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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Brussels:20210127T110000
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DTSTAMP:20260414T234854
CREATED:20220728T081240Z
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SUMMARY:NGI Forward: dialogues on the future of search
DESCRIPTION:Salon: The future of Information access for search and discovery in next generation internet\nRegister early: https://app.livestorm.co/made-group/dialogues-on-data-and-search-the-future-of-information-and-search \nOn January 27th probe the following questions: What are the key needs of tomorrow’s search and discovery\, what are the distributed infrastructure needs and how are algorithms that give ‘top’ results validated? What are the data policy guidelines and governance thereof? What are user’s unmet needs to ‘discover’ tomorrow’s world? Do diverse human languages and values play a local role in the global search context of zeroes and ones? And is there room for a citizens fair data deal that leads to reliable and verifiable information and data trusts? How do individual (eg right to be forgotten) and collective rights (to know) make searching more public\, more transparent or more ethical by design? \nBy decentralising search & retrieval\, and by making future acts machine-processed\, and services composable in realtime\, there still remains a wide gap to fill: to gain quality and discoverability. Open standards can help. Service composability joins multiple independent sources of federated search without a single search authority point of presence. The ethical search would apply a variety of ethical filters to search results\, plus mechanisms for collective action to feed those filters\, making values transparent or visible inside future AI search. Trust benefits usage\, instead of lamenting lack of trust in commercial providers like Amazon.  In ‘The Age of Continuous Connection 24/7’ it may be time to change our unsustainable business models. \nWE WANT YOUR INPUT AND IDEAS: Go tell.edgeryders.eu \nWe invite experts to give their recommendations for NGI. Three EU funded H2020 projects in this domain join this event: NGI FORWARD\, NGI0 Discovery\, and NGI Assure.  We invite others to also join. The expected outcome is to contribute to the next generation EU research funding\, a better understanding and cohesive EU efforts to submit innovative ideas for open calls. Meeting organizers include the IoT Council & Edgeryders for NGI FORWARD\, NLnet Foundation for NGI Discovery and Assure and ELONTECH. \nRegister early: https://app.livestorm.co/made-group/dialogues-on-data-and-search-the-future-of-information-and-search \n11:00 – 16:00 | Workshops: The Future of Search\nWorkshops are on Big Blue Button\,  hosted by TU. Delft \n\n11:00 – 12:00 | Search and Ethics\nKick-off by Noémi Ványi (SEARX)\nhttps://bbb.tbm.tudelft.nl/b/rob-u1k-4jz-ycj\n13:00 – 14:00 | Search and (hyper) locality\nKick-off by Sarah Hoffmann (OpenStreetMap)\nhttps://bbb.tbm.tudelft.nl/b/rob-uo4-q1n-ldu\n15:00 – 16:00 | Search and Internet of Things\nKick-off by Michael Christen (YaCy)\nhttps://bbb.tbm.tudelft.nl/b/rob-1zv-mco-ci9\n\nWE WANT YOUR INPUT AND IDEAS: Go tell.edgeryders.eu \n17:00 – 18:00 | Seminar: The Future of Search\nSpeakers\n\nVint Cerf (Google)\nhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vint_Cerf\nLoretta Anania (EC)\nhttps://www.dsimanifesto.eu/speakers/loretta-anania/\nSarah Hoffmann (OpenStreetMap)\nhttps://sosm.ch/about/board/former-board-members/sarah-hoffmann/\nMichiel Leenaars (NGI projects coordinator)\nhttps://nlnet.nl/people/leenaars.html\nPietro Lio’ (Department of Computer Science and Technology of the University of Cambridge)\nhttps://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/~pl219/\n\nOrganizing\n\ntheinternetofthings.eu\ntell.edgeryders.eu\nresearch.ngi.eu\nnlnet.nl\nnlnet.nl/discovery\nnlnet.nl/assure\nelontech.org\n\nThe Salons reflect the views of the participants and do not necessarily reflect the views of the European Commission but form part of the project’s overarching recommendations for the NGI and future European internet policy. \nWE WANT YOUR INPUT AND IDEAS: Go tell.edgeryders.eu
URL:https://ngi.eu/event/ngi-forward-dialogues-on-the-future-of-search/
LOCATION:ON-LINE EVENT
CATEGORIES:Events
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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Brussels:20190203T144000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Brussels:20190203T145500
DTSTAMP:20260414T234854
CREATED:20220728T075846Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220728T075846Z
UID:39752-1549204800-1549205700@ngi.eu
SUMMARY:NGI @ FOSDEM19
