This panel will look to what we can and are doing at home and internationally to counter those threats. Specifically, the panel will explore questions the rise of these threats and the parallel rise of the new world of ubiquitous connectedness and the internet of everything raise for policymakers. How do we protect connected societies . Whos responsible for what . What are the rules of the road . What are the ways where we think it a place where normative behavior is agreed upon internationally . Moderating the session we have john, probably the longest and oldest reporter covering this, going back to the 1970s. Writing the same stories until most recently. A reporter in the science section of the new york times. Part of a group of reporters who won the Pulitzer Prize for explanatory reporting in 2013. He has a book coming. Request for Common Ground between humans and machines. [applause] thank you, everyone. My panelists to my left, the director of the National Security agency. Suzann
Couple years ago when we were looking at the number of individuals who would meet the criteria for the release based on a terminal illness, we discovered that there were 200 inmates in the bureau of prisons. Once they were identified coming up to go further in making sure that for those individuals being considered, that they have the resources if they are given the opportunity and released under that program. 200 inmates agencywide with a population at times that was at 220,000 is a very small number. Senator we are talking about passionate release, early release, release of foreign nationals. Are you saying that the law or the regulation is written to restrictively and doesnt give you the latitude to utilize those programs more fully . Inspector general, i will be asking you the same question. Mr. Samuels we moved from apple to nonmedical. Even when we look at those cases , when you are looking at the criteria as well as being responsible for Public Safety for any of those individual
The watson come here quick moment of the internet happened on october 29th, 1969 at 10 00 p. M. At night. It was a message sent between node one and node zero, in los angeles at ucla. It involved it was actually the cloud, it was not electronic mail message it was remote login to a machine. A young hacker by the name of bill due val typed l and o and g. On g the system crashed and it crashed because of a buffer overflow problem. A very straightforward programming error, design error and i checked today. And here we are 45 years later and there were announcements both by the chrome team at google and firefox team that they patched buffer overflow errors. Its quite remarkable that the system that we built is still that kind of fragile system. And this final note before we start on metaphors, were charged with the notion of discussing the rules of the road. This notion of a data highway is perhaps one of the worst metaphors we could possibly pick for the world were living in. Maybe if thi