Join me at the pii2011 Venture Forum in Silicon Valley on November 15! 20% discount for members of the C-PET network
Taking place at the Quadrus Conference Center in Menlo Park, the pii2011 Venture Forum is a new event from the team behind the Privacy Identity Innovation conference (pii2011).
The pii2011 Venture Forum will bring together an exclusive group of executives, entrepreneurs, investors and analysts to explore where innovation is heading and what it means for the future of digital identity, trust and reputation. There will also be a pre-event workshop on Privacy by Design featuring experts from the Microsoft Trustworthy Computing team.
Other speakers include:
- Kara Swisher, Co-executive Editor, All Things D
- Ann Miura-Ko, Co-founding Partner of FLOODGATE
- Kevin Mahaffey, Co-founder and CTO, Lookout Mobile Security
- Steve Kirsch, Serial entrepreneur and CEO of OneID
- Owen Tripp, Co-founder and COO of Reputation.com
- Chris Babel, CEO of TRUSTe
- Fatemeh Khatibloo, Senior Analyst at Forrester Research
- Shane Green, Co-founder and CEO of Personal
- Chris Kelly, Former Chief Privacy Officer of Facebook and Founder of Kelly Investments
- Jason Cavnar, Co-founder of Singly
- Mary Hodder, Chair, Personal Data Ecosystem Consortium
Sign up at http://pii2011.com. Tickets start at $60, and you can save 20% with the following discount code: 4CPET. For more information, contact [email protected] or follow @TechPolicy on Twitter.
BONUS BREAKFAST
No charge for this event
The Center for Policy on Emerging Technologies and the Tech Policy team invite you to breakfast to discuss: Bridging the Continental Divide
Panel to include: Nigel M. de S. Cameron, C-PET Rebecca Lynn, Morgenthaler Ventures David Tennenhouse, New Venture Partners
http://techpolicybreakfast.eventbrite.com
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The gap between Silicon Valley and Washington, D.C., is very wide. The distance between the "corporate culture" of the two most strategic communities on earth is light-years. And it represents not simply a fundamental threat both to the creative/innovative culture of America, and as a result to American power and the global order. Yet policymakers in DC continue to regard the Valley as an ATM (as Rob Atkinson of ITIF has put it); and many in the Valley roll their eyeballs at the mention of Washington.
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In this breakfast panel co-hosted by D.C.-based startup think tank the Center for Policy on Emerging Technologies (C-PET) and Tech Policy Central/Pii, we ask what can be done to change this situation; how we can bridge the Continental Divide and do the seemingly impossible: turn D.C. into the kind of innovative community we all desire? |
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