| |

|
| |
|
|
       
|

the
future of Hacking
Thursday, October 14, 2010
Registration: 18:30-19:00, Conference:
19:00-21:15
Tickets
Location:
Hogeschool
van Amsterdam,
Auditorium, Singelgrachtgebouw, Rhijnspoorplein
1, 1091 GC Amsterdam
[corner Wibautstraat and Mauritskade]
The conference language is English.
In collaboration
with
Hogeschool
van Amsterdam
& Freelance Factory
View the webcast
Part
1

Part
2
|
| |
..
|
|
|
 |
| |
The term 'hacking' to most people refers to either Russian criminals stealing
your creditcard or Chinese spies breaking into NATO. For those who call
themselves hackers 'hacking' means the creative use of technology to do
new and unexpected things. Thank old-media for this confusion.
In our hight-tech society of 2010 the realities of internet crime, electronic
warfare and using technology creatively are both much more mundane and
sometimes much more spectacular than portrayed in movies such as 'The
Net'. Windows is still crap but people keep buying it while alternatives
exist.
Meanwhile Wikileaks manages to run circles around the mightiest military
in the history of the planet but despite this the wars still go on. Hacking
changes a lot, but not always were we expect it.
What used to be the Star-trek communicator is called a smartphone now
so the future of hacking might just be a lot more interesting than any
old '90's science-fiction.
Frans
Kolkman,
Head High Tech Crime Unit
East-NL
The future of
Cybercrime and arresting Hackers
Will
The Police in Future be able to catch the bad guys. What are the possible
problems. What is the International perspective. Traditional crimes
in a country with boarders vs. crimes in a digital world without borders.
What does that mean for Law Enforcement in the world. We will take
a look into the technical problems involved witch possibly occur if
you want to fight Hackers in the future. What kind of privacy problems
will occur. What kind of privacy invasive measures are still acceptable
for society.
Martijn
Aslander,
lifehacker, connector
and resourcerer
How to connect hacking with the possibilities of the network and information
age
Martijn just wrote a
book, title 'Easycratie' which is about how to organise in the network
age. It covers pay-what-you-want, lifehacking, the age of acces and
lots more.... in his presentation, Martijn will try to connect a lot
of thinking from the hacking world with the future of organising.
Alper
Çugun,
Intendant, Monster
Swell
Civic duty in a hyper-connected
world
The Internet of Things
is an abstract term for something that is quickly becoming real. The
world is being filled with sensors and actuators, all of which are
linked into systems and being fed back to us with real and virtual
displays. This is changing the fabric of society and the definition
of what society is. It is our responsibility as citizens of this hyper-connected
world to hack our environments to work better however we can.
|
| |
|
 |
 |
|
18:30 -
19:00
Registration
& welcome drinks
19:00
- 20:00
Introduction
by our Moderator
Arjen
Kamphuis,
Co-founder,
CTO, Gendo
Part I:
Frans
Kolkman,
Head High Tech Crime Unit
East-NL
The future of
Cybercrime and arresting Hackers
Martijn
Aslander,
lifehacker, connector
and resourcerer
How to connect hacking with the possibilities of the network and information
age
Alper
Çugun,
Intendant, Monster
Swell
Civic duty in a hyper-connected
world
20:00 - 20:30
Coffee break with
drinks and snacks.
20:30 - 21:15
Part II:
Open discussion
|
|
|
|
|
 |
| |
Tickets for this Season Event are
....Regular Ticket:
€ 30,-
....Discount Ticket:
€ 20,- [*]
....Student Ticket:
€ 10,- [students of HvA are free, but need to register by
email]
As a non-for-profit foundation we don't charge
VAT.
[*] see www.clubofamsterdam.com/ticketcorner.htm
Students of
the HvA have
free entrance, but need to register
by sending an email with the name[s]
to
ticketcorner@clubofamsterdam.com
How to pay for the tickets?
....a)
Online booking
with credit card:
Ticket
Corner
........www.clubofamsterdam.com/ticketcorner.html
....b)
By bank: send an email with your details,
number of tickets, type of tickets
........and
event name to: ticketcorner@clubofamsterdam.com
........Bank:
Fortis Bank, Club of Amsterdam, Account 976399393,
Amstelveen,
........The
Netherlands, IBAN NL46 FTSB 0976399393, BIC FTSB NL2R
....c)
By
invoice: send an email with your billing
details, number of tickets, type of
........tickets.and
event name to: ticketcorner@clubofamsterdam.com
....d)
At the
registration desk the evening of the
event - unless we are sold out
........earlier:
18:30-19:00
|
|

|
| |
|
|
|

|
| |

Hogeschool
van Amsterdam
School of Design and Communication
The Media, Information and
Communication programme (MIC) is part of the School of Design and Communication.
The common foundation year
and five specialisations (see below) of the programme together employ
120 lecturers and 20 support staff, providing full-time education to
3500 students in the form of a four-year Dutch-language bachelor programme.
Most of our lecturers have worked in the media sector and many still
maintain a strong connection to it.
The MIC has recently started
to internationalise its curriculum, a process that will take a number
of years and ultimately establish English-language exchange programmes
with a select group of foreign educational institutes.
www.international.hva.nl/schools/school-of-design-and-communication/mic

Freelance Factory
The Freelance Factory is a network organization
for freelancers and small companies in the creative industry. They organize
free monthly network events in more than seven cities in The Netherlands.
On a regular basis workshops are organised to professionalise the members
in entrepreneurial and work skills. With more than 350 network members
and 1500 professionals registered for the monthly newsletter, they are
the largest professional freelance network in The Netherlands. They
work closely together with influential partners in the creative industry,
such as Club of Amsterdam, Pakhuis de Zwijger, Creative Cities Amsterdam
Area, CHI Nederland, Cultuurfabriek, IPAN, Digikring, Open Circles and
many others.
www.freelancefactory.nl
|
|
|
 |
 |
|

