PdF2008 Schedule for June 24, Day Two

Here’s the schedule for Day Two of Personal Democracy Forum, which is focused on how technology and the internet are changing governance and civic engagement. To register or find out more, go here.
As with Day One, we’ve planned a packed day that will start with a networking breakfast, and a fun door prize that you can only qualify for by being the main hall when the morning plenaries begin. Bring a laptop or other wifi-enabled device, as we’ll have copious bandwith to enable you to blog, twitter, back-chat and otherwise connect with each other (though no downloading of big movie files will be tolerated). We’ll provide breakfast, lunch, snacks, and most of all, a lot of nourishment for your mind.
(Day One Schedule)
Day Two: Governance and Civic Engagement

Time
Breakout B
7:30-8:30am

A Return to Common Sense: 7 Bold Ways to Revitalize DemocracyBreakfast
with Brennan Center Executive Director, Michael Waldman
Rose Theater
8:30-8:45am
The New Renaissance
Douglas Rushkoff (author, Open Source Democracy; Cyberia)
8:45-9:00am
The Rise of a Civic Generation

Morley Winograd (co-author, Millennial Makeover)
9:00-9:30am
The Declaration for Independence
Lawrence Lessig (Stanford)
9:30-10:20am
The Power of Information to Transform Government
Jonathan Adelstein, (FCC Commissioner), Steven Clift (E-democracy.org), Sheila Campbell (USA.gov)
Breakout B
10:20-10:50am
Networking Coffee Break,Sponsored by VShift
Internet For Everyone Campaign Press Conference, Free Press
Networking Coffee Break,Sponsored by VShift
Rose Theater
10:50-11:20am

The Future of the Internet: Towards Civic Technologies
Jonathan Zittrain (Berkman Center for Internet & Society)
11:20-12:15pm

Deploying the Cognitive Surplus: How Social Technology Can Help Solve Global Problems

Robin Chase (GoLoco), Van Jones (Green for All), and Gilberto Gil (Culture Minister, Brazil)
12:15-12:45pm

Hyperpolitics: What Happens When We Are All Connected

Mark Pesce, (Inventor, VRML)
12:45-2:00pm
Networking Lunch
Rose Theater
The Allen Room
Breakout A
Breakout B
Breakout C
Breakout D (Mezzanine)
2:00-3:15pm

National Tech Policy: Which Way Forward?

Andrew Rasiej (moderator), Vint Cerf, Alec Ross, Josh Silver, Claudio Prado,Erick Schonfeld
Mastering the New World of Online Political Video

Steve Grove (moderator), Josh Marshall, Robert Greenwald, Matthew Sheffield
Design Principles for Online Democracy: Connecting Government and Constituents in the Internet Age

Alan Rosenblatt (moderator),
Sarah Schacht, Tom Steinberg, Steven Clift,
Sheila Campbell

All Politics is Local (And the Blogs are Proving It)

Alex Hunsucker (moderator),
Wendy Norris, Isabel Santa, Ed Cone, Liza Sabater
This breakout starts at 2:25*Campaign-Blogger Relations: Best PracticesJosh Levy (moderator), Soren Dayton, Peter Daou
3:15-3:45pm
Networking Break,Sponsored by VShift
3:45-5:00pm

Ideas that Spread Win: Going Viral Online
Heather Holdridge (moderator), Jason Calacanis,
Jonah Peretti, Ami Dar, Sean Parker

Idea Market…
The Cross-Partisan Movement for Political Transparency and Watchdogging Government from Below

Ellen Miller (moderator),
Mark Tapscott,
Matt Stoller,
W. David Stephenson

New Ways of Making (and Spending) Money Online

Ari Melber (moderator), Kate Kaye ,
A.J. Schuler, Henry Copeland, Ben Geyerhahn

Think-tanking 2.0: How to Move Ideas and Policy in a Networked Age

Allison Fine (moderator),
Robert Bluey, Peter Leyden

Rose Theater
5:00-5:15pm
Great New Political Applications
David Moore, (OpenCongress.org) Michael Dale (Metavid.org)
5:15-6:15pm
Closing Plenary: Redefining Leadership in a Networked Age

Scott Heiferman, Craig Newmark, Joe Trippi, Brian Behlendorf, Gina Cooper



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