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CPSR/Japan report Fall 2004 appendix
Chapter repot: Fall 2004 appendix
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CPSR/Japan Event Timeline 2003--2004 September 26, 2003 CPSR/Japan 2nd Anuual Conference http://black.res.soft.iwate-pu.ac.jp/~s-yamane/cpsr/events/cfp2003.txt The conference was reported by Mainichi Online. October 11--19, 2003 CPSR/Japan assisted a series of symposium titled as 'Civil Society and the Internet, Twenty Years of Networking and Future Prospects' held by JCAFE (Japan Computer Access for Empowerment). http://www.jcafe.net/sympo03/report/index.html In this symposium, CPSR/Japan active member Nobuo Sakiyama had a presentaion "Convention on Cybercrime and its Consequences to Information Society: the case of Japan". http://www.sakichan.org/publication/cybercrime-20031011/ Implementing Convention on Cybercrime into Japanese law is ongoing. December 2003 CPSR/Japan translates two CPSR-related documents. 1) Event information "Global Governance of ICT: Public Interest Considerations: Workshop presented by Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility on the occasion of the World Summit on the Information Society." http://black.res.soft.iwate-pu.ac.jp/~s-yamane/cpsr/WSIS/WSIS120903.html 2) "Position Statement on the Use of RFID on Consumer Products", originally published in November and co-signed by several organizations including CPSR. http://black.res.soft.iwate-pu.ac.jp/~s-yamane/cpsr/jointrfid-j.html It provides alternative resource for coming Japanese RFID guideline prepared by Ministry. February 23, 2004. CPSR/Japan held a informal meeting with CPSR president Nathaniel Borenstein. March 2004 CPSR/Japan officer Joichi Ito join the panel discussion with Lawrence Lessig and Hiroo Yamagata at Creative Commons Symposium in Tokyo. April 2004 Douglas Schuler, the director of CPSR Public Sphere Project, become a fellow of GLOCOM, the Center for Global Communications which is associated with the International University of Japan. May 10, 2004 Isamu Kaneko, a well-known software engineer and a research associate of Tokyo university was arrested for creating a P2P software called 'Winny.' 'Winny' supports anonymous bulletin board and file-sharing. From the day Isamu Kaneko was arrested, CPSR/Japan member Shunichi Arai immediately began the action to support him. Arai stated Isamu Defense Fund and "freekaneko.com" site. CPSR/Japan join to endorse the activity of freekaneko.com. Further information is available at http://freekaneko.com/. May 2004 CPSR/Japan officer Joichi Ito and other CPSR members (Gohsuke Takama, Hiroko Nagano, Satoshi Seki, Kenta Ushijima, Caryn Mladen) had been working to compile a report $(B!V=;L1$N%W%i%$%P(B $(B%7!<$NJ]8n$K4X$9$k?7$7$$9M$(J}$HEE;R<+<#BN$K$*$1$k$=$N%7%9%F%`(B $(BE*$JC4J]$N;EAH$_$K$D$$$F$N8&5f2q!WJs9p=q(B to Soumu-sho (Ministry of Public Management, Home Affairs, Posts and Telecommunications) in 2003--2004. In May, it was published online. http://www.soumu.go.jp/kokusai/jyumin_p.html The report is written for Japan's local government on residents privacy data protection issues, and to input up-to-date and easy-to-read information on international privacy issues, Privacy Enhancing Technologies, and Privacy Impact Assessment. Well-known writer Peter Wayner and privacy technology expert Peter Hope-Tindall are also co-authored the report. August 2004 CPSR have UN ECOSOC Special Consultative Status. September 2004 CPSR.ORG website is still under re-construction with Ford Foundation fund. New CPSR President William Drake attends CPSR/Japan annual conference.