 Jetzt hört man dich, jetzt hört man dich. Das ist Holger Klein. Auf Wiederhören. Ja, ja, da machst du jetzt. Du hast eine Stunde 40, nicht länger. Ich komme nur auf den Bühnen und mache richtig Ärger. Ich setze mich jetzt einfach mal an den Tisch, weil ich da eigentlich bin. All right, I'm just gonna sit down here because I'm the one person to not say that much during this event. This year we thought we're gonna have this sort of like PowerPoint karaoke that we did the last few years. We're gonna replace it with something new and so I don't have one single slide to show you. We'll see. So we've replaced the karaoke with the decentralized year in review. So instead of as a monologue or as two or three people up on stage to talk about all the stuff that has happened, we're gonna try to have the regional clubs to come up here the airfars and to give a brief overview in five to ten minutes about what happened last year. Yeah, and I probably not gonna need much of an introduction. Oh, so you've brought a dog into the audience. That's nice. Yeah, we're gonna start now. I'm gonna just tell you who's gonna come up on stage and then let them talk to speakers. Yeah, and so, you know, there's good news and bad news, like always. And we're gonna start with bad news because one of us died this year and we'll talk about him in a minute. Pananoune from Digital Courage. Sein Name des Verstorbenen ist Jimmy Schulz. The person who died, he's called Jimmy Schulz and yeah, now he's gonna talk about him. Ich höre keinen Ton. Nein, es ist auch Begriff. Komm, wir fangen nochmal an. Audio issues. Oatstapht ist nicht mehr nur der Ausspruch nach dem Anstechen eines Bierfasses. Nein, es ist auch Begriff und Hashtag der ganzen Diskussion. Oatstapht is not something you say when you drink beer, but it's also become this groundbreaking terminology in this debate. So, we need to thank the Chaos Computer Club for these 20 pages of analysis and I recommend all of you to read that at home. I recommend everyone in this house to read this document. And he was serious about that because he was enraged that his colleagues in the German parliament didn't want to hear about digitalization. He was just like, not my department, you do you, and I don't want to deal with this. And in the parliament he joined Doro Baer and Lars Klingbeil to have crypto parties for the German parliament. And with Jimmy Schulz, this wasn't some sort of superficial attitude. Maybe you've seen on his clothes there was a sticker from the sea base, a hackerspace in Berlin. This was one of his base stations when he was dealing with politics in Germany's capital. And he was always in the smoking lounge. When it comes to beer and cigarettes, I'm a communist. That was what he always used to say and this has been transmitted through across all party lines. And yes, so digital policies that were non-existent or were so lacking in quality. That was what he fought against. And that's why he went into politics. He wanted to participate. He didn't want to talk, talk, talk. He wanted to improve politics. He wanted to improve digital politics. And the German Liberal Party's yearly meeting, I talked to him back then. In this super election year, quote unquote, back then we still had a pirate party in Germany. Yeah, we tried to sort of infiltrate the Liberal Party, the FDP, and had this little stand where we raged against data retention. Yeah, and he was active in Munich's, in a community against data retention. And he showed us a paper that he wanted to hand in to the Party Council on saying that data retention should not happen anymore if the German Federal Court, Federal Constitutional Court would say it was unconstitutional. And so I said, well, you know, isn't this just a matter of semiotics? Couldn't we just say it like that? Yeah, he just jumped and ran and changed his phrasing, and then the motion passed, actually. And then we had a new coalition in Germany, and data retention was no more thanks to the Liberal Party and his engagement. And then when he joined the German Parliament, he was a very young member of Parliament by comparison. And he was one of the first to have an iPad in Parliament. And so he was the first person in German Parliament to speak and have his notes in digital form in front of him on a screen. And that he received a letter from a call to order afterwards for this behavior. Oh, and we're still missing audio from the video. All right. This time I brought paper. Yeah, so this was his next speech after the call to order. And after the summer break, it was decided that iPads would be allowed in German Parliament. And so Jimmy was really groundbreaking in that role. And by the way, his iPad from back then is now part of the permanent collection of the Museum of German History in Bonn. Yeah, I don't have much time here. I just want to say, you know, you start at the bottom, right? You do like this low work and you try to get people to elect you. And this really isn't an easy job. And Jimmy, he had this wonderful ability to not be mad at people who ignore and say slurs about people who join political parties, especially the Liberal Party, the FDP. And so disability, really, I would have liked to have that when Jimmy had me joined this commission on digital society. And he warned me beforehand that I would become harassed and I was naively I thought that would not happen. And yeah, so in this working group, this, by the way, is a symbol of how annoyed he was sometimes, where he had to, because of measures of the coalition, he had to vote against his principles when it comes to freedom online. And he looked at me and put his hand against his head and just lowered his head and raised his other hand. And doing so, he voted pro Limits online. Yeah, so politics isn't easy. And it's always that way when, and we see that on stage and off the stage here at Congress. Two years ago, Jimmy didn't make it to Congress and he told me he had become gravely ill. But yeah, he stuck to his work, he kept on working because that made him happy. And so sometimes he also came to Berlin and held speeches about the right to encrypt. And he also smoked the first legal joint in Parliament. And then in the evenings he came over to Seabase, even while his energy levels sunk. And this year he gave an interview to German magazine der Spiegel. And he said this wonderful sentence, it's okay for me to die. And this was really good to hear for people who want to continue working with him. Continue working on this digital world, which certainly isn't that new to us anymore. And for people who know what it feels like to have lost someone, I think this really reveals, this reminds us to, you know, go beyond superficialities, go beyond logos and claims and really taking to consideration the, how wonderful people can be. And so as well continued, he had the IGF come to Berlin, the Forum on Internet Governance. And in his memory, members of Parliament from 56 countries send a message to the General Secretary of the UN about him. And I want to mention his family here, his children and his wife. Not all people here at the 36 C3 knew Jimmy, but many did. And I want to say to his family members that a lot of the people here will be with you. So goodbye Jimmy, may the force be with you. Sorry, that was too soon. One more thing. Not in Jimmy's life and not in German Parliament, it's serious business all the time. So sometimes when a member of Parliament wants to start a speech, you get called that by other members. And so Manuel Höhler, one shouted beer crate to Jimmy. And Jimmy asked, well, could it be a beer cake? Yeah, so Oat Zapht is not just something you say after you open a cake of beer. Padelun, thank you so much. And now here are my slides. Great. It's wonderful. I think we can continue in just a few seconds. And we're going to continue with, I mean, I don't even know if you guys are interested, but I'm just going to tell you anyways, because I have a little bit of time to get a bridge here. I'm not even a member of the CCC. You can scream boo now. Nobody's interested in this. I told you that. We prepared something. We obviously do not manage to not do the bookkeeping. So we're going to listen to the report, the annual report that we have to do. And I asked him to get me a membership application that I can fill in while he does this report. And then I can just tell him, yes, moin, good morning. Do you want to maybe pass as a microphone? Do you have an application for me? I just had that. I mean, I had to print that really quickly. But how much does it cost actually? Are you still a student? Only for public transport tickets and for health insurance reasons. So in that case it's 36 Euros. Otherwise it's 72. Amazon Prime is cheaper. You realize that, right? And they bring it to your doorstep. Well, if you don't pay, we're also going to send you a mail. Well, I will fill