[lacnog] IGF 2016 / Se busca contactos sobre el despliegue de IPv6

Robert Guerra rguerra en privaterra.org
Lun Nov 7 17:31:23 BRST 2016


Estimados colegas,


Estoy organizando una session sobre IPv6 en el Foro de Governance que 
tendrá lugar en Mexico al mes que viene.

Me encantaría incluir la participación de personas responsable del 
despliegue de IPv6 de Latin America. A continuación os incluyo detalles 
de la session.

Si teneis alguna pregunta, envíame una nota.

saludos

Roberto



--
Robert Guerra
Twitter: twitter.com/netfreedom
Email: rguerra en privaterra.org
PGP Keys : https://keybase.io/rguerra

Details of the workshop
——————————————————————————

IGF 2016 Workshop #6 : Can Law enforcement catch bad actors online 
anymore

https://www.intgovforum.org/cms/igf2016/index.php/proposal/view_public/6

Description of workshop:

The exhaustion of the IPv4 address supply has been predicted since the 
end of the 1980s. However, the large scale adoption of mobile devices 
and their associated IPv4 addressing needs accelerated the exhaustion 
timetable, and placed increased pressure on network operators to 
conserve IPv4 addresses

This pressure has resulted in a marked increase in the use of 
technologies, such as Network Address Translation (NAT), that allow 
pools of addresses to be shared across multiple endpoints. These 
mechanisms enable the reuse of the limited pool of available IPv4 
addresses, resulting in the number of connected endpoints vastly 
outnumbering the number of addresses in use in the public internet.

This has three important implications for Internet technology 
developers, and those who depend on certain behaviors of the technology.

Application designers need to consider the fact that an IP address does 
not necessarily identify an endpoint.

Law enforcement and forensic functions need to consider that an IP 
address alone may not be sufficient to correlate Internet activity 
observations with an endpoint; and even an IP address associated 
timestamp generally may not suffice.

Data retention mechanisms and policies that record or reference an IP 
address need to refactor their actions and requirements to consider that 
in increasingly large parts of the Internet, an IP address is merely a 
temporary identifier. Potentially large volumes of ancillary data are 
required to match an IP address to an endpoint.

Description of the plan to facilitate discussion amongst speakers, 
audience members and remote participants:

The workshop will be organized as a facilitated dialogue. Led by the 
moderator, subject experts will debate and discuss the key questions and 
issues. Subject experts will give opening comments, after which the 
moderator will turn to those attending the session and invited experts 
in the audience to engage in facilitated dialogue.

In addition to the background documents and papers that will be prepared 
ahead of the IGF, additional articles of interest, commissioned blogs, 
reference materials and social media conversations will be published and 
distributed ahead of the workshop.

Speakers:

The experts listed below have accepted the invitation to participate in 
the session. They are drawn from the Law Enforcement, Government, 
Academia, Civil Society, The Technical Community and Private sector 
stakeholder groups. A facilitated dialogue will be organized so that 
these experts can bring their knowledge and perspective to discuss and 
debate the challenges brought by IPv4 exhaustion and the challenges and 
opportunities presented by IPv6 adoption.

(1) Jeffrey R. Bedser is the founder and CEO of iThreat Cyber Group 
www.ithreat.com. Mr. Bedser has led ICG on its journey from an internet 
investigative firm to a technology driven threat Intelligence Company. 
ICG was formed in 1997 as Internet Crimes Group. Mr. Bedser has been a 
facilitator, panelist and speaker for organizations such as POLCYB, ASIS 
International, Infragard, HTCIA, The Conference Board, ICANN and the FBI 
Training Academy at Quantico. Mr. Bedser has received media coverage on 
multiple occasions discussing topics surrounding cyber-crime and cyber 
security.

For the session, Jeff will help present an overview of the current 
challenges being faced by cyber investigators as IPv4 addresses are 
exhausted and the transition to a wider deployment of IPv6 takes place.


(2) John Curran is considered an Internet and telecommunications 
industry expert. Curran was one of the founding members and is the 
current President and Chief Executive Officer of the American Registry 
for Internet Numbers (ARIN), a Regional Internet Registry (RIR). He is 
also a Principal Associate at Isotropic, LLC., a cybersecurity and 
telecommunications service provider. Curran actively participates in the 
activities of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) and has served 
as co-chairman of the Operations and Network Management Area and member 
of IPng (IPv6) Directorate.

For the session, John will bring the North American Regional Internet 
Registry perspective to the conversation.

(3) Laura DeNardis is an American author and a globally recognized 
scholar of Internet governance and technical infrastructure. She is a 
tenured Professor and Associate Dean in the School of Communication at 
American University. She is a Senior Fellow of the Centre for 
International Governance Innovation (CIGI) and serves as the Director of 
Research for the Global Commission on Internet Governance. With a 
background in Information engineering and a doctorate in Science and 
Technology Studies (STS), her research studies the social and political 
implications of Internet technical architecture and governance.