Frans
Kolkman
Head High Tech
Crime Unit East-NL
Frans Kolkman joint the Dutch Police Force in 1975. He became a detective
in 1981. Was active in detective work until he was appointed as the
head of High Tech Crime unit East in 1995. Is a member of the Dutch
advisory board on High Tech Crime for the Board of Dutch Police Chiefs.
Joint the National Cybercrime Program in 2008 for 2 days a week. Represents
The Netherlands in the field of High Tech Crime at Interpol and Europol.
Projects he initiated and worked on are an Infrastructure for Internet
investigations for the Dutch Police and others, the National HASH database
Child Porn pictures and Video Fingerprinting Child Porn movies.
|
 |
|
|

Martijn Aslander
lifehacker, connector and resourcerer
Im a 38 year old
exploren of the network and information age.
Im interested
in setting things in motion, to develop myself and others.
Most of my time I
spend learning and thinking.
The rest of the time
I engage with people and connect people.
After reading The
Tipping Point, the book of Malcolm Gladwell on social epidemics, I figured
out that I am a maven, a connector as well as a salesman. If you want
to spread ideas and knowledge like I do, you need people with these
roles.
Since 8 years now,
after I figured out that asking money before an assignment is maybe
not the best way to operate, I ask people to evaluate me and the value
of my efforts afterwards. A path that would be much richer than the
path of being a consultant that can be hired.
Richer in the sense of value to me and others, value in a much broader
meaning than just money. We live in the age of access now, and access
will be more important than possesion in the next decades, I think.
I love to give lectures
and do that over 150 times a year, speaking about the new economy, valuecreation,
marketing 2.0, complementairy economics, networking, lifehacking, and
about my ideas to make te world a better place, with my insights in
social and information capital.
Specialties:
Creative thinking,
recognizing underlying patterns, organising, guerilla marketing, network
www.martijnaslander.nl
|
 |
|
|

Alper Çugun
Intendant, Monster Swell
CEO, Aardverschuiving Media
Chief Evangelist, TipIt.to
Alper Cugun is Intendant of Monster Swell an Amsterdam based
data visualization agency where he is lead of technology and experience.
He is formally educated as an engineer of Media and Knowledge Engineering
but he spends more time designing interactions with a focus on mapping
and games.
He started
micropayment startup TipiT, helped introduce Foursquare
to the Netherlands and was technical lead of PLAY Pilots. He
is also an active participant in the open data and open government movements.
Alper is regularly published about all of these topics.
alper.nl
monsterswell.com
tipit.to
foursquare.com
playpilots.nl
|
 |
|
|

Arjen Kamphuis
Co-founder, CTO, Gendo
Arjen is co-founder and Chief Technology Officer of Gendo. He studied
Science & Policy at Utrecht University and worked for IBM and Twynstra
Gudde as IT-architect, trainer and IT-strategy advisor. Since late 2001
Arjen has been self-employed, advising clients on the strategic impact
of new technological developments. He is a certified EDP auditor and
information security specialist. As a much sought-after international
speaker on technology policy issues he gives over 100 keynote talks
every year.
Since 2002 he has
been involved in formulating public IT-policy in the area of open standards
and opensource for the government and public sector. Arjen advises senior
managers and administrators of companies and public institutions, members
of parliament and the Dutch Cabinet about the opportunities offered
by open standards and opensource software for the European knowledge
economy and society as a whole.
In 2009 Arjen was part of the team that organised Hacking at Random
(har2009.org), a 5-day, 2500 participant techfest about all things hackable.
Besides information
technology Arjen also works on scenarioplanning and strategic assesments
of emerging technologies sush as bio- and nanotechnology. With clients
he investigates the social, economic and geo-political impact of science
and technology.
Arjen's collumns
and article's can be found on his Gendo blog.
Dutch: www.gendo.nl/blog/arjen
English: www.gendo.nl/blogs/arjen-int
|
| |
|
|
|

|
| |
Hogeschool
van Amsterdam
Singelgrachtgebouw
Auditorium
Rhijnspoorplein 1 [corner Wibautstraat and Mauritskade]
1091 GC Amsterdam
How to get there by public transport
Get to "Weesperplein"
by
Metro:
From Amsterdam Centraal take metro 51, 53 or 54
From station Zuid take metro 51 (direction Centraal Station)
From station Duivendrecht take metro 54 (direction Centraal Station)
Tram:
Tram 7 (Slotermeer - Flevopark)
Tram 10 (Van Hallstraat - Azartplein)
See also www.9292ov.nl
How to get there by
car
From
A2:
Continue along: S110 towards "Centrum"
Arrive in Amsterdam - continue along S110
Turn right into Mr. Treublaan
At the roundabout, Prins Bernhardplein, take the 4th exit.
Continue along S112 / Wibautstraat
Destination: Amsterdam, Rhijnspoorplein 1
From A10:
Take the exit S112 towards "Amsterdam Zuidoost"
Close to Duivendrecht continue along S112 towards "Centrum"
Continue along S112 / Wibautstraat
Destination: Amsterdam, Rhijnspoorplein 1
View
Larger Map
|
| |
|
|
|

|
| |
Related to this topic see also
Club
of Amsterdam Journal
and for more events
Agenda
|
| |
|
|
|

|
| |
Club
of Amsterdam
info@clubofamsterdam.com
|
m
|
|
|