this in. You guys do the year-end review. Volker and Letty, you have five minutes, like Paralloon just had. Wonderful. All right, so I am one of the people that collects the membership data and governs it. This is our office in Hamburg, as we like to call it. This is in this small computer right next to the monitor. We have the database that's only offline. It never is connected to the Internet because security and so on. I admit this picture is not completely updated. This is an Intel Nook by now. And it is a lot more cluttered and a lot more chaotic. This was the picture taken upon moving in, but all right. The data in this database, we took another look at it and we tried to find some interesting information in it. And I got the help of Letty for this, who made this beautiful analysis and got interesting information for you guys. First I thought you were joking because the membership number is 42,042, which was really, really funny. So at the moment we are at 7,900 members. Obviously we have a little jumps, usually right after Congress. But you can also see sometimes numbers are shrinking. And obviously that happens because we have numbers that go back. So, I was interested in what are the people, what years were they born in, when do they join and how long do they stay. So 86 to 96, we have about 10 members and then all of a sudden we have these ginormous jumps in 2008. We had about 400 people and the year of Snowden of 2014 you kind of assumed that maybe people only joined and then would like undoin or leave right after. But we still had about 900 after. And I mean this year we may be lacking a little behind. But I mean we don't know what's going to happen. Yes, still a few days to go. Okay, the last graphic that I brought with you is where do our members come that are part of the CCC and where are the stronger regions. So we have these regions split up by postal codes and obviously Berlin is quite a strong but also Hamburg. And then we have these kind of interesting cities such as Düsseldorf and Kern. So, and also Karlsruhe and white Karlsruhe. Well, of course we have the GPN. There's a lot of people there but also in Munich and ever since we started being leipzig also leipzig has gotten a lot more stronger. You could potentially think that we have white spots but no, this year we have a member from every postal region in Germany. Round Dürferplatz, we closed all white gaps. Do you have a question, Holger? No, no, you may continue, you have two more minutes. All right, so another statistic that we have not brought as a beautiful graphic is the number of males. It kind of exploded in the past few years because we have so many new members so we tried to automate things and all this sort of stuff and by now we have about 2019 we had roughly 33,000 emails that we sent out. Mainly automatic ones, kind of just what's going on. You have to pay your membership fees. We got your membership fees but we also have about 4,500 emails that we received and worked on and responded to. You're going to have to do the math on this. That's roughly about 90 emails per day so you kind of, you know what I mean, when I do this kind of calculation and then we meet up once a week at the office on average. Sometimes we do it more often, sometimes less often, like this week for example. In one evening in like two, three, four hours depending on how much emails we got we work on all of these emails. We really are great if you inform yourself and that we can like spend our time reading other things or eating pizza. So like there's certain things like read the ccc.de slash faq before you email in a question and please do read the emails that we send out because a lot of times we actually have this case where we're like hey, do you want to have to pay for my next membership fee and there's a quote in the email where it's like literally like this is a response to an email that was automatically sent which has a date of when your membership fee is due. So like this sort of stuff. Hey, we have a problem with your GPGQ this is the error message that we got. Please send us a response and then underneath that there was like another notification of why that actually is happening. So what do you see? Please like read the emails before you respond. Be sensible about this. All right, what does it look like with your application? I'm done, I'm going to pay why doing bank transfers. It's beautiful, great. This is the second club that I've ever joined and who also wants to do that. There is a club table. It's showing up on the map at the CCL. You can go there, you can get a membership application if you want. You can also talk to the people, discuss problems that you have with them and you can like go to the Infodesk. You can pay your membership fee directly on the spot if you want and you can, if you have other problems you can obviously send emails and letters. That's it from my side. I have one more question. It says that I'm supposed to send this as a bank transfer. Are you going to send me an email that I should be doing this? Because I need a chaos number which I don't have yet. Yes, that's a good point. It's also stated on your application form. There was only like a little footnote. I didn't really read that. All right, so we are going to get this membership application. Then you will get an email which says hey, welcome to the club. Here is your current temporary chaos number. This chaos number you should be using in your bank transfer and we're also going to state in the email that you should be sending that money and then you're going to get an email with your permanent chaos number which is going to be your chaos number for the future. It had to be in 1998, 1999 when the Congress was still held in Berlin. Do you remember that? There was this room with the female hackers and they put an N64 there with Mario Kart. And before then I wasn't a gamer at all. But then like the whole Congress I spent playing Mario Kart. And ever since then I buy game consoles to play Mario Kart and nothing else. And so, even my son, he doesn't understand like how can you just use a switch to play Mario Kart. Anyway, so one of our female hackers what did our female hackers do this year? Das ist hier schon lange, lange her mit dem Mario Kart. Hi, yeah, so Mario Kart, that's, you know, long ago. A few years we weren't so sure if we still existed anymore where we had like three female hackers and now we're even bigger than the Hamburg section of the club. Und so we really had an influx of membership last year and I think this year as well. And, you know, the future is looking bright. And so, since we missed out on the yearly reviews in the past few years. Yeah, we're going to give you an overview here. So we have 292 Hexen, so about 300 on a mailing list. We have assemblies and, you know, the village at the camp. And we have so called hats, you know, the hats of witches. And so, you know, usually you use your connections to get, you know, follow through on your goals. And so, yeah, this year we asked and and found five new female hackers who wanted to participate, to hold workshops. And so now, you know, we've let this sort of this connection system behind and now we just have people want to participate just like that and it works really wonderful. And so, yeah, we have social media, so you can find us Hexen-C or Hexen on Twitter and Mastodon. There's a picture missing. An important picture, but, you know, that's why we use a Mac, I guess. So, day four we have the Hexen-Year-in-Review, because we like to use euphemisms. What really happened at the witch trials and femicides in the present. And so, usually, you know, there's this holy trinity between sort of this holy mother image of the woman and the woman is slut, the sort of dichotomy. And, yeah, what we see here is that back when the witch trials were going on is that when women started, you know, confronting traditional views that they were drawn across a village to, you know, punish them. And so for years and years women at congress have, you know, spoken up and we still haven't reached like a gender parody here. And so during the last few years when lots and lots of female hackers joined us. So, for example, we have a fuck and German acronym for women and computer stuff. And lots of these have associations with CCC hack spaces. Some have their own feminist hack spaces and, yeah, we'd like to see this map fill up in the future. That would be really nice. So, yeah, so 2020 more of everything, more local groups, more representation on the Easter hack. We like camping, so maybe we'll do that. Hopefully we'll have a geek end in October in the German city of Brunswick. And, yeah, just join us, write a mail info at Hexen.org and the only way to become a Hexer is to talk to another Hexer. So please talk to us in person, find our assembly, leave your mail and you're in. And so