She is an appointed member of the U.S. Department of State Advisory 
Committee on International Communications and Information Policy 
(ACICIP). She has more than two decades of experience as an expert 
consultant in Internet Governance to Fortune 500 companies, foundations, 
and government agencies.

For the session, Laura will bring an academic and research perspective 
to the conversation

(4) Robert Flaim has been a Supervisory Special Agent (SSA) for the 
Federal Bureau of Investigation for over seventeen (17) years. 
Currently, SSA Flaim is assigned to the Executive Staff Unit of the 
Operational Technology Division in Quantico, Virginia. Since 2004, Mr. 
Flaim has worked on Internet Governance efforts with the Internet 
Corporation of Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) and Regional Internet 
Registries, i.e., ARIN, RIPE NCC, the Internet Engineering Task Force 
and other Internet Governance organizations, to foster Internet policies 
and practices that ensure effective international law enforcement 
investigations. Prior to his current position, Mr. Flaim worked at the 
FBI Washington Field Office on cyber and counterterrorism 
investigations.

Bobby will bring a US and international law enforcement perspective to 
the conversation and dialogue. As well, Robert will bring a unique 
first-hand familiarity of urgent cyber investigations to to discussion.

(4) Athina Fragkouli is the Legal Counsel at the RIPE Network 
Coordination Centre (NCC), where she is responsible for all legal 
aspects of the organisation. She defines the RIPE NCC legal framework, 
provides advice, and gives legal support for all RIPE NCC activities. 
Athina works with a variety of Internet stakeholders such as network 
operators, governments, and Law Enforcement Agencies (LEA). She also 
represents the RIPE NCC in a variety of fora such as technical meetings 
and EU-organised events.

Athina - Will bring a European Regional Internet Registry perspective to 
the panel. As well she will bring a rights based, european and privacy 
perspective to the conversation.

(5) Merike Kaeo is a recognized global expert in information security 
and author of “Designing Network Security.” Prior to joining 
Farsight Security, Merike served as Chief Information Security Officer 
for Internet Identity (IID), where she was responsible for maintaining 
IID’s vision and ensuring the company’s sensitive information and 
technologies are protected. Prior to joining IID, Merike founded Double 
Shot Security, which provided strategic and operational guidance to 
secure Fortune 100 companies. She led the first security initiative for 
Cisco in the mid-1990s. Merike is on ICANN’s Security and Stability 
Advisory Council (SSAC) and the FCC’s Communications Security, 
Reliability and Interoperability Council (CSRIC). She earned a MSEE from 
George Washington University and a BSEE from Rutgers University.


(6) Dick Leaning has over 28 years’ experience in Law Enforcement, 
leading teams of investigators in the Metropolitan Police Service 
(London), UK National Crime Squad (NCS) and the Serious Organised Crime 
Agency (SOCA) and from 2009 within SOCA’s Cyber Crime Department. Dick 
has been the UK representative at the G8 High-Tech Crime subgroup of 
senior experts and Interpol’s European High-Tech Crime Working Group 
with responsibility for enhancing the abilities of law enforcement. 
Based in The Hague since September 2011, Dick joined the United Kingdom 
Liaison Bureau (UKLB) desk as a Europol Cyber Liaison officer, and has 
recently taken on the role of Seconded National Expert attached to the 
European Cybercrime Center (EC3) at Europol. In his current role, Dick 
has responsibility for Internet Community Engagement through which he 
hopes to achieve significant dialogue with the Internet’s 
multi-stakeholders and Law Enforcement, to work in partnership to 
prevent, disrupt and prosecute cyber criminals.

Richard will bring a Internet Registry, Law Enforcement and 
International Cyber Investigation perspective to the conversation and 
dialogue.


(7) Ben Butler has been with Go Daddy since 2001. In 2002, He formed the 
Go Daddy Abuse Department, and served as Director of Network Abuse for 
over 10 years. In this role, Ben helped create and enforce company and 
public policies dealing with every form of potential abuse that happens 
online, including spam, phishing, identity theft, copyright 
infringements, cyberbullying, child exploitation issues, and rogue 
internet pharmacies. He recently took on a new role as Director of the 
Digital Crimes Unit. Ben comes from a strong technical background 
including several years as a network and email administrator, and has 
experience in customer service, business management, and marketing.

Ben will bring a registrar perspective to the conversation and dialogue.


Description of the proposer's plans for remote participation

The workshop will be organized as a facilitated dialogue. Led by the 
moderator, subject experts will debate and discuss the key questions and 
issues. Subject experts will give opening comments, after which the 
moderator will turn to those attending the session and invited experts 
in the audience to engage in facilitated dialogue.

Background paper (attached)
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