Skip to content or view screen version

24C3 - Demonstration against data retention

Mensch Meier | 30.12.2007 22:19 | Free Spaces | Repression

There´s a new law for data retention in Germany. It passed all hurdles and will come into effect starting from the 1st January 2008. The connection meta data (phone, cell phone, internet) of all citizen of Germany will be stored for six month then. A law suit against this law will be started soon. The AK Vorratsdatenspeicherung organized a demonstration that took place here in Berlin starting in front of the congress center to protest against this and similar laws. There will be more demonstration in the near future.







The 24 Chaos Communication Congress (24C3) the annually hacker meeting organized by the Chaos Computer Club was finished in Berlin. Here you can find lots of inspiring talks, cool workshops and interesting people. Hacking (in the broadest sense), making, privacy and politic issues and many other topics are covered. The theme"Volldampf voraus" (German for "full steam ahead") is inspired by the retrofuture steam punk genre and you can see at some place of the conference related accessories.

 http://konradscons.blogspot.com/

First held in 1984, it since has established itself as "the European Hacker Conference". Lectures and workshops on a multitude of topics attract a diverse audience of thousands of hackers, scientists, artists, and utopists from all around the world. The 24C3s slogan is Volldampf voraus! - the German equivalent of "full steam ahead" - a particular request for talks and projects featuring forward looking hands-on topics. The Chaos Computer Club has always encouraged creative and unorthodox interaction with technology and society, in the good tradition of the real meaning of "hacking".

 http://events.ccc.de/congress/2007/Press_Review

Mensch Meier

Comments

Hide the following 3 comments

in the UK they store the info for 7 years!

31.12.2007 17:47

.

but we didn't even take to the streets..


data retention

01.01.2008 20:58

was the idea of the chuffing huge photos a way of filling up their data stores?

For a bunch of computer geeks I'd have thought resizing photos was easy?

or are you holding shares in ISP's?

sam