I have a vague memory from 2009 IIRC, walking past Alexanderplatz underneath the S-bahn towards the Berlin Congress Center. A somewhat "top-of-the-world-ma!"-moment in retrospect. I think we drove there, the four of us, in my parents Mitsubishi SUV. We had parked the car in a nearby garage. It didn't meet the environmental requirements of the city instituted a year earlier, but no tickets were issued on it.
We slept at The Gym. We saw Assange on stage. My first quad-copter encounter was at that event. I had my first Club Mate. The curry-wurst was good.
The four of us who went there together knew each-other from IRC, but I don't think we met before that. One of us ended up working for Google, one of us ended up co-founding a startup. One of us disappeared, one of us started working for a European network camera manufacturer.
>I feel so invasive attending as an English native
Why that. They actually try to be as open as possible. Volunteers type translations for the subtitles while the talk is ongoing. At least afterwards it is possible to understand what's going.
It obviously caters to German speakers and bilinguals more than English natives. I can’t attend 30-50% of the talks and I have no right to expect them to speak English there. It’s their country and community, I am just a visitor.
Actually, I think that might be a bit of an odd perspective.
If the event was meant as a German event, there wouldn't be so many German speakers with English talks. For some German talks, they even provide simultaneous translated English audio tracks in the live stream portal.
So while I appreciate your 'I am just a visitor' attitude, I don't think it is fair to assume that they don't welcome English natives (think about how much courage it takes to give a talk in a foreign language). I think the event culture is more along the lines 'Most visitors understand English, so we like English talks. But since the event is in Germany, German is okay too'.
"Invasive" seems a bit strong of a word choice given that they have free translations volunteers for pretty much all talks (for multiple languages) and do a lot to welcome everyone.
Wow .. quite the well organized site. One can actually navigate quickly, see whats up, switch channels and get a feeling of control. Google, Microsoft etc should look at how to present a conference like this.
the TLS1.3 talk was pretty amazing. I think implementing 0-RTT in a way that it's on by default and can be deactivated is a bad idea[0] (as we know in practice the majority won't mess with defaults). Also the middlebox issues raised by the banking industry[1] and now addressed by the ETSI Middlebox[2] standard is a bad idea. Because this was a crucial design decision in the standard meant to improve security in 1.3 and ETSI is breaking this security with "mTLS". Three is a complaint by IETF against ETSI for copyright violation[3] which also mentions how the security is being weakened in this proposed standard:
> We agree with the statement in the document that what it calls "eTLS" is an"implementation variant of Transport Layer Security (TLS) version 1.3" and that unmodified TLS 1.3 clients can interoperate with MSP servers. At a protocol level, the main area of divergence from TLS 1.3 to this MSP profile is the replacement of the server’s "ephemeral" DH key with a "static" DH key, which suffices to violate the design and operational assumptions of TLS 1.3 and render this MSP profile as a qualitatively different protocol that should be named accordingly.
also the China SCS talk is amazing. A lot of these ideas are being eyed by Western technocrats. It's just our language/propaganda is different) so people are less aware that it happens. Expect more of these ideas gain traction all over the world. We certainly got our work cut out. The fight is real y'all :(
eye-popping talk about WIFI4EU which shows that this program is essentially a EU sponsored backdoor aimed to track citizens movements across member states through its captive portal. It's targeted at enterprises across EU that allows them to offer WIFI to their users (e.g. smart-cities, coffee-shops, public spaces etc). Please watch this talk and let everyone know that this should be burned with fire!
a few years ago, a few friends camped in my home while the CCC was ongoing on the other side of the planet, and every day we'd pick the most interesting talks and then download and watch them together.
doesn't compare with actually going to the CCC itself, but we had a blast nontheless.
> A Web Page in Three Acts is a live coding performance which combines principles of choreography within the formal structures of coding. An assemblage of semi-improvised visuals and composition experiments in web environments. The screen becomes an open stage for the hybrid code which links choreography and web programming as well as body and language.
We slept at The Gym. We saw Assange on stage. My first quad-copter encounter was at that event. I had my first Club Mate. The curry-wurst was good.
The four of us who went there together knew each-other from IRC, but I don't think we met before that. One of us ended up working for Google, one of us ended up co-founding a startup. One of us disappeared, one of us started working for a European network camera manufacturer.
Good times!