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William Gould Dow Distinguished Lecture

Implications of Our Dependence on a Digital Ecosystem

Vinton G. CerfVice President and Chief Internet EvangelistGoogle
WHERE:
Stamps Auditorium, Walgreen Drama CenterMap
SHARE:
Vinton G. Cerf

This event will also be shared as a webinar. Remote attendees can attend vis this link:
https://umich.zoom.us/j/98568633657

A reception will follow the lecture.

Abstract: We have become a society deeply perfused with digital technology and the dependencies are increasing.  There are social, economic and technical consequences of this dependence. These technologies are power enablers and amplifiers of human endeavor but they also introduce points of hazard and fragility. The challenges are not merely technical. They fall into sociological, anthropological, economical and political domains. To cope with them will make demands on our ability to understand and manage domestic and international relationships, norms, legal frameworks and myriad other considerations. We will explore some of these notions in the time available and provide opportunity for discussion.

Bio: Vinton G. Cerf is vice president and Chief Internet Evangelist for Google. He is the co-designer of the TCP/IP protocols and the architecture of the Internet. He has served in executive positions at ICANN, the Internet Society, MCI, the Corporation for National Research Initiatives and the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency. A former Stanford Professor and former member of the US National Science Board, he is also the past President of the Association for Computing Machinery, Emeritus Chairman of the Marconi Society and serves in advisory capacities at NIST, DOE, NSF, US Navy, JPL and NRO. He earned his B.S. in mathematics at Stanford and M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in computer science at UCLA. He is a member of both the US National Academies of Science and Engineering, the Worshipful Company of Information Technologists and the Worshipful Company of Stationers.

Cerf is a recipient of numerous awards for his work, including the US Presidential Medal of Freedom, US National Medal of Technology, the Queen Elizabeth Prize for Engineering, the Prince of Asturias Award, the Japan Prize, the Charles Stark Draper award, the ACM Turing Award, the Marconi Prize and Marconi Lifetime Achievement Award, the IEEE Medal of Honor, the Legion d’Honneur, the VinFutures Grand Prize and the Franklin Medal. He is a Foreign Member of the British Royal Society and Swedish Academy of Engineering and holds 31 honorary degrees.

Faculty Host

Ang ChenAssociate ProfessorElectrical Engineering and Computer Science