social problems is 
regarded "dangerous" by the elite.

* Usability and Adoption Threshold

How can we appeal to a large audience? And how can we make the technologies 
developed grandparent compatible?

* Scalability and Architecture

How can we build systems that are capable of scaling to, in the best case, some 
hundred million users? How can we leverage the distributed computing power and 
refuse to be thrown back into the cloud?

* Crypto Routing Cores

How can we achieve confidential transmission of information? How much anonymity 
is possible and what are the tradeoffs?

* (Wireless) Mesh Networks

We need more infrastructure that is run independently of nation states or 
for-profit corporations. How can we as a society operate networks for the 
common good?

* Open Hardware

If the hardware we are running our systems on is intrinsically insecure, we may 
be building a fortress on top of a house of cards. What is required on the 
lowest levels to get reasonable endpoint security?

* Financing and Business Models

Operating networks and developing software that do not, by design, allow the 
aggregation,  marketing, and eavesdropping of user data is a technical 
challenge. Making it trustworthy for the general public calls for free and open 
software. This creates its own challenges when it comes to financing and 
sustaining a business. How can we get done what we think is right and still 
afford a living?

* Invited projects (so far) are

BATMAN, BitTorrent, Briar, cjdns, cryptocat, debian, GNUnet, I2P, Lorea, 
Milkymist, OTR, Pond, PSYC, Retroshare, TAHOE-LAFS, The Freenet Project, Tor, 
Tribler, Unhosted

* Open list of supporters

Nana Karlstetter, Daniel Reusche, Tom Twiddlebit, Carlo v. Loesch, Clemens Cap, 
Guido Witmond, twelve unnamed,

Attachment: #youbroketheinternet_invitation.pdf
Description: Adobe PDF document

Attachment: 0x4FC9BCE4.asc
Description: application/pgp-keys

Attachment: signature.asc
Description: OpenPGP digital signature

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