an overview of our activities here at Congress, you know, it's day two. And so you can find our panel. We have talks, we have performances about including new members into hack spaces, for example. We have projects like the seed exchange and we have workshops held by Hexen, for Hexen, but also for non-Hexens in these workshops. And it's not as far as we all want the same rights. And yeah, just have fun. One moment, one second. Soup Saturdays is mentioned in my list here. You did not talk about this. I'm sorry, what? Soup Saturdays. Well, I don't know soup Saturdays, but we're going to have a celebration 30. Maybe this was my own personal interest. You have to cook yourself, my honey. All right, I'm going to go eat cake now. Bye, have fun. 30 years. Hi. Now I'm confused. Who are you? We're Monika and Herr Acht from Utopia in Göttingen. Which is soup Saturdays. We lose complete overview. This is double printed pages. All right, so now we're going to talk about the soup Saturdays. Last year we were quite active and some of these activities we want to introduce to you. Do we have a new slide? Oh, you have to press. You have to click. All right. Us, that means eight hackers and Hexen. We wanted to have a youth group which is what we did. So a couple of parents, couple of non parents, couple of students, one person who is a teenager. So we thought about brainstorm and just started a group of teenagers. So we have about 20 young hackers and we want to give them a space where they can learn, where they can understand basic knowledge but also where they can network. And it works quite well and we have a lot of fun doing it. We are the ones who are actually learning the most. And we brought you one project that Haacht is going to introduce. So we made a Marta Light. As mentors, what's exciting is that we have very different backgrounds. Like me, for example, I come from the hardware side of things. Julia is more like physics and data stuff and things like that. And then there's other people who do more software and we learn so much from one another. We built a Marta Light. You know these things like these big things where you can put into a crate of Marta Bottles and you can put LED in there and then you can look into it and then you build basically giant pixel displays. And so we built these with the kids and we sold it with the kids. We built it from scratch. We did all the things that I've heard of this and then in the end we built a Marta Light and you can like look at it just like our kids built this. So, come and check it out. It's too late. You just saw how we did the programming. Oh, what's going on? We're jumping. Oh, oh, oh. Hacky hour. Yeah, okay, so a few years ago we had this idea that we should have a hacky hour. This is not our idea, it comes from Wurzburg and the idea is that scientists and future scientists need up once a month and they talk to one another and talk about tools and programming languages and help each other out to analyze data. So once a month we get together there's a short talk and then after that we do a quick hands on where you can try out tools and programming languages and you can discuss on how to best use them. And I clearly also seriously I learn the most and I'm going to be interested read up about it and you can build up your own hacky hour. We are excited about every hacky hour that happens and takes place in Germany and maybe next year we have a few more. We would love to see that. So, yes, alright. So, the soup, Saturdays and the U.S.S.R., which in German is like an abbreviation of German soup. So, basically what we do is we make a gigantic pot of soup. Lots of greens you turn it around like you cook it and then while you cook you discuss interesting subjects such as encryptions, backups also other interesting things. Before they cut our sound we also have a hexing group in Göttingen in Halloween this year we are meeting twice a month, two hours and who is from Göttingen or close by nearby come talk to me, come to open chaos cause we love to grow. And one of our members just founded a library and you can obviously come and use the books and taste them out. This is our witch. This is the one that we hang on the wall when we meet so that nobody else enters. Last but not least we also bought a laser cutter and did a lot of bullshit with it and this is calibration that was done with a laser cutter we also did all sorts of stencils we are from Göttingen Göttingen is quite politically active and we are supporting a lot of different groups this is kind of an overview of the stencils that we managed to do by an evening and we use them obviously to spray onto bags or big signs but yeah, so this is kind of this sums it up. Thank you so much. All right I was just about to say we have something new so five minutes we have this guy with the red beard and when they pass the five minutes he's just gonna come up and you know annoy them and prevent them from continuing speaking yeah so at camp people were drunk and come on, turn off your phone and so they care us now so please tell me that this is more than just a drunken idea I don't think anyone was drunk then it was so hot in those days yeah okay so begin what do we want to do we want young people in care us to connect with each other and so we want to build a platform for us and to have to work with youth, with teenagers and to encourage that so for example we're closely connected to yeah people from all over all regions of the care's computer club our core group of people between 14 and 18 years of age and then also you know 19 to 25 years and then maybe even people in the late 20's we haven't done so much so we got together at the camp this year but we also registered the main chaos.jetzt so chaos.now in german and we have a matrix chat and for our traditionalists we also have an IRC channel if you want to join come to our meeting on day 3 tomorrow at the wikipakka community at 5 p.m and yeah we're gonna have a short meeting there maybe have a plan for other stuff and or otherwise whenever you feel like it come to our assembly chaos.jetzt in the dome at the wikipakka where we hang out we're planning a geekent in Göttingen 28.February until the 1.March and yeah we also have these telephone conferences in our matrix so join our matrix or join our IRC and work with us and of course even the older people here could follow us on twitter or on mastodon and yeah so this is chaos for young people so if the club does PR that's usually a big thing so like more like a large scale stuff so usually on a regional scale we all know that a lot of times people are not really interested in this sort of like large scale politics but obviously like also in regional PR we still have to do things and those are the things that are they gonna share now why you two people well mr.igler has a lot more experience with PR so that's why he's up here on stage with us why am I only here because Fawas is about as large as me why am I the only one on the slide who do you think you are Holger Klein maybe well we don't have time let's not joke around so what is regional PR um well obviously there's like our press speakers we're not competing with them but we have another focus and it's another thing that we do so we're connecting all the local airfas like all the cars meetups because they obviously have to do some sort of public relation work and we try to everybody knows who did like a little bit of PR ever in their world like all of a sudden there is like a request coming in or you maybe want to get something to the press and you just kind of don't know how to do that and so there was especially in this initiative cars macht schule so cars go school how do we get the word out when we want to talk to the press or when the press talks to us how do we respond how do we react so this is how we came up with this idea of regional PR so what can we do we sit down together with four people we are like okay let's try it out and the final result was that started in 2018 we are regularly meeting up in mumble like once a month and I am going to quickly say that docu.ccc.de enter regio pr yes oh oh this is great sounds there okay we have a project that is ongoing we have a workshop that we already did in Vienna you know us Austrians always like to puff our chest the first thing that we major thing that we want to do is go to the European data protection day where we want have a tool where you can make requests for GDPR reasons we are going to publish that and we are looking forward to participation from everyone please additionally we are every first month every Monday of the month come to the mumble server if you want to join the more we are the more the merrier I am not going to continue counting just come join us if you want to understand a little bit more about regional work or have experience that you want to contribute like we are always