DESCRIPTION:Next Generation Internet initiative – Year Zero\nCome work for the internet on privacy\, trust\, search & discovery\n Track: Lightning Talks | Room: H.2215 (Ferrer)\nLast year during a FOSDEM keynote Michiel Leenaars\, director of strategy at NLnet foundation\, introduced the Next Generation Internet initiative together with member of the European parliament Marietje Schaake. NGI aims to be the first concerted effort to put significant public funding to hands-on work to really fix the internet. Meanwhile\, the project is on its way. \n \nOn December 1st 2018\, the first open calls opened with funding for independent researchers and developers working on free and open source projects in the area of privacy and trust enhancing technologies and on search\, discovery and discoverability. In this talk Leenaars\, project lead of NGI Zero that is currently offering 11.2 millioneuro in grants\, will tell everything you need to know about the various open calls that you can apply for. With grants ranging from 5.000 euro to 50.000 euro available for research\, development and engineering effort NGI Zero aims to lead the push toward the post-Snowden internet we want. \nFrom the humble four nodes of the ARPANET that were bootstrapped half a century ago this year\, until today\, the internet has grown at a breathtaking pace. But while the technology has gradually penetrated every aspect of our lives\, it has become clear that not all is well and at least some part of its growth has spiraled out of control. In fact\, web inventor Tim Berners-Lee has recently called the current state of his creation (and by extension the larger internet) “dystopian”. \nThe internet of especially the last fifteen years has brought about undesirable concentration of power (“winner takes all”)\, and while it has given us many good things has also caused loss of human agency in many other realms. Internet has given the world totalitarianism the likes of which it has never seen\, has enabled political manipulation at unprecedented scale affection the lives of hundreds of millions of people. Internet has eroded the private sphere to the point where it has been declared dead\, and the mantra of ‘big data’ and business analytics frame the discussion we should be having. Due to its open global nature and the wholly new types of economic dominance neither internet users nor governments both have an adequate answer against dominant super-actors. How dow we stop large scale abuse of power. Have the web and the internet become “anti-human” as Berners-Lee posits? And what can we do about it? \nThe internet is not going to fix itself. Many of the more promising efforts in this realm have been ‘bottom up’ efforts from individuals or small teams\, but these isolated efforts certainly have missed critical mass to actually scale up and change the mainstream internet and the commercial landscape where powerful actors are fully vested in the current course. The Next Generation Internet initiative aims to bring those efforts together\, strengthen and unite them and turn them into something that can be deployed across the whole internet. Let there be no doubt about it: fixing the internet is an insane ‘moonshot++’ effort: the internet is the largest technical structure man has ever made\, and the task at hand is to vastly improve its very operating fabric with > 3 billion people using it on a daily basis. \nAnd yet we have to: fixing the internet is essential to safeguard our economy and create a more resilient and robust infrastructure. And even more importantly we also depend on it to upholding our way of life. How the internet\, the web and the mobile ecosystems work directly impacts our human values. Crafting a better internet is essential for maintaining basic human rights such as privacy for the near-future Europe. \nSurely\, a larger political agenda of Europe should be an integral part of the approach – in some cases regulating the most predatory behaviour from bad actors might be the only thing left to put the genie back in the bottle and to restore health back to the internet. However\, it is also clear that a significant part of the solution lies in the hands of technologists. NGI Zero is probably the first funding programme of its scale that is entirely based on the principles of free/libre\, open source software. We need smart and resourceful people that come and work for the internet. Could this be you? In this talk Michiel Leenaars will explain how the funding works\, and how NGI Zero deals with important issues like localisation\, accessibility\, security\, packaging\, documentation\, responsible disclosure and more. Come and work for the internet too!
URL:https://ngi.eu/event/ngi-fosdem19/
LOCATION:ULB Campus du Solbosch | H.2215 (Ferrer)\, Avenue Franklin Roosevelt 50\, 1050 Bruxelles\, Belgium\, Bruxelles\, Bruxelles\, 1050\, Belgium
CATEGORIES:Events
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