Sue Gardner

Founder & CEO

Tiny Ventures

Sue Gardner’s work is motivated by the desire to ensure that everybody in the world has access to the information they want and need. Sue spent the first decade of her career as a journalist. In 2003 she became head of CBC.CA, the website of one of Canada’s best-loved cultural institutions, the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. Later she was executive director of the Wikimedia Foundation, the non-profit that operates Wikipedia, which she ran through its major period of growth. Today she serves as an advisor or board member for a variety of non-profit, grantmaking, and policy organizations, mostly related to technology, media, and digital rights. Sue has an honorary doctorate of law from Ryerson University, was named a Technology Pioneer for the World Economic Forum at Davos, has been ranked by Forbes magazine as the world’s 70th most powerful woman, was the inaugural recipient of the Knight Foundation’s Innovation Award, received the Cultural Humanist of the Year award from the Harvard Humanist Association, and is a proud recipient of the Nyan Cat Medal of Internet Awesomeness for Defending Internet Freedom.

Sessions

The internet is harming society part one: How we got here

04/11/2021 11.15 - 11.25

Keynote TrackChannel 1Keynote

How to regulate the internet has been a blazing hot topic lately, with Germany, the EU, the UK, Australia, and now also Canada taking steps to curb online harms. It’s a complex landscape, with lots of room for error, and governments are picking their way through it gingerly and with trepidation.

Sue Gardner is the former longtime head of the Wikimedia Foundation, the San Francisco... read more

The internet is harming society part two: How to fix it

04/11/2021 14.30 - 15.10

Breakout TrackChannel 1Breakout session

How to regulate the internet has been a blazing hot topic lately, with Germany, the EU, the UK, Australia, and now also Canada taking steps to curb online harms. It’s a complex landscape, with lots of room for error, and governments are picking their way through it gingerly and with trepidation.

So far, the conversation about how best to shape our experiences online has mostly been... read more