welcoming more hands on deck I have a feeling that my colleague starts timing when I start speaking so I can steal their time basically I went to school in the 80s to high school don't worry I am going to stay in the 80s and we had computer science as a lesson and there was this room having apple twos we learned tobo pascal learned quote unquote and very fast we found out how to get these things to beep and we just let them beep and went to join the girls in the smokers corner so school can be quite different computer science education is going to talk about that yeah I have two topics I want to talk about both related to chaos mach schule so the education initiative of the chaos computer club there is lots of workshops we did at schools but there is also a statement that we published on the law digitalisation in german schools in general chaos mach schule is an education project from the chaos computer club and our goal is to increase the ability to handle technical stuff for students in we want to talk about the risks and possibilities of new technologies with school students and as always we are decentralised we are active in Germany Austria and Switzerland and even though on the sort of federal stage you don't hear a lot about us on the regional levels we had a lot going on with chaos mach schule instances but a lot of them have a lack of participants really and today we had the you packer day don't worry don't worry this all counts towards your time we invited hundreds of children to come to congress and had lots of workshops for them soldering, printing shirts small workshop on facial recognition and we're not just active at schools it's just sort of the pseudonym for education for example our group in Essen went into universities to work with future teachers we also worked with environmental groups in Berlin we organised the so called adhulabs which is a community that deals with contemporary techniques of education and open educational materials the CMS group in Mannheim went to an event of the BSI so a german federal agency they also talked and there's lots of stuff going on time isn't sufficient and we all do this in our free time and we really encounter time and personal constraints and a lot of the time I want to encourage you join us to work with us we're always looking for new people Wenn das etwas, was dir zu dir klingt, dann gehst du zu deinem nächsten Kausdreff oder AERFA, also deiner lokalen Gruppe. Und die wichtigste Sache ist, dass du willst, zu früh nach der Schule zu arbeiten, und wir wollen uns mit den Nachfolgen und den Nachfolgen zu studieren. Wir wollen uns mit den Nachfolgen und den Nachfolgen zu studieren, um mit der Technologie und mit dem Internet zu verabschieden. Das ist wirklich ein sehr schwieriges Problem für die Schulen. Aber ich muss sagen, dass wir noch in 10 Jahren das gleiche Problem sehen, wie es im Bildungssystem gibt, wie es in den Schulen gibt. Und so, wie wir als ein einziger Gruppe nicht alle diese Probleme lösen. Und was wir wirklich brauchen, ist eine Veränderung in den EU-Planzen und die Aufgaben für die Schüler. Das wäre wirklich wichtig. Und wir sehen uns auch als jemand, der sich als Kounsel sieht. Manchmal machen wir Statements auf die Bildungspolizei. In der deutschen Stadt Hesse haben wir ein Statement auf die Digitalpolizei. Ich werde jetzt darüber reden. Der sogenannte Digitalpact war dieses Jahr verabschiedet. Und auf der federalen Ebene werden 5 Billionen Euro für die digitalen Infrastruktur in Deutschland verabschiedet. Aber weil die Bildungspolizei nicht auf der federalen Ebene in Deutschland ist, aber auf der staatlichen Ebene ist, gibt es viele Diskussionen über wie das Geld verabschiedet und administriert. Hesse ist nur eine Stadt. Und viele von euch leben nicht da. Aber dieses Problem hat sich auf alle deutschen Städten verabschiedet. Hesse kann hier ein Passport-Toto sehen. Wir haben 7 Punkte für unsere Kritik und für die Bildungspolizei. Ich gebe euch jetzt die 7 Punkte. Der erste ist die Bildungspolizei. Es geht nicht so viel um die Lachen, die passen. Es geht immer um Infrastruktur. Aber es gibt keine Definition, was die Bildungspolizei unterliegt. Ich denke, das ist ein sozialer Problem, eine Frage, die wir addressieren müssen, weil die Digitalisation die ganze Gesellschaft betrifft. Wie können wir das Content, das wir so lange in der Schule gebraucht haben, verbessern? Wie können wir die Studierenden in die kompetenten und versatile Users of standard programs and applications. Digital, so-called digital maturity, digital competency basically, that's what we want. So people who understand what happens behind their screen, not just on a technical level. Another important point, teachers. According to the German Council on educational matters, the Kultusministerkonferenz, the question remains, how should this work in practice? So, especially through this so-called digital pack, there's supposed to be new infrastructure. But often times we see that the teachers don't know how they can use this infrastructure and how they can include this into their own teaching methods. And so this is not to say that they're incapable as sort of a reproach or an accusation. It's really that they don't know any better and they can't know any better. And so this is a really huge deficit that should be addressed. But this isn't part of this digital pack and we think that's a big problem because that just means we have unused hardware lying around. And in August 2019 we had a statement on ccc.de as a press release. 17 pages. Read that if you're interested in the topic. And before I finish, a quick resume. So we've shown lots and lots of possibilities of what could be done. But not a lot of that really made its way into this law that had been passed. And so we don't think that's a viable option in this law. But what's also important is that without contemporary infrastructure and contemporary aspects of education, the digital pack is doomed basically. So do we want to have Microsoft and Google influence, young people influence, how we deal with digital technologies or do we want to encourage and enable young people to deal with possibilities and risks of digital technologies. And so basically we want to enable the whole society to influence how the digital change is going to come about. The last time when I talked to Linus Neumann he had problems to speak because of the lack of sleep. I don't know if you're still here. Linus, are you still here? Oh, I can see you. It's your turn now. You should be coming up. Okay. Who are you again? Good evening. We're going to talk about the Dataschleuder. Well, we also had our 100-Edition so before starting, so we had 100, this was the 100-Edition, we wanted to do a review, but so what happened between one and 100 and that didn't really work out. So, well, there was a lot of other subjects that were important though to deal with and so that's why the 100 you can read online really soon. Who read it already? Oh, a few hands. Nice, so people know it, great. So, coming soon, I kind of wanted, I wanted it to be possible to be accessed online already, but that didn't really work out. Hopefully, that's going to happen really soon, but it's going to take a few more days. However, in the Ex-Edition 100, instead of a review, we did highly particular things that are important to chaos and what is important to us. And as an organ of the chaos computer club, we wanted to portray also what's important to you guys and what's important to the club. So, up here you can see some symbolic examples. So, we had the incompatibility declaration from Vienna and two other examples. So, after the Ex-Edition 100, we obviously couldn't stop. So, we did shortly before Christmas, kind of like a Christmas present to all of you guys. The Ex-Edition 101 and this is where we did the review and looking into the past. We finally accomplished that goal. And basically, do you want to talk about this? All right, so the Ex-Edition 101 is we have this beautiful text. We just published it. I don't want to take away from your experience of reading it. I'm expecting that a lot of you might not have read it. It just got to you in the mailbox and just in your mailbox before leaving here. And the reason that that happened is mainly do what I had cared about. Getting it printed, getting it sent out, mailed out so that you can actually receive it. That's a lot of work. I mean, we send it off to a school where they put it into the envelopes and they have a workshop for disabled people and they do all this work for us and they do an amazing job. But it also means it's not really as comfy as a delivery pass in that you throw money at them and then they just do whatever they want to. I actually have to do a lot of work so that they do the mail via the post office correctly and I don't do this on a daily basis. Those are all excuses. All right. So, come