[[!meta title="Submit"]] [[!meta copyright="Copyright © 2019, 2020 Amin Bandali"]] When you're ready to submit your talk proposal, send your submission via email to including at minimum these essential information: - your (preferred) name, - the title of your talk, - a short handle ("slug") for your talk (for use in file names and URLs), - an abstract of your talk (500 words or less), and - confirmation of your agreement with releasing the recording of your talk from the livestream on the day(s) of the conference, along with any associated material publicly, under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-SA 4.0) free culture license. Associated material may include slides, notes, transcripts, and prerecording of your talk (if you had sent me one). All kinds of people use Emacs for all kinds of things. We would love it if EmacsConf 2020 could highlight interesting perspectives and reflect the diversity of our community. If you know someone who might have a good idea for a talk, please reach out to them and encourage them to submit a proposal. Many people (especially from underrepresented groups such as women, people of colour, and non-developers) might not consider themselves expert enough to share their thoughts. If you let them know that you value their knowledge and maybe even suggest something that you think others would like to hear more about, they may realize that they have something worth sharing and that we would love to hear from them. This year, we are experimenting with an anonymized submission process. Identifying information will be removed from submissions by a conference organizer who will not participate in talk selection. The anonymized submissions will then be reviewed by a selection committee. We hope this will help reduce bias and encourage contribution. We look forward to hearing from you (and the people you want to nudge to speak)!