Difference between revisions of "Main Page/Crash Courses/Systems and Policies/Week two"

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=== Week 3: Threat modeling and privacy basics ===
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=== Week 2: Threat modeling and privacy basics ===
 
* Real time lecture: July 30th 9 - 11 Pacific/12 - 2 Eastern on Zoom https://zoom.us/j/9129428892
 
* Real time lecture: July 30th 9 - 11 Pacific/12 - 2 Eastern on Zoom https://zoom.us/j/9129428892
  
 
==== Overview ====
 
==== Overview ====
This week we'll cover one of the building blocks of privacy advocacy and a major theme for this course: threat modeling. Threat modeling is a method for figuring out a privacy strategy that works for someone based on their unique needs, their material conditions, and their community network. Alison will teach us how to threat model, and how we can use this methodology in thinking about privacy in the current moment and beyond. We'll also talk about free and open source software (FOSS), what it means for privacy, and how it offers one vision of a rhizomatic, grassroots, internationalist movement for better technology. Depending on time, we may cover some of the 101 level privacy tools for anyone with any threat model.
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This week we'll cover one of the building blocks of privacy advocacy and a major theme for this course: threat modeling. Threat modeling is a method for figuring out a privacy strategy that works for someone based on their unique needs, their material conditions, and their community network. Alison will teach us how to threat model, and how we can use this methodology in thinking about privacy in the current moment and beyond. We'll discuss some example threat models, and the ways that different threat models should impact our decision-making when it comes to library privacy.  
  
 
==== Readings ====
 
==== Readings ====
 
* Bruce Schneier on "The Security Mindset" https://www.schneier.com/blog/archives/2008/03/the_security_mi_1.html
 
* Bruce Schneier on "The Security Mindset" https://www.schneier.com/blog/archives/2008/03/the_security_mi_1.html
 
* Read EFF's threat modeling one-pager: https://www.eff.org/files/2015/11/24/3mod_threat-modeling-ssd_9-3-15.pdf
 
* Read EFF's threat modeling one-pager: https://www.eff.org/files/2015/11/24/3mod_threat-modeling-ssd_9-3-15.pdf
* Browse through Tactical Technology Collective's Data Detox Kit: https://datadetoxkit.org/en/home/
 
 
* Browse through EFF's Surveillance Self-Defense: ssd.eff.org
 
* Browse through EFF's Surveillance Self-Defense: ssd.eff.org
* Globalization from below: free software and alternatives to neoliberalism: https://drive.google.com/file/d/11Bf6S2-cujj21uLM0XzPHQVuV2Kg40d3/view?usp=sharing
 
  
==== Guest lecturer ====
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==== Discussion board ====
No guest this week; Alison will lead the lecture
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* TBD
 
 
==== Discussion ====
 
* How might someone's threat model have changed already given the current pandemic and uprisings for Black lives?
 
* How can threat modeling help us when thinking about privacy practices?
 
* What adversaries are you thinking like when you think in a security mindset?
 
* Discussion of Data Detox Kit and Surveillance Self-Defense modules
 
* How can free software challenge the hegemony of Big Tech? What lessons can we take from the Brazilian free software movement? What are the limitations to this approach?
 
  
 
==== Tasks ====  
 
==== Tasks ====  
* Lecture, readings, and discussion forum
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* Readings
* Complete one module of the Data Detox Kit https://datadetoxkit.org/en/home or one module on Surveillance Self-Defense ssd.eff.org
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* Post to discussion forum
 
 
 
 
communicating about privacy
 
https://libraryfreedom.chat/t/lfi-4-week-7-discussion-on-privacy-talking-points/723
 
https://libraryfreedom.wiki/html/public_html/index.php/Main_Page/Teaching_Resources#Talking_points
 
https://libraryfreedom.wiki/html/public_html/index.php/Main_Page/Teaching_Resources#Talking_points
 
 
 
also cohort 4 week 7 recording
 

Revision as of 14:36, 23 April 2021

Week 2: Threat modeling and privacy basics

Overview

This week we'll cover one of the building blocks of privacy advocacy and a major theme for this course: threat modeling. Threat modeling is a method for figuring out a privacy strategy that works for someone based on their unique needs, their material conditions, and their community network. Alison will teach us how to threat model, and how we can use this methodology in thinking about privacy in the current moment and beyond. We'll discuss some example threat models, and the ways that different threat models should impact our decision-making when it comes to library privacy.

Readings

Discussion board

  • TBD

Tasks

  • Readings
  • Post to discussion forum