March 1, 2021 - June 28, 2021

Balancing Trust and Safety in an Encrypted World

Stanford Internet Observatory Workshop Series organises a series of workshops on end-to-end encryption.

Save the dates:

  • 1 March 2021 – E2EE platforms and health misinformation
  • 3 May 2021 – E2EE platforms and political misinformation
  • 28 June 2021 – E2EE platforms and incitement to violence

Register here. (Note: You need a Google account)

Call for Presenting and non-Presenting Participants

End-to-end encrypted (E2EE) communications have been around for decades, but the deployment of default E2EE on billion-user platforms has new impacts for user privacy and safety. The deployment comes with benefits to both individuals and society but it also creates new risks, as long-existing models of messenger abuse can now flourish in an environment where automated or human review cannot reach. New E2EE products raise the prospect of less understood risks by adding discoverability to encrypted platforms, allowing contact from strangers and increasing the risk of certain types of abuse. This workshop will place a particular focus on platform benefits and risks that impact civil society organizations, with a specific focus on the global south. Through a series of workshops and policy papers, the Stanford Internet Observatory is facilitating open and productive dialogue on this contentious topic to find common ground.

An important defining principle behind this workshop series is the explicit assumption that E2EE is here to stay. To that end, our workshops have set aside any discussion of exceptional access (aka backdoor) designs. This debate has raged between industry, academic cryptographers and law enforcement for decades and little progress has been made. We focus instead on interventions that can be used to reduce the harm of E2EE communication products that have been less widely explored or implemented.

This call solicits paper, op-ed, or abstract submissions from stakeholders in academia, industry and civil society on the following topics:
• The role of encrypted platforms in spreading political or health misinformation
• The role of encryption in the use of platforms to incite violence
• Product designs that improve platform safety without breaking encryption

Stanford Internet Observatory seek a diversity of viewpoints on these topics. Students and professionals from around the world are encouraged to apply.

More information here.