on, admit it. All right. Check out the notion on the right, bottom right. This is how it works. I have to admit, this is also my fault. We're also learning new things every day. It's a learning process. We are getting the data in Schleuder to you guys even if it takes a month and a half longer than we expect. We managed to keep up the frequency that we've cut it down to every half year so if the post plays along. So, warm round of applause for that. All right. What else? So, data in Schleuder 101 is published. If you don't have it, come get it at our assembly. Oh no, you can't get it because it's out of stock. So sorry, something else that is screwed up. What do you mean screwed up? There was so much demand. All these Airfas that wanted them, they also wanted to have a box. Please send one over. Right after printing, we had to tell them, so sorry, we don't have enough. So then not all the Airfas got all the editions they wanted. But, you know what, little hint, members get one delivered. See this beautiful Markup in the map. You can get a membership and you can get one of these mailed to your home. All right. So that there's going to be a few more. I'm going to have to ask you a few things that please, like we're interested in what you're interested in. So if you have ideas, if you want to submit something, send us an e-mail ds at ccc.de and then we'll look into whatever we can do with it. Thank you so much. All right. Now that this has completely changed my plan, let's see who's coming up next. Freiburg, Freiburg is entering the stage. And they look like this. Well, it doesn't quite fit the review theme. We actually moved two years ago. We had a lot of luck to get rooms in the Meatshauts Indikat. Great for moving Hacker spaces. Look at local housing projects. And that's just how it is with a move. It's not completely finished after a year. So, yeah. That's a unit of BER years at the Berlin Airport. We have made a request for Freiburg and I have good news for Freiburg. The cable and the fiber is now available but telecom apparently has to put in an SAP fax. Okay, so we will have a fiber connection soon. Great. And except for that there's not much happening in Freiburg all the time. So langsam kommt die ganze Zeit in diesem Hackspace. The Hackspace is booting. We are growing in terms of technology and have a lot of fun with it. We do radio. We did have a small retro gaming night. Mario Kart is one of our standards. So that may be something for you Holger. So maybe you can just join us. We also have showers. Well, I will check if you need one in a second. We also have washing machines. Okay, so I will continue eating them. Right. So, we have a central location. We have moved because the size and location was great and I can really recommend that to everyone. So about a year there's going to be problems because that's how long the moving takes and we have grown in membership because we are very close to the center. Just three minutes from the center come visit us if you are visiting the south or anything on vacation. So I have another thing. It's a request. Many of you may have met 5G people. This is a very popular topic in Freiburg and it's kind of bizarre sometimes. So we are providing this now. It's a 5G detox resilient craft beer. You can also have it as a chunk. But in all honesty we think it's very important to look at all these there's a lot of uncertainty people are talking about things that are not accurate in terms of technology and we have the power to move that along there's wavies also in mixed up with education and we would like that to be kept separate to mix that up with fear of radio frequency. And as you can see we also like brewing. This is craft beer brewed in the hack space. Come to us and then you will get something against your fear of 5G. Thank you. So by now I have an overview over my papers so I will tell you do not print double sided because you lose your overview or at least put page numbers. This is Daria, says my piece of paper. Come again. I didn't understand you and he says, oh this is Daria are you Daria? Daria from Chaos Pot Hi I'm Daria from Essen and I'm gonna tell you about what we did 2019 in Essen first of all we grew so last year oh this year we cracked the 100 member mark we were very happy about this next year at our 10th anniversary we can celebrate that. So now what we did last year or this year we did a lot with Chaos Snakes school so yeah we did a lot of talks and we did the mouse open open doors day and worked with kids and young people creating LED lightning stars and lightning trees that you see here and then we also in February we participated, no we created the Huck and Pot again conference so next year we also will organize this and we'll be very happy if we saw one or two of your faces there talk to us if you feel like coming to us das ging schnell das was fast but now we have the previously prepared Neumann we'll give us an overview over two topics that the CCC thought about a lot this year first is Ola Bini a human who had the wrong friends and is therefore in jail and so that Dinos doesn't have to talk about only bad things is he's talking about fusion and that the fusion is staying this year I don't know what would you but I thought oh yeah I'm gonna skip fusion it's for young people who take drugs and you don't want to go to a public mobile toilet and then comes this policeman and is trying to impart law and order and so I try to get a ticket in the last second to defend the fusion but it was good so some of you may have seen that in Ecuador there has been political change and not only Julian Assange has been thrown out of the embassy but also another case Ola Bini a Swedish person was taken in custody who's been living in the country for 13 years and he's been held with Accused with things that they don't really explain but they're afraid of him because he's a computer programmer and he's in a very weird situation where the judicial ways of escaping is blocked for him and so human rights organizations are clear on the fact that this is not okay and we are among others more again and again trying to shine a spotlight on this this guy doesn't have anything that is being said about him he's just held in jail without any real explanation we also talked about this as camp and it's very important that we keep these in our view field so we can look at them so it's very important for me to tell you about this again in the context of this Rear in Review of course every year we deal with attacks on our freedom I can't tell exactly but it probably was around Easter I got a call from Culture Cosmos who saw an attack on the fusion festival by weird requirements regarding the security concepts of this festival and they said you guys from the CCC you're doing these things and the work with the press and could you maybe help us working with the press about this attack that we have and so that we can continue with the festivals and so the police trying to stop the festival would be blocked so I thought to myself you can't always win so I thought maybe I gotta take some risks so let's do press work for fusion and a huge conspiracy opened itself that some AFD people and some attackers, some violent people apparently tried to like people said they would try to save the fusion with water cannons or cool it I guess but we had a talk at the fusion festival itself where Stefan Pelzer had a talk at the camp and I would recommend you to watch this and so now we're at the camp and SMTV SMDW will tell you all about the camp Hi, good evening Holger are you sufficiently confused that the same person is back on stage again and Holger is fine, how was camp? I wasn't there because it's only every four years so in the week where it started I put work that I couldn't move so tell me what I missed and FDW says okay you know the next date already so who was at camp this year look at this look at this on the screen look at the image it's very colorful so camp is you have 5.000 hackers on a field so camping for electronic geeks and dust C3 dust likes this apart from some dust problems there was a huge another problem this camp was too short I don't have any other criticisms everything else was absolutely fantastic camping and computers it actually works way more, way better than you would think so I can very much recommend it in 2 years there's other camps outside of Germany so maybe you could go there and have a taste infrastructure wise infrastructure worked perfectly the whole event was very cuddly and cozy you could just walk around all day I lost my overview on what all the different fantastic things were I was working a lot with village organization so I don't know how many groups there were there were too many from all corners and countries of Germany and outside of Germany people came to this huge happening and festival so big recommendation