Come negoziare dati hackerati e fughe di notizie

Come negoziare dati hackerati e fughe di notizie


Data

Gio 18 aprile 2024

Orari

11:00 - 11:50

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Hacked and leaked datasets are more common than ever and they present new challenges for journalism. Unlike any other point in history, hackers and whistleblowers now routinely make off with terabytes of data from governments, financial and legal intermediaries and corporations. These datasets are often goldmines of public interest information but they also present new legal, ethical and logistical challenges. This panel brings together four of the world’s leading experts to help reporters navigate this new landscape. Moderated by Gerard Ryle.
Organised in association with International Consortium of Investigative Journalists.


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Pagine coinvolte
Palazzo dei Priori (Perugia)
Palazzo dei Priori (Perugia)

Il Palazzo dei Priori, o comunale, è uno dei migliori esempi d'Italia di palazzo pubblico dell'età comunale. Sorge nella centrale Piazza IV Novembre a Perugia, in Umbria. Si estende lungo Corso Vannucci fino a via Boncambi. È ancora oggi sede di parte del Municipio e, al terzo piano, della Galleria nazionale dell'Umbria. Deve il suo nome ai Priori, la massima autorità politica al governo della città in epoca medievale.

Juliette Garside
Juliette Garside

Juliette Garside has been deputy business editor at the Guardian since 2021. She joined the paper in 2011, and worked for six years as a member of the investigations team. She spearheaded the Guardian's move into cross-border, collaborative reporting with series ranging from the Panama Papers to the Daphne Project. Since the invasion of Ukraine, Juliette has edited a string of investigations on Russian wealth and sanctions enforcement, including the Russian Asset Tracker.

Micah Lee
Micah Lee

Micah Lee is an author, journalist, security engineer, and software developer. He is the director of information security at The Intercept, an advisor to the transparency collective Distributed Denial of Secrets, and a Tor Project core contributor. He used to work as a staff technologist at Electronic Frontier Foundation, and he helped co-found Freedom of the Press Foundation. He did opsec for journalists while Edward Snowden was leaking NSA docs to them. He is the author of Hacks, Leaks, and Revelations: The Art of Analyzing Hacked and Leaked Data, a hands-on book that teaches journalists, researchers, and activists how download, research, analyze, and report on datasets. (No prior experience required.) At The Intercept, he writes about technical topics, leaked datasets, and the far right. He develops open source security tools like OnionShare and Dangerzone. You can check out my GitHub activity here.

Alexander Papachristou
Alexander Papachristou

Alexander Papachristou is Executive Director of the Cyrus R. Vance Center for International Justice, an international public interest law program of the New York City Bar Association, providing pro bono legal support to human rights, environmental, and investigative journalism organizations worldwide. He is the former president of the Near East Foundation, which empowers vulnerable communities in the Middle East and Africa to overcome conflict, migration, and climate change. Alexander lived in Russia from 1989 to 1993, where he opened and ran the Moscow office of White & Case and wrote a column for the Moscow Times. From 1994 to 2007, he served as managing director and general counsel at NCH Capital, Inc. He also was board member and acting US CEO of Spinevision, a French company. He earlier was associated with the law firm of Clifford & Warnke in Washington, DC and served as policy assistant to New York Governor Mario C. Cuomo. He was law clerk to US District Judge Myron H. Thomps...

Gerard Ryle
Gerard Ryle

Gerard Ryle is the director of the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ). He led the worldwide teams of journalists working on the Panama Papers and Paradise Papers investigations, the biggest in journalism history. Under his leadership over the past seven years, ICIJ has become one of the best-known journalism brands in the world. Reporters Without Borders has described Ryle’s work with ICIJ as "the future of investigative journalism worldwide" when naming him as one of "100 information heroes" of worldwide significance. Before joining as ICIJ’s first non-American director in September 2011, Ryle spent more than 20 years working as an investigative reporter and editor in Australia. His work as a journalist began in his native Ireland. He was later a Knight-Wallace Journalism Fellow at the University of Michigan, and in 2013 he accepted an honorary doctorate from the University of Liege, on behalf of ICIJ. Ryle is a book author and TED speaker and he has won...

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