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DESCRIPTION:   'Title: Looking into the future\, what can we learn about ha
 cking in\n   science-fiction?\n   When: Saturday\, Aug 12\, 13:00 - 13:45 
 PDT\n   Where: Caesars Forum - Forum - 109-119\, 138-139 - Track 2 - [1]Ma
 p\n   Speakers:Nicolas Minvielle\,Xavier Facélina\n\n   SpeakerBio:Nicola
 s Minvielle \, Making Tomorrow\n   former brand manager for Philippe Starc
 k\, professor\, researcher and\n   fututirst. Nicolas is also the head of 
 the French Armie’s Science\n   Fiction red Team\n\n   SpeakerBio:Xavier 
 Facélina \, Seclab\n   Xavier Faclina — former hacker\, self taught en
 trepreneur\, founded 3\n   cybersecurity companies including SECLAB\, cybe
 rsecurity company\n   protecting cyberphysical system (real world !) from 
 cyberattacks.\n\n   Xavier has 25 years of experience in cybersecurity wit
 h a focus on\n   digital war and cyberdefense. How he gets into this? By s
 eeing the\n   Wargames movie at the age of 8! Today\, he still watch movie
 s and read\n   books and comics to anticipate what is coming.\n\n\n   Desc
 ription:\n   The links between science fiction and reality have been demon
 strated\n   in numerous research studies. By speculating about the possibl
 e future\n   uses of technologies under development\, science fiction show
 s us\n   plausible futures. In this sense\, it allows us\, as a society\, 
 to\n   popularize and debate the consequences (expected or not) of our\n  
  technological developments. In addition to this not negligible social\n  
  role science fiction also has an impact on our current developments.\n   
 We speak here of "loop-looping"\, i.e. there is a feedback loop between\n 
   what science fiction shows us and what we are then led to actually\n   d
 evelop. From this point of view\, our imaginations are performative\,\n   
 and this is perhaps the most critical issue: what I see can happen. In\n  
  the case of hacking and cybersecurity\, a particular phenomenon is\n   ad
 ded: the general public's knowledge of these subjects is mainly\n   throug
 h the fictions they watch\, read\, or listen to. We propose to\n   analyze
  a corpus of 200 fictional attacks\, and 800 real attacks and to\n   compa
 re them to define if the imaginary ones are predictive if they\n   inform 
 us or on the contrary mislead us as for the reality of the\n   current att
 acks.\n\n   REFERENCES:\n\n   The subject of imaginaries is a key subject 
 of the work of the Making\n   Tomorrow collective co-founded by Nicolas Mi
 nvielle. As such\, he has\n   been able to conduct numerous studies aimed 
 at analyzing the impact of\n   science fiction on a given practice.\n\n   
 A book has been published on the subject and is available online in\n   pd
 f format: Minvielle\, N. & Wathelet\, O. & Lauquin\, M. & Audinet\, P.\,\n
    Design fiction for your organization\, Making Tomorrow (2020)\, [2]http
 ://making-tomorrow.mkrs.fr/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/Making-Tomorrow-Desi
 gn-Fiction-and-more-for-your-organization.pdf\n\n   Academic references on
  this subject:\n\n   Brake\, Mark\, and Neil Hook\, Different Engines: How
  Science Drives\n   Fiction and Fiction Drives Science (London New York: M
 acmillan\, 2008)\n\n   Carpenter\, C. (2016). Rethinking the Political / -
 Science- / Fiction\n   Nexus: Global Policy Making and the Campaign to Sto
 p Killer Robots.\n   Perspectives on Politics\, 14(1)\, 53-69. doi:10.1017
 /S1537592715003229\n\n   Jones\, C.\, & Paris\, C. (2018). It’s the End 
 of the World and They\n   Know It: How Dystopian Fiction Shapes Political 
 Attitudes.\n   Perspectives on Politics\, 16(4)\, 969-989.\n   doi:10.1017
 /S1537592718002153\n\n   Kevin L Young\, Charli Carpenter\, Does Science F
 iction Affect Political\n   Fact? Yes and No: A Survey Experiment on “Ki
 ller Robots”\,\n   International Studies Quarterly\, Volume 62\, Issue 3
 \, September 2018\,\n   Pages 562–576\, [3]https://doi.org/10.1093/isq/s
 qy028\n\n   Kirby\, David A.\, Lab Coats in Hollywood: Science\, Scientist
 s\, and\n   Cinema (Cambridge\, Mass: MIT Press\, 2011)\n\n   Maynard\, An
 drew D.\, Films from the Future: The Technology and Morality\n   of Sci-Fi
  Movies (Coral Gables: Mango Publishing\, 2018)\n\n   Seed\, David\, ed.\,
  Future Wars: The Anticipations and the Fears\,\n   Liverpool Science Fict
 ion Texts and Studies\, 42 (Liverpool: Liverpool\n   Univ. Press\, 2012)\n
 \n   Shedroff\, Nathan\, and Christopher Noessel\, Make It so: Interaction
 \n   Design Lessons from Science Fiction(Brooklyn\, N.Y.\, USA: Rosenfeld\
 n   Media\, 2012)\n\n   Telotte\, J. P.\, Replications: A Robotic History 
 of the Science Fiction\n   Film (Urbana: University of Illinois Press\, 19
 95)\n\n   Westfahl\, Gary\, Wong Kin Yuen\, and Amy Kit-sze Chan\, eds.\, 
 Science\n   Fiction and the Prediction of the Future: Essays on Foresight 
 and\n   Fallacy\, Critical Explorations in Science Fiction and Fantasy\, 2
 7\n   (Jefferson\, N.C: McFarland\, 2011)\n\n   Appadurai\, Arjun\, ed.\, 
 The Future as Cultural Fact: Essays on the\n   Global Condition (London: N
 ew York : Verso Books\, 2013)\n\n   Here\, a video (6’30 to 17’) of Xa
 vier Faclina in 2017 inviting a\n   panel to thing about cybersecurity fr
 om a different angle \; and with\n   science fiction references (in French
 ) : [4]https://youtu.be/PIVwcu-HhQo\n\n   Here\, a video (8’55 to 29’5
 5) of Nicolas Minvielle talking about\n   the impact of science fiction in
  innovation (in French) : [5]https://www.youtube.com/live/oK-k3AqdXBc?feat
 ure=share\n\n   '\n\n   1. #CaesarsForumBR\n   2. http://making-tomorrow.m
 krs.fr/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/Making-Tomorrow-Design-Fiction-and-more-
 for-your-organization.pdf\n   3. https://doi.org/10.1093/isq/sqy028\n   4.
  https://youtu.be/PIVwcu-HhQo\n   5. https://www.youtube.com/live/oK-k3Aqd
 XBc?feature=share\n\n\n
DTEND:20230812T204500Z
DTSTART:20230812T200000Z
LOCATION:DC - Caesars Forum - Forum - 109-119\, 138-139 - Track 2
SUMMARY:Looking into the future\, what can we learn about hacking in scienc
 e-fiction?
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