look at this if you can deal with sleeping outside or a motor home who brought this thing this little cart that played different music depending on its location in the festival so you could troll people if you put it next to some tents and then leave I don't know who did this but it was wonderful so it was controlled by GPS there were so many projects of this kind but we have a specialist for the biggest and most interesting of these of these projects, the cardio batch so I want to introduce Geo he can tell you all about it okay, yes after the very successful batches in 2011 and 2015 we knew we needed something great and innovative and innovative for the camp this is a batch that you can wear as a clock around your wrist and you can measure your EKG if you want so you can see that it's kind of not very relaxing to be in front of you all now and there's also like a pressure measure device so you can see how high up you are and there's a gyro sensor in there that you can use for useful stuff you can make light paintings with the LEDs there's a 3D magnetic sensor in there and all of these apps are written in python so it's quite easy to have this interface so here we have micro marble which shows that even though it's quite easy you can still do quite great things with it if python isn't enough for you so you can see and do these kind of simulations there's an additional companion app that you can install on your smartphone where you can basically send data over there's a couple of cases that has happened with 3D printing and laser cutting the CPU is quite interesting because it's a dual core CPU that uses python or micro python and it was really very current and very up to date that was even a problem it should be a this should be a review so I have a timeline in 35C3 we first thought of having something that is a variable on your arm and these are the first prototypes was we wanted it to be we thought about what should be in there and we started with the technical stuff and the biggest question was how do we start how can you wear this and we kind of agreed on a wristband the first prototypes from the lower board which we call fundamental master hack at the end of April you could start using the firmware you could start they were starting building prototypes actually and we were quite surprised to find out that it worked quite well something that happened as well was the first layout of the harmonic board so the top board and then we did some sort of crowdfunding for the camp and we had so many people apply and like pay for it we were able to give batches to every camp participant even if they did not pay money for it because so many people donated to us the done boards were ordered in June this was the second design for the harmonic board and that actually worked and we also ordered it at the beginning of July and then we actually had to do some stuff by hand like the wristbands and we also had to solder the displays on there by hand and then we had this problem with the typhoon these very modern up to date CPUs were still in Taiwan at this point and they couldn't start because there was a typhoon and that was one week before camp and then we had to read these instructions or finish these instructions and then in the last days before the camp and even some of them while camp was running already we had to actually finish the CPUs and stuff and flash them with ckit and package them up and then we were able to give them out after final preparations we were able to give a batch to everyone at camp and now applause for everyone and I have one extra minute we have the cardio assembly at 363 you can go there especially if you helped us we also have some additional sets for stuff that you could do and if you've done anything amazing we have tomorrow we have a competition so if you did something great you can go tomorrow thank you and goodbye you've stolen the clicker did you get it back he stole the clicker so you should notice that something is wrong with your notes THM THM is correct originally Martin was planned to be up with me here he is not able to come my voice is trying to do the same thing so she is failing as well but next slide please alright I am here to talk about not the largest project but the largest village on the camp the three headed monkeys THM and I am here to introduce four teams who work together there Entropia, Cardus the Volga's crew and the CCB and I know that a lot of you were there but you really missed something we built a large village with its own stage a bar which doubled as a boat workshop tent and we just created an event inside the event it was important for us to make it a beautiful place that we can we've got our own worker crew they are going to talk about what they did what they built but we also organized the village from video bar sounds we also made food for us it was a lot of work but it was great because we wanted to use the camp that we love to do the thing that we wanted to do the way we want to do it and to have more self organization more decentralization in the organization of these events so we didn't start with zero there was the BAR in the last camp which was partly organized by us on this congress but also other examples like chaos west which tried to do decentralized organization taking over stages and we see it on this congress it's growing more and more and that's what we're welcoming and all of these teams that have been doing events since forever we wanted to do something like entropia we wanted to do the birthday the air succession OIO wanted to come but we all knew it's a lot of work weren't sure if we were able to make it resource exhaustion is a problem for us as well we were talking hey what are you doing are you doing something and we figured out we could do something together we took a phone call in January together and so we said yes we're doing it and we're doing it really big so we became the 300 monkey crew I'm not trying to explain where the name is coming from this would be 10 additional minutes alone but it was great it was colorful and for us we all grew with it we all didn't start with zero we have all our skills our experiences and we removed the borders between these groups there wasn't kados, tz, tz entropia, it was just one crew and everybody brought what they wanted to bring and we filled one great thing that you can't imagine if you've been there a lot of the things if you've been there you could have seen many of the not all of it so I'm now heading over to our build crew and they're going to tell you how to build these large wooden structures that's a story of its own hey my name is Vanessa I'm from kados and we are going to tell you about the crew the logo of the folgers crew we've made this up just half an hour ago it's very nicely designed I think kados almost seems a bit unfunny let's talk about about kados we are in the OIO space at congress which we also initiated just like at camp and kados some of you probably know it or have heard about it we are there's a mobile hospital in syria and it's often seen as a humanitarian aid organization but it's also a hacker space we also have a hacker space in Berlin a maker space and it's also a place to meet people who are supporting us a lot of them have been involved with building as well and camp so thanks a lot to you for spending that much of your free time with us all right my name is Störte and I will represent folgers crew we thought it would be great if we wouldn't just be doing computer stuff but also wood construction and we have built the OIO so this time is CCL1 kit space here entropia has at camp it started we've made put a lot of thought into it use CAD software to plan it and then we realized well this sketch has to suffice we then realized we don't have money or materials so we took a truck and then we went to all the containers in Brandenburg and ebay and we were able to get some wood and the first choice how could it look like not great at planning as you can probably tell and it ended up working funny enough and we moved it to the space and then built upon that so this is how we continued do you want something the lights for example they weren't planned it was just spontaneously added people came together and put the lights there and a lot of people and camp and you may recognize this great bar now and you may have drank Perlenbacher with us so this is our small hot pub for the crew with all this canned beer and you can see the ratio between beer and food and this brought us together certainly and we found out that you can buy this stuff with a palette at Lidl but then you have to move it along the cash register so you can't just bring it out to the back exit and after camp they changed the logo of Perlenbacher so we were able to pay a design person after that and then there is also regulations for building so stuff must not be higher