Netconf 2020 edition

Netconf 2020 edition

An unconference on the technical, economic and social aspects of network engineering and infrastructure

Make a submission

Accepting submissions till 27 Mar 2020, 09:00 AM

TERI auditorium, Bangalore, Bangalore

##This event is postponed. Watch this page for updates.

Netconf has emerged from conversations that started at Rootconf 2019 edition and continued into Rootconf Pune, Hyderabad and Delhi editions subsequently.

Netconf is a platform for network engineers, ISPs, government representatives from telecom and IT departments, civil society groups, policy makers, providers of networking solutions, tech and law groups and activists, among others to discuss the technical, economic and social aspects of running networks and infrastructure, and access. See https://hasgeek.com/rootconf/netconf-2020/proposals#call-for-proposal for more details about topics.

The first edition of Netconf is an unconference, where participants can propose topics, suggest speakers and session formats. The event’s agenda will be set by participants. There will be room for open sessions for participants to propose topics/ideas/sessions on the morning of the event itself.

Event details:
Date: Friday, 27 March 2020
Venue: TERI auditorium, Domlur, Bangalore
Time: 9 AM to 6:30 PM followed
Schedule: https://hasgeek.com/rootconf/netconf-2020/schedule
Post-conference programme: reading of Michael W. Lucas’s works on tech-fiction followed by dinner.


For inquiries about tickets and sponsorships, write to sales@hasgeek.com or call 7676332020.

Click here for the sponsorship deck


To speak at Netconf, submit a talk here: https://hasgeek.com/rootconf/netconf-2020/proposals#call-for-proposal


Entry for children at Netconf: Children of all ages are welcome at Netconf. Entry for children is free. If you are bringing child/children under age 1, mention it when filling your ticket details. This will help us to arrange facilities for care.
Participants are welcome to propose sessions and activities for engaging children at Netconf.


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Rohini Lakshané

@rohinilakshane

Testing the whitelist for Internet access in Jammu and Kashmir

Submitted Mar 14, 2020

A free-wheeling discussion about significant findings from a usability testing exercise conducted on the whitelist issued for Internet access in Jammu and Kashmir in January 2020 and related issues regarding Internet access.

Target audience:
Policy makers
ISP representatives
Government representatives
Technology/ law groups/ enthusiasts
Civil society groups

Key takeaways:
Internet shutdowns as instruments of policy in J&K and the rest of India.
How alternatives such as whitelists will play out.
Call for feedback/ suggestions regarding methodology and policy interventions.

Outline

We performed usability testing of the whitelist for Internet access issued by the government of Jammu and Kashmir (J&K) in January 2020. The session presents significant findings from the study done from the perspective of the end-user, its methodology and limitations, and various challenges involved in empirically analysing the whitelist. We will also shine a light on the timeline and events leading up to the issuance of the whitelist and various developments that happened after the whitelist was released. It was updated periodically, which required us to make changes to the technical tests and the logging of results, until the list was scrapped in early March. We will also speak about the selection of entries in the whitelist and the current status of Internet access in the region.

J&K has experienced prolonged armed conflict and public unrest over the past few decades, which have shaped the nature of civil liberties that can be exercised in the region. An Internet shutdown that lasts 5.5 months and is followed by whitelist-mediated Internet access for an indefinite period, for a population as large as the one residing in the Jammu and Kashmir region is an unprecedented occurrence. The whitelisting arrangement with speeds restricted to 2G, when implemented as an alternative to blanket Internet shutdowns has severe and long-lasting implications for, inter alia, the economy, Internet policy and human rights. In this session, we hope to have a free-wheeling conversation with the participants about the technical and policy implications of such approaches to Internet access. We also hope to obtain feedback and suggestions from the participants about our methodology, technical results, and subsequent policy interventions.

Requirements

None

Speaker bio

Rohini Lakshané and Prateek Waghre

Rohini Lakshané is an engineer by training and a researcher working at the intersection technology, policy and civil liberties. As the Director (Emerging Research) at The Bachchao Project, a small techno-feminist collective, she co-authored “Of sieges and shutdowns” (2018), an exploratory study of how unreliable telecom connectivity and intentional Internet shutdowns adversely impact the lives of women in Manipur, India. The findings from this greenfield study have been presented at various regional, national and international fora.

Prateek Waghre is a Research Analyst at The Takshashila Institution, an independent center for research and education in public policy, where he is studying the influence(s) of technology in democratic societies. He also has experience running product platforms for content delivery networks (CDNs) in China and Russia.

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Make a submission

Accepting submissions till 27 Mar 2020, 09:00 AM

TERI auditorium, Bangalore, Bangalore

Hosted by

Rootconf is a community-funded platform for activities and discussions on the following topics: Site Reliability Engineering (SRE). Infrastructure costs, including Cloud Costs - and optimization. Security - including Cloud Security. more