Research center at Harvard University
The Center for Research on Computation and Society (CRCS, commonly pronounced "circus") is a research center at Harvard University that focuses on interdisciplinary research combining computer science with social sciences . It is based in Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences . It is currently directed by Milind Tambe .
History
The center was officially founded in 2005,[ 1] although there are appearances of CRCS affiliation back in 1996.[ 2] The center name mimics the name of the centers for Internet and Society such as Stanford's or Harvard's .[citation needed ] The Privacy Tools Project was one of the most important efforts led by CRCS.[ 3] It received funding from multiple sources from 2009 throughout 2020 in order to research and build tools to enhance privacy, in a common effort with Harvard's Berkman Klein Center, Harvard's Data Privacy Lab , and MIT Libraries.[ 4] [ 5] The CRCS founding director was Stuart M. Shieber.[ 6] [ 7] After him, the center was directed by Greg Morrisett [ 8] [ 9] and later by Salil Vadhan until 2015,[ 10] when Margo Seltzer was named new director.[ 11] In 2018, after her departure to Columbia University , she was replaced as director by Jim Waldo . When Milind Tambe joined Harvard in September 2019 he became the new center director.[ 12]
The center has a yearly fellowship program,[ 13] [ 14] and relevant past fellows include Simson Garfinkel or Ariel Procaccia . It also hosts regular public talks ("seminars") with distinguished invited speakers, which are usually video recorded.[ 15] Some speakers include Susan Crawford ,[ 16] Bruce Schneier [ 17] or Megan Price .[ 18]
Research
The center has covered a broad spectrum of research lines within computer science, typically with social aspects. These include social computing,[ 19] privacy-enhancing technologies,[ 20] [ 21] [ 22] encryption and data security,[ 23] [ 24] [ 25] misinformation,[ 26] machine learning fairness,[ 27] internet of things,[ 28] or a citizen-science platform.[ 29]
See also
References
^ "Changing the world through technology | Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences" . www.seas.harvard.edu . Retrieved 2020-02-09 .
^ Mahmoody, Mohammad; Moran, Tal; Vadhan, Salil (2011). "Time-Lock Puzzles in the Random Oracle Model". In Rogaway, Phillip (ed.). Advances in Cryptology – CRYPTO 2011 . Lecture Notes in Computer Science. Vol. 6841. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer. pp. 39– 50. doi :10.1007/978-3-642-22792-9_3 . ISBN 978-3-642-22792-9 .
^ SEAS, Harvard (2015-11-23). "Trusting the system: Innovations for an insecure world" . Medium . Retrieved 2020-02-09 .
^ Jones, Rachael. "Research positions at the Privacy Tools Project at the Center for Research on Computation and Society (CRCS)" . UNC Center for Media Law and Policy . Retrieved 2020-02-09 .
^ "Harvard University Privacy Tools Project" . privacytools.seas.harvard.edu . Retrieved 2020-02-09 .
^ "Michael Mitzenmacher and Stuart Shieber named 2014 ACM Fellows | Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences" . www.seas.harvard.edu . Retrieved 2020-02-09 .
^ "Stuart Shieber | Berkman Klein Center" . cyber.harvard.edu . 2019-03-29. Retrieved 2020-02-09 .
^ "Brown CS: Distinguished Lecture" . cs.brown.edu . Retrieved 2020-02-09 .
^ "Greg Morrisett named dean of Cornell Tech" . Cornell Chronicle . Retrieved 2020-02-09 .
^ SEAS, Harvard (2015-11-23). "Trusting the system: Innovations for an insecure world" . Medium . Retrieved 2020-02-09 .
^ "Margo Seltzer named director of Center for Research on Computation and Society | Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences" . www.seas.harvard.edu . Retrieved 2020-02-09 .
^ "New Computer Science Professor Milind Tambe Aims for Social Impact | News | The Harvard Crimson" . www.thecrimson.com . Retrieved 2020-02-09 .
^ Ardia, David. "Harvard CRCS Call for Postdoctoral fellows + Visiting Scholars for 2016-2017" . UNC Center for Media Law and Policy . Retrieved 2020-02-09 .
^ "Apply" . crcs.seas.harvard.edu . Retrieved 2020-02-09 .
^ "Harvard's CRCS" . YouTube . Retrieved 2020-02-09 .
^ "CRCS Lunch Seminar: Susan Crawford" . crcs.seas.harvard.edu . Retrieved 2020-02-09 .
^ "Bruce Schneier: "The NSA, Snowden, and Surveillance" " . crcs.seas.harvard.edu . Retrieved 2020-02-09 .
^ "Megan Price: "How Machine Learning Helps Count Casualties in Syria" " . crcs.seas.harvard.edu . Retrieved 2020-02-09 .
^ "Teeing up collaboration | Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences" . www.seas.harvard.edu . Retrieved 2020-02-09 .
^ "Reengineering privacy, post-Snowden | Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences" . www.seas.harvard.edu . Retrieved 2020-02-09 .
^ "Cybersecurity, Trade on Collision Course" . www.bankinfosecurity.com . Retrieved 2020-02-09 .
^ Shaw, Jonathan (2016-12-07). "The Watchers" . Harvard Magazine . Retrieved 2020-02-09 .
^ "Stephen Chong approved for promotion to tenured full professor | Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences" . www.seas.harvard.edu . Retrieved 2020-02-09 .
^ Naone, Erica. "Peeking Into Users' Web History" . MIT Technology Review . Retrieved 2020-02-09 .
^ "We're Not Digital Yet" . www.businesswire.com . 2015-08-18. Retrieved 2020-02-09 .
^ "Are We Living in a Post-Fact Society?" . wdet.org . Retrieved 2020-02-09 .
^ "Setting the standard for Machine Learning | Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences" . www.seas.harvard.edu . Retrieved 2020-02-09 .
^ "Now arriving: Internet of Things" . Harvard Gazette . 2016-10-04. Retrieved 2020-02-09 .
^ Xue, Katherine (2013-12-16). "Popular Science" . Harvard Magazine . Retrieved 2020-02-09 .
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