The Surveillance Economy and Extreme Income Inequality: You Can't Have One Without the Other
Speaker/Performer: Jaron Lanier
Sponsors: CITRIS (Ctr for Info
Technology Research in the Interest of Society), Berkeley Center for New
Media, CITRIS Data and Democracy Initiative
Jaron Lanier's
scientific interests include biomimetic information architectures, user
interfaces, heterogeneous scientific simulations, advanced information
systems for medicine, and computational approaches to the fundamentals
of physics. He collaborates with a wide range of scientists in fields
related to these interests.
Lanier's name is also often
associated with Virtual Reality research. He either coined or
popularized the term 'Virtual Reality' and in the early 1980s founded
VPL Research, the first company to sell VR products. In the late 1980s
he led the team that developed the first implementations of multi-person
virtual worlds using head mounted displays, for both local and wide
area networks, as well as the first "avatars," or representations of
users within such systems. While at VPL, he and his colleagues developed
the first implementations of virtual reality applications in surgical
simulation, vehicle interior prototyping, virtual sets for television
production, and assorted other areas. He led the team that developed the
first widely used software platform architecture for immersive virtual
reality applications. Sun Microsystems acquired VPL's seminal portfolio
of patents related to Virtual Reality and networked 3D graphics in 1999.
From
1997 to 2001, Lanier was the Chief Scientist of Advanced Network and
Services, which contained the Engineering Office of Internet2, and
served as the Lead Scientist of the National Tele-immersion Initiative, a
coalition of research universities studying advanced applications for
Internet2. The Initiative demonstrated the first prototypes of
tele-immersion in 2000 after a three-year development period. From 2001
to 2004 he was Visiting Scientist at Silicon Graphics Inc., where he
developed solutions to core problems in telepresence and tele-immersion.
He was Scholar at Large for Microsoft from 2006 to 2009, and Partner
Architect at Microsoft Research from 2009 forward.
Lanier has
received honorary doctorates from the New Jersey Institute of Technology
and Franklin and Marshall College, was the recipient of CMU's Watson
award in 2001, was a finalist for the first Edge of Computation Award in
2005, and received a Lifetime Career Award from the IEEE in 2009 for
contributions to Virtual Reality.
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