@ Ricketson Theatre, Denver Performing Arts Complex
August 26, 2008
Video
Introduction
The 2008 Technology Roundtable is designed as a discussion of 18 participants. Phil Weiser, University of Colorado professor of law and telecommunications and executive director of the Silicon Flatirons Center, will lead the Technology Roundtable, encouraging a dynamic, substantive interchange among the participants. Seated in a venue with a capacity for 200 persons, the audience for the Technology Roundtable will be by invitation and include individuals with a particular interest in the subject of technology.
Roundtable Focus
This Roundtable will discuss the technology-related challenges and opportunities our country faces in the years ahead. The first session will take up the natural question after an election where the Internet transformed the way politics is practiced in this country: how can the Internet and technological changes transform the way the federal government operates. In so doing, it will discuss how the federal government can use emerging technologies to operate more efficiently and serve the public more effectively. In particular, it will discuss, among other things, proposals ranging from the call to install a Chief Technology Officer at the federal government, the challenges around upgrading the technologies used by first responders, opportunities to develop a strategy for public media in the digital age, and how the government can embrace "Web 2.0"-type technologies to best share information with the public and solicit its input.
The second session will address the question of what strategies that the federal government can use to promote technological development and innovation. In particular, it will evaluate what public policies can best spur capital formation and protect the U.S. advantage in that area; what educations reforms, particularly as to math and science education, can prepare a next generation of engineers and business persons; and what innovation policies, be they support for basic research or patent law reform can spur greater levels of technological development.
The final session will evaluate whether and how to best enable U.S. consumers to reap the benefits and opportunities of the Internet age. It will thus evaluate the related questions of whether all Americans are equipped to participate in the information age and what set of broadband policies should be pursued by the next administration. The session will also discuss to what extent competition in broadband and telecommunications markets has developed in the wake of the 1996 Act and what reforms--to both the regulation of wired and wireless networks--are appropriate. Finally, the panel will discuss whether consumers are prepared for the challenges raised by the Internet--fending off denial of service attacks, viruses, breaches of their privacy, etc.--and what, if anything, government should do about such concerns.
Welcome
9:00am - 9:10am
Julius Genachowski (invited)
FCC Chairman
John Hickenlooper
Mayor
Denver, Colorado
Phil Weiser
Executive Director
Silicon Flatirons
Professor
University of Colorado Law School
Government 2.0
9:10am - 10:00am
Kathryn C. Brown
Senior Vice President, Public Policy & Corporate Responsibility
Verizon
Don Gips
Group VP for Corporate Strategy
Level 3 Communications
Former Domestic Policy Advisor
Vice President Gore
Ellen Goodman
Professor of Law
Rutgers University-Camden
Reed Hundt
Senior Advisor
McKinsey
Former FCC Chairman
Andrew McLaughlin
United States Deputy Chief Technology Officer
Joe Samuel
Senior Vice President
First Data Corp.
Promoting the Next Wave of Innovation
10:00am - 10:55am
John Seely Brown
Independent Co-Chairman
Deloitte Center for Edge Innovation
Charlie Egren
CEO
Echostar
Brad Feld
Managing Director
Foundry Group
Mobius Venture Capital
Bill Kennard
Managing Director
Carlyle Group
Former FCC Chairman
Honorable Zoe Lofgren
Congresswoman
U.S. House of Representatives
Charles Phillips
President
Oracle
Don Rosenberg
General Counsel and Executive Vice President
Qualcomm
David Thompson
Group President of Information Technology and Services
Symantec
Keynote Remarks
10:55am - 11:10am
Jay Rockefeller
U.S. Senator
West Virginia
Internet Policy in a New Era: How Best to Protect Competition and Consumers?