Bitcoin (german)
venty, xtaran, alex
Hackerfunk
Showing posts with label freedom. Show all posts
Showing posts with label freedom. Show all posts
Saturday, March 3, 2012
Monday, January 9, 2012
Saturday, October 15, 2011
Sunday, June 26, 2011
Tuesday, May 17, 2011
Friday, February 20, 2009
Privacy- und Sicherheitsaspekte in ubiquitären Umgebungen
A friend of mine, Stefan Schlott, has written his thesis about privacy and security aspects in ubiquitous environments (in German).
He tackles the problem of being untraceable although carrying devices with protocol-specific unique identifications and the problem of peering without revealing private data.
One of his achievements was the invention of a cryptographic protocol for peer recognition under changed pseudonyms, which keeps the identities of the peers secret.
He tackles the problem of being untraceable although carrying devices with protocol-specific unique identifications and the problem of peering without revealing private data.
One of his achievements was the invention of a cryptographic protocol for peer recognition under changed pseudonyms, which keeps the identities of the peers secret.
Sunday, September 30, 2007
Sunday, June 11, 2006
Wednesday, March 23, 2005
Gauss Project
I am proud to have helped realizing the Gauss Project:
There is currently much debate in Europe regarding SoftwarePatents in the light of the EU SoftwarePatentDirective and continued pressure to legitimize the EPO software patents dispite strong opposition. Motivated by this debate, we have build a Database of patent documents to document the current practice of granting patents on software in Europe.My job was to get the wiki integration done. Therefore I introduced virtual pages to MoinMoin, which read the patents data on the fly from a Postgres database.
Links:
Sunday, March 6, 2005
Wednesday, December 1, 2004
The Danger of Software Patents
Die Gefahren der Softwarepatente
Alexander Bernauer
Datenschleuder #85, Seite 10-14
Alexander Bernauer
Datenschleuder #85, Seite 10-14
Article:
Der CCC Ulm hat zwei Chaosseminare zum Thema Softwarepatente veranstaltet. Am 13. Oktober 2003 hat
Christian Cremer, Patentanwalt aus Neu-Ulm, das Patentsystem allgemein und den Übergang zu
Softwarepatenten aus seiner Sicht als Patentanwalt dargestellt. Am 4. November 2004 hat
Richard M. Stallman einen Vortrag über die Gefahren derSoftwarepatente gehalten. Stallman ist als Gründer der Free Software Foundation und der
GNU Bewegung besonders engagiert im Kampf gegen
Softwarepatente. Jedoch wird nicht nur freie Software von Softwarepatenten bedroht, sondern fast
alle, die im Bereich Informationstechnik tätig sind, und im Grunde auch jeder Endanwender. Dieser
Artikel greift die Inhalte und die Argumentationen aus beiden Vorträgen auf und gibt einen Überblick
über Softwarepatente und ihre Konsequenzen.
Sunday, November 14, 2004
Monday, February 2, 2004
Free Haven
Free Haven (german)
Alexander Bernauer
Seminar on P2P-Technologies, Institute for Media Informatics, University of Ulm
Alexander Bernauer
Seminar on P2P-Technologies, Institute for Media Informatics, University of Ulm
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