Author: foresightsynergynetwork
FSN Workshop – May 31
Foresight Synergy Network Workshop Part 3 of 3: Impact of Advanced Information & Communications Technologies on the Governance of the State
Friday, May 31, 2019
1:00 – 4:00 pm
University of Ottawa
Telfer School of Management
Desmarais Building Room 7170
55 Laurier Ave E
Abstract
FSN Workshop – April 18
Please note: April 18 work shop by Dr. Chris Cooper has been postponed to future date that is to be determined.
Dr. Chris Cooper, CEO of Tech Forward a US Nanotech company currently planning a move to Canada will describe his research with using carbon nanotubes to cleanse polluted water supplies.
DMS 4165 @ 55 Laurier Ave, East Ottawa
FSN Workshop – March 25
Foresight Synergy Network Workshop
Part 2: Impact of Advanced Information & Communications Technologies on the
Governance of the State
Monday March 25, 2019
11:30 – 15:00
University of Ottawa
Telfer School of Management
Desmarais Building Room 7170
55 Laurier Ave E
Abstract
At the 1st Workshop on this topic, held March 18th, participants asked to continue with a follow-on Workshop to further the development of scenarios, hence this date and time as the earliest available and current with the recent discussion. For further information see Workshop Notice below for March 18th.
As noted in the previous Workshop, democracy is under threat. Fake news and alternative facts are increasingly penetrating the public commons. Autocratic states are using advanced ICTs to monitor citizens in unprecedented ways. Cyberspace is becoming an environment for nefarious actions by both state and non-state actors seeking many conflicting objectives ranging from eavesdropping and espionage to influencing public processes such as elections.
This workshop will further develop the prescient views from participants as to this unfolding drama that is sweeping the world. We look out in three timeframes between now and 2100.
Note that anyone interested in Foresight can join in this 2nd workshop without a requirement to have been at the 1st event as this gathering is simply continuing with using Foresight to develop scenarios in timeframes that have not been addressed yet.
There will be a plenary session with each group presenting its views as per the format prescribed for the Workshop. A follow-up Workshop will be held within a month or so to review and refine the scenarios with a view to crafting a document for wider circulation.
The Workshop will be facilitated by Stephen Fanjoy and Peter MacKinnon, as in the last event.
Please note, feel free to bring a brown bag lunch.
FSN Workshop – March 18
Update: Here are the slides:
PKM AI Summary Presentation for March 18th Workshop – as presented1
Impact of Advanced Information & Communications Technologies on the Governance of the State v2
Foresight Synergy Network Workshop
Impact of Advanced Information & Communications Technologies
On the Governance of the State
Monday March 18, 2019
12:00 – 17:00
Abstract
Democracy is under threat. Fake news and alternative facts are increasingly penetrating the public commons. Autocratic states are using advanced ICTs to monitor citizens in unprecedented ways. Cyberspace is becoming an environment for nefarious actions by both state and non-state actors seeking many conflicting objectives ranging from eavesdropping and espionage to influencing public processes such as elections.
This workshop seeks to capture prescient views from participants as to this unfolding drama that is sweeping the world. We will look out in three timeframes between now and 2100.
This workshop is a consequence of two past Foresight seminars, namely Technology & Democracy November 23rd and The History & Foreseeable Future of Artificial Intelligence: Opportunities & Threats on December 14th, which both raised issues that led to staging this Workshop.
The workshop will begin with a brief overview of the issue to be addressed. This will be followed by a discussion about the structure and procedures for the Workshop such as working groups and selection of rapporteurs for a plenary session.
As the workshop will be based on a Foresight Methodology perspective, challenge questions will be posed along with suggested axes for developing a quadrant-type synthesis of working group views. Following working group deliberations there will be a plenary session with each group presenting its views as per the format prescribed for the Workshop. A follow-up Workshop will be held within a month or so to review and refine the scenarios with a view to crafting a document for wider circulation.
The Workshop will be facilitated by Stephen Fanjoy and Peter MacKinnon, the Nov and Dec speakers noted above.
Bios
Stephen Fanjoy is a management consultant, director, and interim executive to start-up entrepreneurs, specializing in business software, including significant experience in novel cybersecurity, medical device and data science solutions.
Steve has over two decades of experience in enterprise software, including executive and senior management roles in strategy, product management, marketing, analyst relations, business development, and mergers and acquisitions. He is an honours graduate of the Dalhousie University School of Business and a Certified Management Consultant (CMC). https://www.linkedin.com/in/stephenfanjoy/
Peter MacKinnon has a background as a scientist, business manager, entrepreneur, domestic and international bureaucrat, executive, diplomat, management advisor, and academic; including affiliation with both Telfer and the Faculty of Engineering at the University of Ottawa.
March 4 – Postponed
Feb 25 – Jack E. Smith
Join Jack E. Smith, an adjunct emeritus professor at the University of Ottawa and the CEO of TFCI Canada Inc. as he kickstarts the winter program of the FSN for 2019 Hindsight on Foresight. Jack will bring an overview of foresight practices in Canada and a summary of the evolutionary development of Canadian public foresight since 1966. During the 5 decades, a broad definition of foresight has been adopted to ensure an inclusive approach to organizations involved in public foresight–including research oriented toward shaping the future of foresight – a least in Canada.
About Jack E. Smith
Dec 14 – Peter MacKinnon
Nov. 23 – Stephen Fanjoy
Update: Here is the presentation Technology and Democracy 2018.11.23
The next FSN meeting is Friday Nov. 23 [DMS 4165 at 12:30], where Stephan Fanjoy will be presenting a talk on following topic:
Technology and Democracy: Self-correcting or Collision Course?Communication and information technology has always played a role in politics, from the era of the first printed words, to religious texts, the Gutenberg press, newspapers, the telegraph, radio, television and, of course now, the internet. Until very recently, the normative view was that these technologies were a constructive, humanistic force that generally helped to achieve, among other things, more just, functional, rational and accountable political governance. This view was held no more firmly than in democratic states, especially during the Cold War era through to the early years of mass internet adoption. But almost all technologies have dual uses and, compared to authoritarian governance, democracy is a historically young, incomplete, and fragile human institution.The technology developments of the last half decade and a critical appreciation of the information operations, propaganda, and psychology of the last century suggest much future uncertainty about the role that technology may continue to play in advancing democracy. This overview will raise many questions, answer too few, but should stimulate much discussion and thought.Stephen Fanjoy is a management consultant, director, and interim executive to startup entrepreneurs, specializing in business software, including significant experience in novel cybersecurity, medical device and data science solutions. To-date, Stephen has played a leading role in securing over $10 million in angel and non-dilutive startup financing and over $50 million in premium-valuation founder exits. Stephen has over two decades of experience in enterprise software, including executive and senior management roles in strategy, product management, marketing, analyst relations, business development, and mergers and acquisitions at SHL VISION* Solutions (acquired by Autodesk), Oracle, and Watchfire (acquired by IBM). Stephen was also a founding Director of the Ontario Bioscience Innovation Organizations (OBIO), former Co-Chair of the Ottawa Life Sciences Cluster, Chair of the Ottawa eBusiness Cluster and Director of the Institute of Certified Management Consultants of Ontario. Stephen is an honours graduate of the Dalhousie University School of Business and a Certified Management Consultant (CMC). https://www.linkedin.com/in/stephenfanjoy/