Events

ICSI BEARS Open House 2015

ICSI logoThursday, February 12, 2015
12:45 - 5:00 p.m.

The ICSI annual open house, held in conjunction with the UC Berkeley EECS Department's Berkeley EECS Annual Research Symposium (BEARS), includes research demonstrations, talks, and posters as well as time to talk with our computer scientists about their work. A shuttle will be available to bring people from the symposium to ICSI.

RSVP to frontdesk@icsi.berkeley.edu if you plan to attend the open house.

The PanLex Project

David Kamholz, Jonathan Pool, Susan Colowick, and Laura Welcher

PanLex Project

Tuesday, January 27, 2015
12:30 p.m., Conference Room 5A

Joint Modeling for Entity Analysis

Greg Durrett

UC Berkeley

Tuesday, November 25, 2014
12:30 p.m., Conference Room 5A

Usable and Secure Human Authentication

Jeremiah Blocki

Jeremiah Blocki

Carnegie Mellon University

Wednesday, November 19, 2014
3:00 p.m., Lecture Hall

 

Oxymora and Punchlines: Two Ways of Using Incongruity to Generate Attractive Sentences

Hiroaki Yamanes

Keio University and Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Tuesday, November 18, 2014
12:30 p.m., Conference Room 5A

Unsupervised Transcription of Text and Music

Taylor Berg-Kirkpatrick

UC Berkeley

Tuesday, November 4, 2014
12:30 p.m., Conference Room 5A

Recording and Translating the World’s Unwritten Languages

Steven Bird

University of Melbourne

Tuesday, October 28, 2014
12:30 p.m., Conference Roon 5A

ICSI Research Review

ICSI LogoFriday, October 10, 2014
1:40 - 4:30 p.m., Lecture Hall

Featured talks by ICSI research staff highlighting some of our latest results and new directions in computer science research. Talks will be given in the sixth floor lecture hall.

1984+30: Navigating Privacy Threats and Protections in the Digital Age

Monday, October 6, 2014
8:30 a.m. - 2:00 p.m., Lecture Hall
1947 Center Street, Sixth Floor
Berkeley, California 94704

Update: We are now soliciting posters and demos that present results or ongoing work on online privacy or the impact of information technology on privacy in general. Posters and demos must be submitted by Friday, September 26. Submit now.

In 1984, George Orwell describes a dystopian society in which everything citizens do is monitored by the all-seeing eyes of Big Brother. Thirty years after 1984, we find ourselves surrounded by threats to our privacy. Is there anything to be done? And if so, what?

ICSI invites you to join us and our colleagues from academia and industry as we discuss privacy in the digital age. Please register on Eventbrite.

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