The Speakers of 2009

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Expo Opportunities

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We've told you that next09 goes exposition a while ago. In the meantime, we've put together a detailed overview, including all information around the expo, its target groups and the advantages for your company by taking part.

We've also spelled out the conditions for the exposition. Any questions you might have concerning the application, booth rental, terms of payment and place allocation are going to be answered here (also available in German).

Are you interested to profit from the exclusive image of our innovative conference and demonstrate the leading position of your company on the market and to present products in an optimum way?

Apply now and sign up for your exposition booth at next09!

Here you can find a collection of our badges to spread the word. We're certainly happy about any support!

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next09 - Register now!

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You are a media representative and would like to report about next09, be involved with speakers, participants and sponsors?

We then ask you to pre-register for the next conference by filling out this form. We will get back to you!

We cannot give accreditations to all media representatives who like to attend next09, since the access to the conference will be limited. For further information or details please contact Anja Waltemate.

You are interested in becoming a sponsor of next09?

You have seen our brief but compact sponsoring documents?

You want to get an even better insight of what the next conference is all about and your opportunities of sponsorships?

You can now review our past conferences and check out all the advantages you gain as a sponsor in our detailed presentation. We are showing you what's next to expect at next09, our new concept and newfound location as well as impressions that have been collected since 2006.

Contact Julia Ruf for individual consulting on your sponsorship!

next08_SpeakersDinner.jpgnext09 will be the fourth edition of the next conference and it's the first time we have installed an Advisory Board. Its function is to consult the conference organiser SinnerSchrader concerning the next09 programme and speaker acquisition.

The Advisory Board also has a crucial function for the Call for Participation procedure. All members will review the applications and decide who will receive a slot in the next09 programme.

We're happy to have the following advisors on board:

Mark Pohlmann, Mavens Dialog, as the Head of Advisory Board

Mike Butcher, TechCrunch
Björn Negelmann, [n:sight]
Rodrigo Sepúlveda Schulz, vpod.tv
Nicole Simon, cruel to be kind
Brian Solis, FutureWorks

Our goal is to bring together personalities which are able to cover national and international expertise in the web industry in order to generate a high profile next conference programme. A bunch of first speakers have been found already.

Copyright and Piracy

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Joi Ito loves to share at LeWeb'08 Joi Ito loves to share at LeWeb'08 (Photo: cvander) Well-known writer Paolo Coelho was interviewed on the LeWeb'08 stage by Loic Le Meur. Coelho has some struggles with copyright, even when it comes to his own books. Author Paulo Coelho supports piracy: "share to get revenue", wrote The Next Web blog about this interview. What happened? The author distributes digital copies of his own work and finds them to promote book sales. One striking example is the russian version of "The Alchemist". After Coelho posted it online, sales in Russia went from around a 1.000 books per year to 100.000 and then to a million and more (watch the video from DLD in January). Despite the sales increase, his publishers don't like what Paolo Coelho does. They insist on copyright. But copyright is a problem in a world with a large infrastructure which is basically just built for copying. We call this infrastructure the Internet. As Cory Doctorow puts it:
The Internet is a system for efficiently making copies between computers. Whereas a conversation in your kitchen involves mere perturbations of air by noise, the same conversation on the net involves making thousands of copies. Every time you press a key, the keypress is copied several times on your computer, then copied into your modem, then copied onto a series of routers, thence (often) to a server, which may make hundreds of copies both ephemeral and long-term, and then to the other party(ies) to the conversation, where dozens more copies might be made.

Copyright law valorizes copying as a rare and noteworthy event. On the Internet, copying is automatic, massive, instantaneous, free, and constant. Clip a Dilbert cartoon and stick it on your office door and you're not violating copyright. Take a picture of your office door and put it on your homepage so that the same co-workers can see it, and you've violated copyright law, and since copyright law treats copying as such a rarified activity, it assesses penalties that run to the hundreds of thousands of dollars for each act of infringement.
Joi Ito presented in Paris a modest proposal to solve the copyright issue on the web. The solution is called Creative Commons, a non-profit organization dealing with a sensible distribution of copyrights between creators and users. Instead of having classical copyright ("All rights reserved") on one hand and public-domain ("No rights reserved") on the other, Creative Commons offers several licenses that allow the creator to reserve some rights while users can simply use his stuff for clearly defined purposes. For example, both pictures in this entry are licensed under Creative Commons from their licensors. Joi Ito at LeWeb'08 Joi Ito at LeWeb'08 (Photo: Peter Bihr) Creative Commons is a kind of infrastructure for the Share Economy. We define Share Economy as the increase of return on investment by sharing the same or nearly the same goods that at the same time are sold. That is exactly what Paolo Coelho achieved by sharing his work on the web:
You'll have to share in order to get some revenue. At the end of the day, it doesn't hurt your sales. People download the book but don't read it. They wait for the hard copy anyway. Don't be fooled by the publishers who say that piracy costs authors money.
That's what we call Share Economy. Let's discuss it at the next conference 2009.

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