Here is how I would rewrite your cv:<p>1. Your name: add a title below (Junior programmer) and a short summary of yourself (for example Enthusiastic CS graduate with experience in Java, C, Common Lisp and Assembly).<p>2. Section "Technical experience and side projects".
Instead of listing the programming languages you know, list the projects you have done, with the technology used. For example: "Tor isolation proxy: [High level description everybody can understand, not sure if what I gonna say is right, or even possible:] Transformed a wifi router into a Tor relay. Technology involved: VDHL and C."<p>You mention that you have experience with HTML. Do you have a webpage online that you can show? Also, add a link to the github repo of your project if you have it. I am not sure your prospective employers will bother to click on them, but they will if they find the description of your project interesting.<p>3. section Education. Drop everything below University, because frankly, nobody cares. Instead, write the date of your entrance at your university, the year of expected graduation, and a description of what you are learning there.<p>4. Languages: unlike what mataniko says, I'd recommend you to leave it there, but just write:
English: Fluent, German: mother tongue - it's especially relevant if you want to apply in companies in Germany. Out of interest, why don't you mention Romanian?<p>4. Professional skills. Drop it. Nobody cares that you have "tact and diplomacy", that's something they will find out if they interview you. You mention "self employed". In English, it means that you are your own employer, i.e you have your own company that makes some money. I am not sure that's what you meant, maybe what you meant was more like "I can work by myself".<p>5. I would suggest to remove the "others" section. You mention your interest in cryptography and open source, which is good, but must be visible in your side project. If you have contributed to an open source project, mention it in the section "technical experience and side projects", and if you haven't you will look bad if someone asks you in an interview "You are saying on your cv that you are fond of FLOSS. Have you contributed to some open source project?". And same for crypto.<p>6. Drop the "references" section as well. They will ask you if they need them. Meanwhile it's just eating place on your cv.