than 5 meters but you can build it and then add the 12 meter the 12 meter masts after the regulation has been verified so a Das wäre sehr schwer, wenn wir die alte Wunde auf der Seite nehmen und den Rest verladen und in ein Container in den Trash bringen. Dann sind wir 8-times nach Leerz gebracht, in dem wir den Safe Harbour Space aufbauen. wo ihr auch sehr willkommen seid. Und das ist der Ende des Gesprächs. Tschüss. Wir haben schon einiges von Entropia gesehen. So, let's continue with the Entropia Festival. So, sie haben nicht nur den 3-headed Monkey, aber sie haben auch etwas, das für mich sehr persönlich ist. Es macht mich sehr glücklich. Das ist die Gulasch-Programming-Night. Ich liebe es. Hallo. Hallo. Ich bin Martin für die Purposes dieses Event. Das ist Karo. Wir wollen ein bisschen über die Gulasch-Programming-Night, der GPN. Es ist ein Event in Karlsruhe, das ist in der Year-in-Review usually vergessen. So, dieses Jahr hatten wir 2.000 Leute da. Wir hatten Telefons, wir hatten Kinder, wir hatten 42 Kilogramm Waffel, wir hatten 84 Telegramm, wir hatten 85 Snacks und 1.500 Bunsen. Wir hatten 17.000 Trinken, wir hatten 440 Kilogramm Zucker und 4-6 Kilogramm Koriander, 2.600 Kilogramm Waffel und 3 Tonnen Gulasch. Wir hatten Network-Pause, 1.700 Kilometer Fiber-Optik-Kabel und ein paar Kleins in der Wi-Fi. Bye. Häng mal. Warte, was eigentlich passiert ist. Okay, wir beginnen mit den schlechtesten Sachen. Ein paar unserer Visitors wurden in einer homophobischen Fession bei der Person, die ihre Tickets kontrolliert. Das ist das Wichtigste, dass es eine Kooperation mit dem Publikumsport-System war. Und das war die CSD in Karlsruhe. Diese Tickets kontrollierten Menschen wussten nicht, was sie gemacht haben. Die Person hatte 2.000 Follower auf Twitter und das eskalierte so viel, dass es eine spontane Demonstration war, weil der Offizier dieser Firma auf der Strecke war. Und ich habe das nicht wirklich betrachtet. Und dann war es eine große, blöde Katze vor dem Event. Und eine große, blöde Katze ist natürlich etwas für die Polizei, die fragt, warte, da ist eine Katze. Was ist da los? Wir antworten, nein. Wir sehen keine Katze. Die Katze ist weg. Die Katze ist zurück, aber mit der Polizistin. Was ist dann geschah? Was ist dann passiert? Wir können es nicht sagen, es gibt ja keine Legale. Aber es gibt andere Optionen. Wir wollten fragen, was da passiert. So, jemand fragt die Regierung dieser Plattform von der Freedom of Information equivalent in Deutschland. Und das ist die Antwort. Wir werden das ein wenig beantworten. Warum ist diese Katze da? Und die Städte von Baden-Württemberg wollten eine Campaign haben. Und sie fragten die Leute, dass die Leute nicht informiert sind über Digitalisation. Die Lösung war, eine Blu-Karte vor einem Museum zu investieren. Das ist erklärt, dass die Logo der Digitalisation Katze-Content sieht, weil Leute wie Katzen sind. Wir haben dann gefragt, was die Katze kostet. Die ganze Kampagne hat 2,2 Millionen Euro. Die Katze hat 6.000 Euro. Dann wurde die Katze vandalisiert. Wir haben uns gefragt, ob die Katze Hunger war. Wir haben uns gefragt, ob die Blu-Karte keine Essen braucht. Es braucht nur Liebe und Luft. So, als die Digitalisation repräsentiert, fühlte sie sehr gut. Mit den Visitors der GPN, obwohl sie nicht Gulasch essen. Seit der GPN wissen wir auch, dass wir die Evacuation kennen. Und die Smokeremau-Systeme arbeiten wirklich gut. Die GPN 24 ist der 21. Mai 2020. Und wir bauten die Gulasch, um die Canon zu machen. Es ist nun für uns. Okay, genug Karlsruhe. 10 Jahre ago war ich auf der Bühne gesessen. Ich war auch auf der Bühne auf der CCC. Wir haben mit Mr. MCD in Darmstadt gesprochen. Auf die damalige Justizministerin Brigitte Zupris ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... Und Mr. MCD ist jetzt 15 Jahre alt oder so, wenn ihr es nicht kennt. Ich bin sicher, dass alle von euch dort waren. Es ist ein Regionalschaos-Meeting mit ca. 700 Menschen, meistens in Darmstadt, meistens bei der Technik der Universität Darmstadt. Wir haben ein Motto jedes Jahr. 2019 waren es Boardgames. Wir hatten inflatable Dice. Wenn ihr ein Partizipant seid, habt ihr ein Kartgames zu spielen. Die Speakers haben auch ein Boardgames-related Merge. Wir können nicht das Motto für nächstes Jahr erzählen, aber ich würde mich sehr glücklich sehen. 2019 war es toll, nicht nur wegen des Mottoes, aber auch wegen des Wetteres. Es war im September, und das ist besser als der Kongress. Aber manchmal ist es auch schon sehr kalt. Wenn es nicht kalt ist, ist es auch schon sehr kalt. Wir haben sehr gute Räume, und ihr könnt dort gehen. Was ich wirklich sagen möchte, ist, dass wir nicht in Karlsruhe oder in Darmstadt haben. Aber diese kleinen Räume mit ca. 2000 Menschen sind wirklich toll. Die Vorteil des Mr. MCD ist, dass die Menschen die Räume präsentieren, die sie dann an den Kongress präsentieren. Wir haben sehr viel Arbeit im Programm, und das ist wirklich interessant. Ich würde sehr glücklich sein, wenn ihr zu uns oder zu der GPN oder allen anderen gekommen seid. Wenn es euch interessiert, und so, dass ihr eine Chance habt, dann sind wir glücklich mit euch in 2020. Es ist von September 4. bis September 6. Das ist das erste Wochenende im September. Vielleicht werden wir auch Holger attenden. Du musst einfach fragen. Ich sage immer, dass ich nicht sagen muss. Ich sage immer, warum? Ungefährlich, dass das Minister der GPN nicht präsentiert. Wir werden sie nicht attenden. Danke. Jetzt ist es komplett anders. Austria. In Austria gibt es auch Chaos. Skoda wird uns über C3 Vienna erzählen. Wir haben die Ehre gehabt. Wir haben die Ehre gehabt. Wir haben die Ehre gehabt. Wir haben die Ehre gehabt. Wir haben die Ehre gehabt. Wir haben die Ehre gehabt. Wir haben die Ehre gehabt. Wir haben die Ehre gehabt. Wir haben die Ehrecupine vergangen. Sie haben dann gesagt, du wirst abgeholt werden. Sie haben es ge nominated. Sie haben die Ehre getätet. Sie wollen ein werden. Sie wollen ein werden. We had a banana for scale, but we left it out this time. The whole event was happening at TU Vienna. Two large holes in the interior area to a karaoke party even. Was wir auch hatten, was wir jedes Jahr machen, und das ist das vierte Mal. Was wir auch machen, ist das Privacy Week. Für das vierte Mal war das Motto privat Euder. Euder ist ein Suffix in Vienna. Man kann in all den Veränderungen mit Euder ausgehen. Es kann wirklich gut sein, wie mit einer Kongress-Euder. Manche Leute können das auch so aussehen. Ich bin nicht aus Vienna originally, so ich bin nicht zu sagen. Die zwei events are the big things that happened in Vienna. We also have Chaos, Machtschule, Chaos at school and the privacy week is going to happen again next year, probably at the end of October, but not 100% sure will be announced and that's that. Thanks a lot. Come visit us. Oh, I forgot one more thing. You can order these t-shirts and hoodies. We also have a small set of Easterhack-Mux and they are available at the assembly, at our assembly, just go out the door, just on the left hand side of the dome, the coffee house. See you there. Thanks. So, we're a bit afraid at the beginning and first took a lot more than five minutes, but looks like we are able to finish on time. There's not much left, but Frank Grieger is left and he's going to talk about digital sovereignty. He's not ... Okay, hi. I want to quickly report what happened in the Berlin lobby bubble, so we try to knowledge into politics and know that everyone is like you see it in the built newspaper and the most important topic this year was digital sovereignty in the context of this whole Huawei problem. The situation is the Huawei Panic, where the Chinese will all infiltrate us if they build our 5G network that was built by the politics, but it doesn't have a lot to do with reality. If you look at these things more clearly, then you see that this has a lot of bugs with all the people who make these, but it doesn't even ... you don't even need to put in the back door because it has so many bugs. In parallel, parallel ist the security IT law 2.0, where they want to have IT security in the law with all the responsibilities. The problem with that is that next to some good starts, also the ministry for the inner interior also added a make-a-wish path with just a lot of basic nonsense that doesn't have anything to do with IT security, but public security, and that would lead to IT security would be reduced. For example, they try to ban anonymizers or make it illegal to use or present these anonymizing services, and we see these problems where instead of solutions, we have destructions, and so at the end, people have no knowledge at all, but it's clearly to see that the impacts from the economy, the effects of the economy were seen, so some small and medium businesses, but also cities and hospitals were hit, all of those are being shut down because they open an email