Saturday, 5 November 2011 : Sunil Abraham (Bangalore)

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12.15 – 13.00: A critique of openness

Sunil Abraham

Are we liberating people from the hegemony of proprietary control only to entrap them under the hegemony of openness? Does the Free Software and Creative Commons movement only serve to distract people from calls for more fundamental reform of the current global intellectual property rights (IPR) regime? What new forms of injustice are produced by open projects such as Wikipedia and Open Data?  How do large corporations use open-washing to engage in terminology capture to confound policy formulation processes? Is freedom of expression on the Internet really only a trade issue? Is transparency used by governments as a denial of service attack on citizens and civil society to divert their attention from real issues? How are digital natives redefining openness and consequently activism in the Internet era. Sunil has been been engaged in practice and policy research around IPR reform and openness for the last 10 years. He will use stories from the Asia-Pacific to reflect on some of the above questions towards a more critical understanding of openness and transparency.

 

Sunil Abraham is Executive Director of the Centre for Internet and Society in Bangalore, India. He is also a leading figure behind the Tactical Technology Collective and founder of Mahiti, an organisation that aims to reduce the cost and complexity of Information and Communication Technology.

www.cis-india.org

Other items in this program

Getting Rough with Media: The ‘Right to Know’ Summit

Time
12:00-16:30
Where
Theater Kikker Grote Zaal/Main Hall
Price
10,-/gratis

Buy your ticket here.

curated by Stephen Kovats (Transmediale 2008-2011, McLuhan in Europe 2011)

Focusing on the ‘Right to Know’ the Summit invites discussion on how digital media engulfing our daily lives are now accessible in not only new but perhaps previously unimagined ways. Such accessibility also creates new forms of openness and malleability blurring the lines between the hack, the hoax and the objective. The public focus of the Net as being a broad ranging arena of information exchange moderated by proxies such as ICANN and dominated by enterprises incl. Google, Facebook and Amazon is once again shifting. Two decades into our life within the World Wide Web, a much wider and more diverse group of users has emerged using the Net as a central arena of critical socio-political activity.

The currently unfolding ‘Arab Spring’, as well as the victory of the Pirate Party in Berlin’s State elections, fuels forces that have the ability to create new forms of information visibility and data malleability. These major popular movements have radically influenced all sides and players in the rapidly evolving and seemingly completely unpredictable shifts in social and political orders. The recent case of the ‘unmasked’ fraudulent (or simply naive prankster) U.S-based blogger who purported to be a Syrian Lesbian rights activist moving to the fore of that country’s current revolt underscores the precarious level of blind trust mass media and digital society at large nonetheless still places on the power of ‘sincerity’ in net-based communication. Hactivism itself, once the poetic domain of seemingly invisible forces, is becoming mainstream. Is there a danger that the rough, highly unstable edges of digital media and network practice, including political hacktivism, open source protocol design (ie. Thimbl, DIY tools and apps) and evolving movements such as Sharism, will be ‘corporatised’? Where do these forces converge, and where does the opportunity lie to entrench the idealism of the Net’s ability to be the essential guarantor of expressive freedom and mobility? By supporting and embracing the rough edges of the media, keeping these in flux and critical, we have the historical opportunity to firmly guarantee, as an entire society, the Net’s primary strengths and characteristics: that of a truly open, unregulated and free tool of communication.

Programme:

12.00 – 12.15: Introduction

12.15 – 12.45: A critique of openness: Sunil Abraham

12.45 – 13.15: How to create a perverse social network in 3 steps: Rui Guerra

13.15 – 13.45: The right to radical media: the case of student movement in Chile 2006-2011: Alejandra Perez Nunez

13.45 – 14.00: Summit discussion

14.00 – 14.15: Break

14.15 – 14.45: Roughing up Copyright: The Right to Know and our Agreement to Share: Christopher Adams

14.45 – 15.45: Networked Disruption: A critique of oppositional practices in the business of social networking: Tatiana Bazzichelli

15.15 – 15.45: Contested Zones: Alejo Duque

15.45 – 16.15: Foundland

16.15 – 16.45: response / summit discussion: Chris van der Heijden

16.45 – 17.00: Performance by HIMW

17.00: End

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