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=== Career History ===
=== Career History ===
**She has been the President/Senior Internet Law and Policy Counsel at Internet Matters.
*President/Senior Internet Law and Policy Counsel, Internet Matters.
*She worked as the Senior Internet Law and Policy Attorney at Dozier Internet Law.
*Senior Internet Law and Policy Attorney, Dozier Internet Law.
*She was the Internet Law & Policy Specialist at McLeod, Watkinson & Miller.
*Internet Law & Policy Specialist, McLeod, Watkinson & Miller.
*She was the Associate, Telecommunications Law at Fletcher, Heald and Hildreth.<ref>[http://www.linkedin.com/pub/kathryn-kleiman/1/32b/98 linkedin.com]</ref>
*Associate of Telecommunications Law, Fletcher, Heald and Hildreth.<ref>[http://www.linkedin.com/pub/kathryn-kleiman/1/32b/98 linkedin.com]</ref>


=== ENIAC Programmers Project ===
=== ENIAC Programmers Project ===

Revision as of 22:27, 17 January 2011

Country: USA
Facebook:    [Kathy Kleiman Kathy Kleiman]
LinkedIn:    [kathryn-kleiman Kathy Kleiman]
Twitter:    @kleimk

Kathy Kleiman is a pioneering attorney, programmer and data security auditor.She is the co-founder of the Noncommercial Users Constituency. She was also the organizer of the Privacy Conference Building Bridges on ICANN's Whois Questions in Vancouver. The Conference featured numerous experts from Canada's Office of the Privacy Commissioner, CIRA(.CA), Nominet(.UK) and Japan Registry Services(.JP). Kathy Kleiman is perhaps most renowned for her research surrounding the female ENIAC programmers. Kleiman has done a lot of work for preparint internet policies with ICANN, including the Uniform Dispute Resolution Policy (UDRP).[1]

Kathy Kleiman is also the director of ACM's Internet Governance Project.

Career History

  • President/Senior Internet Law and Policy Counsel, Internet Matters.
  • Senior Internet Law and Policy Attorney, Dozier Internet Law.
  • Internet Law & Policy Specialist, McLeod, Watkinson & Miller.
  • Associate of Telecommunications Law, Fletcher, Heald and Hildreth.[2]

ENIAC Programmers Project

During her undergraduate she heard about the ENIAC women, she did exhaustive research and wrote about these women. She attended the ENIAC's 40th anniversary and met programmers personally. She felt the need to tell the untold story of the six women who programmed ENIAC, the first all-electronic, programmable computer, thus she founded EPP. She is working to make a full feature documentary about these women.[3]

She says I'd like to let women and men and girls and boys know that computing is not just for geeks, that amazingly interesting, bright, creative women were the first programmers, and that the industry still needs amazingly interesting, bright, creative people.[4]

Awards

She received the Heroines in Technology Lifetime Achievement Award in 2009.[5]

Education

  • She became the one of the first few attorneys in the internet law after attending Boston University School of Law.[6]

References