If you're free or in the area, you should go to this:

*The 2013 PK Policy
Symposium*<http://publicknowledge.org/events/policy-symposium>
Feb 26, 2013 10:00 AM - 03:00 PM

The Capitol Visitor Center: SVC 201-00

East Capitol Street Northeast
 Washington, DC 20004

Join Public Knowledge for conversations on the future of internet,
communications, and copyright policy. From "fixing" TV to copyright reform,
we'll discuss obstacles and solutions to what are sure to be this year's
most interesting policy questions. How do we ensure that broadband is a
catalyst for growth? That the video marketplace has room to grow? That
copyright balances the needs of creators with the needs of the public?

*Program:*

*10:00 - 10:15 am | Welcoming Remarks*

* **10:15 - 11:10 am | Data Caps*

* *Even the fastest broadband connection will fuel innovation if the data
it carries is limited by caps.  This panel will consider the inpact that
data caps could have on the next generation of broadband applications.

Moderated by Michael Weinberg, VP, Institute for Emerging Innovation,
Public Knowledge

   - Jenni Powell, Producer The Lizzie Bennet Diaries and Director of
   Content, VidCon
   - Avner Ronen, Founder and CEO, Boxee
   - John Vezina, Political Director, Writers Guild of America, West

*11:10 am - 12:00 pm | Future of Video*

Television is a highly regulated industry, and the future of video depends
on how those regulations can evolve to fit a new marketplace and new
technologies.  This panel will looks at issues like retransmission consent
and the cable compulsory license, and try to figure out how traditional
platforms like cable and broadcast will relate to newer forms of video
distribution.

Moderated by John Bergmayer, Senior Staff Attorney, Public Knowledge

   - Barbara Esbin, ACA counsel with Cinnamon Mueller
   - Rachel Welch, VP, Federal Legislative Affairs, Time Warner Cable

*12:00 - 1:00 pm | Lunch Keynote Address: Chip Pickering on the Telephone
Transition*

The transition of traditional telephone lines to more efficient IP-based
networks raises critical questions that go to the very heart of the
100-year-old social contract that made voice service in America universally
available, affordable, and reliable. There are no easy answers as telecom
policy contends with the new reality of IP-based networks. Former
Congressman Chip Pickering will discuss what needs to be done to fill the
policy holes left by the transition and guarantee that certain values apply
to the next generation of innovative networks.

*1:00 - 2:00 pm | Copyright Reform*

A year after the outcry against SOPA, digital technology continues to clash
in many ways with current copyright law. Beyond the matter of online
copyright infringement, ordinary users find themselves constrained by legal
and technical mechanisms that are often based on assumptions about creation
and copying that are no longer true in today's world. This panel will look
at a few of the problems facing technology users created by copyright law,
and explore possible solutions to them.

Moderated by Gigi B. Sohn, President & CEO, Public Knowledge

   - Erik Martin, General Manager, Reddit
   - Tom W. Bell, professor of law at Chapman University, author, *Copyright
   Unbalanced*
   - Pamela Samuelson, professor of law at Berkeley Law, University of
   California; Faculty Director, Berkeley Center for Law & Technology
   - Michael McGeary, Co-Founder, Engine Advocacy

*2:00 - 3:00 pm | Digital First Sale*

The first sale doctrine is one of the most important ways that the law
reconciles the rights of an author in her works with the rights of a
consumer in his property. As more and more media is sold as digital
downloads, the line between who owns what can become less clear. Can a user
give away his ebook collection? Can another leave her iTunes collection to
a descendant in her will? Our panel will describe the challenges that
online media bring to digital ownership, and how we can ensure certainty
for buyers and sellers of digital goods.

Moderated by Sherwin Siy, VP, Legal Affairs, Public Knowledge

   - Christina Mulligan, Postdoctoral Associate in Law and Kauffman Fellow
   of the Information Society Project, Yale Law School
   - Andrew Shore, Executive Director, Owners' Rights Initiative
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