HOPE (abbreviation of
Hackers on Planet Earth, in addition to being the first two letters in "
Hotel Pennsylvania", the venue where the conference is held) is a
conference series sponsored by the
hacker magazine
. There have been eight conferences to date.
Conferences
HOPE: Hackers On Planet Earth
Held from August 13 to August 14, 1994, at the Hotel Pennsylvania, the first HOPE conference marked
's 10th anniversary. Well over 1,000 people were in attendance, including speakers from around the world. Admission included access to a 28.8 kbit/s local network.
Beyond HOPE
From August 8 through August 10, 1997, Beyond HOPE moved the conference to the
Puck Building. Attendance doubled, with 2000 attendees.
Bell Technology Group helped to support the hackers. A TAP reunion and a live broadcast of
Off the Hook took place
(hear it here). Admission included a 10 Mbit/s local network.
H2K
In 2000, HOPE returned to the Hotel Pennsylvania, where all its successors would also be located. Between July 14 and July 16, 2000, the conference ran 24 hours a day, bringing in 2300 attendees.
Jello Biafra gave a keynote speech. In this historic cultural exchange between the
punk rock icon/free speech
activist and the hacker community, Jello managed to draw powerful connections, despite not having any actual computer experience, and the
EFF raised thousands of dollars. The conference admission included a working
Ethernet and a
T1 link to the internet.
H2K2
H2K2 (July 12-14, 2002) also ran 24 hours a day, this time with a theme of the
United States of America homeland security Advisory System. H2K2 included two tracks of scheduled speakers, a third track reserved for last minute and self scheduled speakers, a movie room,
Retrocomputing, musical performances, a State of the World Address by
Jello Biafra, keynotes by
Aaron McGruder and
Siva Vaidhyanathan and discussions on the
DMCA and
DeCSS.
Freedom Downtime premiered on Friday evening (July 14). The conference admission included wireless 802.11b coverage and places to link in with wired Ethernet, an open computer area for access to a 24-hour direct uplink to the Internet at "T-1ish" speeds,
a public cluster (pictures here) made available by
The DataHaven Project, as well as an active internal network.
The Fifth HOPE
The Fifth H.O.P.E. (July 9-11, 2004) had a theme of
propaganda and commemorated the anniversaries of both the H.O.P.E. cons and
Off the Hook (with a live broadcast of the show from the con like at Beyond H.O.P.E.). Keynotes speakers were
Kevin Mitnick,
Steve Wozniak and
Jello Biafra. There was also a media presentation by some of the "members" of the
Phone Losers of America who celebrated their tenth-year anniversary. Additionally,
Cult of the Dead Cow celebrated its twentieth anniversary at the conference. The conference admission included access to a four layer public network with two
T1 lines + backup links to the internet via a
Public Terminal Cluster, various wired means, a
WiFi network on three floors and a
video network.
HOPE Number Six
HOPE Number Six (July 21-23, 2006) included talks from
Richard Stallman and
Jello Biafra.
Kevin Mitnick was scheduled to be at the conference but was unable to make it; while on vacation in
Colombia an illness postponed his return. Hope Number Six had a 100-megabit Internet connection, claimed by the organizers to be the fastest Internet connection at any US hacker conference. The event's theme was based around
the series "The Prisoner" (as this event is titled "Number Six," a designation shared by the titular "prisoner,") and around the number 6 itself.
Notable occurrences:
Steve Rambam, a noted private investigator who runs Pallorium, Inc., an online investigative service, was set to lead a panel discussion titled "Privacy is Dead ... Get Over It." A few minutes before the start of the panel, Rambam was arrested by the
FBI on charges that he unlawfully interfered with an ongoing case prosecutors filed against Albert Santoro, a former Brooklyn assistant district attorney who was indicted in Jan. 2003 with one count of money-laundering. The charges were eventually dropped and the talk was held in November 2006, long after the conference ended.
Jello Biafra began his talk by referring to the above arrest, noting the convention had been more "spook heavy" than usual. He then announced a "special message" to "any Federal agents that may be in the audience", and
mooned the convention.
The Last HOPE
The Last HOPE took place on July, 18-20, 2008 at the Hotel Pennsylvania. A notable change from past years was the use of an
Internet forum to facilitate community participation in the planning of the event.
The name referred to the expectation that this would have been the final H.O.P.E. conference due to the scheduled demolition of its venue, the Hotel Pennsylvania. A 'Save The Hotel' campaign is ongoing, but it was revealed at the Closing Ceremony that the hotel's demolition plans were postponed indefinitely, and that The Next HOPE was scheduled for Summer 2010. It was at the closing ceremony that it was revealed that the use of the word "last" could also refer to the previous event, or one that had ended (referring to The Last HOPE itself).
Steven Levy gave the keynote address. Kevin Mitnick, Steve Rambam, Jello Biafra, and Adam Savage of MythBusters were also featured speakers. Descriptions and audio of the talks can be found at TheLastHOPE.org and their wiki.
The Next HOPE
The most recent HOPE convention, named "The Next HOPE", took place on July 16 - 18, 2010. The Next HOPE was held at the
Hotel Pennsylvania,
as the plans by
Vornado to demolish the hotel are on hold.
See also
Computer security conference
References
External links
Main HOPE site
Official HOPE forum
Official HOPE wiki
2600 Magazine
Category:Computer security conferences
Category:2600: The Hacker Quarterly
Category:Computer conferences