attachments that went into their system, and people are starting to realize that just banning anonymization is not the right strategy to fight against it, but they have to actually deal with IT security, so suddenly we have a lot of hearings, official hearings and discussions of fractions for finding an opinion, and background talks where people are, we will just talk to people and try to improve their knowledge, which is kind of our task in this whole game, and so we spend a lot of time on that just to impart some more basic knowledge of that field, not always successfully, like the Atlantic Bridge is the US American lobby, is kind of our opponent in this, and they try to, the Huawei exception thing, they try to push this very hard, and they believe that if they say Huawei often enough, then they can dominate the debate, but it's kind of annoying when their bosses kind of start the topic of technology sovereignty by sanctions against Nord Stream II Gas Pipeline, they might have to stop the refinery in Sweden, which has a US American firmware, but it belongs to the Russians, so you have the problem that there's no real allies in technological sovereignty, so you have to take the Syria, so we say in the Huawei debate, it doesn't really matter where it comes from, from the Americans, from the Chinese, from the Swedes, from the Germans, they all have to open their source, they all have to find the security standards, only if we deal with everyone in the same way we can find some kind of security, and slowly this idea is taking ground, and certain agencies already agree with this, but in politics they're kind of desperate, because widespread technological sovereignty doesn't seem to be reachable, so this is a problem for next, that's going to be interesting next year, but there is interest in all the parties in trying to find solutions, so you can see that even if you are the Chaos Computer Club being invited by even the Conservative parties, which usually never happens, but they are so desperate that sometimes they actually ask us. Okay, shortly our demands that we are trying to spread, so we're trying from the start, we say like everyone who learns programming in Germany should learn safe programming, and that should be financed by the state for all educational institutions, so you can use it very easily, because everyone is using it, we want updates, cycle, security, so we want, if you buy a fridge that updates itself by the cloud, you should know in advance how many times is it being updated, and how long is the update cycle before the updates just stop, and also we want if these devices, if they are cloud dependent, and have vulnerabilities but because of that, we want a seal on that, like a traffic light on the side of a fridge, this idea is also very interesting to people, so we might find a chance to push through with this, but we need a lot more support with this, another thing we try to push for a long time is going away from the problems that we, okay, I have two points left, so the huge research institutions and security projects, they never come to fruition really, they just like being financed by like, you know, 50 millions go somewhere and then they just don't reach anything, they don't reach the economy, many small projects, more startups, and if they work, and if they have a security focus, then you can finance them some more, so we have to do a lot of, to do here as well, but maybe we can reach it, another thing is the security standards that are by default in various parts of the industry, we want to create those, and we want to keep them dynamic, not like, oh yeah, this router is secure because it doesn't catch fire, but a dynamic system that evaluates, that's being evaluated like a standard every two, three months, and if you are not adhering to that system, you are officially unsafe, and this should give companies the drive to amortize the cost to keep a device secure into the planning of the device, and our evergreen is the split of the Ministry of the Interior and the Ministry for security, for internet security, so you don't have a mixture of loyalties and they can then, the Ministry for internet security can concentrate on their task, so this is going to be very exciting, and I'm going to keep you up to date what is happening, thank you. Okay, we call it day two, outside today is December 28, 2019, and the Süddeutsche Zeitung, a huge mass media in Germany, found out that security experts from the CCC have found, have analyzed 28 surveillance devices, and found out that they're not actually safe, so Linus will tell us, I was at a music festival, and I basically did press work there, and then there was a phone call, and Ulf Burmeier, was it, and I asked Ulf, what can I do against you, could you not maybe look at malware, are you wearing an aluminum hat, what do you think, it's happening, why? I think there's a staged Trojan, is the aluminum hat great, no real, I think it was used in Turkey against oppositionals, oh that's interesting, yeah, he said, especially because we're not allowed to export stuff there, like military stuff, so I would like to know who made it, who made this, and where, and then I called Thorsten, Thorsten Schröder, Thorsten, I know you're busy, I'm sorry, but we need to take a look at a staged Trojan, it's been a while since CCC did this, in 2011, CCC destroyed the German Digitus-State Trojan, and there was also another one, Finnfischer Finn-Spai, so we looked at a couple of samples, some GFF looked at something, and they wanted us to verify their analysis, and I kind of didn't really expect Thorsten to be to really work that much, so if we want to make sure that this is Finn-Spai, then we can not only look at one other Finn-Spai sample, I would like to have all of the Finn-Spai sample, so we looked at 28 of these samples, some friendships, we needed to kind of use some of our relationships for that, but Thorsten really is really conscientious, and he really wanted to do that, and then for a while it took a lot longer than it did, than we expected for a couple of months, so I told him, you need to give a presentation tomorrow, just to make sure that we're done, so tomorrow Thorsten Schröder and someone else Ulf will be giving a talk about this analysis, and I do not want to show the results now, but we can show that this State Trojan was only built in 2016, because it uses specific compilers and libraries are linked there, and of the 28 samples we looked at, we're very sure that they're from Finn-Spai, and now we want to now know how the Federal Law, how the basically Federal Police in Germany and the State Polices will be able to explain how this company managed to export this to Turkey, which is not allowed, are there still people with these aluminum hats walking around, are there people from these offices walking around here, did you ask them, yes I hope so, we have actually published a press notice today, and we said that we analyzed all these 28 samples, they're all published on Github, and did I not mention that, yeah, we have them all on Github, and we would be happy if other people would check our analysis, I'm sure you can find even more stuff, and we would mostly prefer if people from the Federal Police Office also do this, because we assume that they have samples that we don't, because they actually bought this from Finn Fisher, so we would really like you to be a witness in this court trial, because they have bought this. Okay, thank you, have fun analysing, have fun at Congress. I wouldn't have thought, I haven't prepared anything for the last minutes, because I was so scared two hours before this event, I didn't even know what we were doing, and then they said, well, 30 people, every one five minutes, well, you did well, and you got a weapon, I'm a bit, so what did stick, you had double-sided notes, and they were all thinking about, I was thinking about whether they are all just trolling me. Yeah, so I'm going to talk very shortly in the end, there was the first try to have the CCC year in review decentralized, we're trying to make this a bit less chaotic in 2020, and we will print one-sided, and we will save resources, of course. Congress motto, I forgot, resource, something's broken, right, so we had chaos at school, we had MAMCD, we did have, where do we start, let's start at the top, so chaos, we did have chaos, at school we had, he was a bit disappointed, I think he had prepared more, and well, he really used his five minutes well, we did have fusion, I'm a bit sad that I didn't go there, well, I was at camp for two days, yeah, I arrived very late on Friday because I had to work and I didn't know what camp was, and at Saturday, on Mittag, there was wine tasting, a friend from Switzerland, so I stayed till Monday. All right, so do we finish up, big round of applause for everyone who was here, for Holgi who did well.