Dear Mr Abramson,
The International Telecommunication Union, in the framework of its New
Initiatives Programme, is organizing an expert workshop to examine the
feasibility of a project to promote IP connectivity in the Least Developed
Countries. It will be held at ITU headquarters in Geneva, starting on
Thursday 11 April in the afternoon, and continuing on Friday April 12. The
workshop will provide an opportunity for representatives from the public and
private sectors, as well NGOs and other development professionals, to
discuss the proposal, provide new input, and explore the possible
contribution of the international community.
The background study, together with other information and links, can be
found at: www.itu.int/ipdc.
It would give us great pleasure if you could participate in the workshop, in
view of your interest in Internet networks and infrastructures for global
communications. The project would certainly benefit greatly from your
experience and inputs.
If you are interested in participating, or would like more information,
please contact me at: claudia.sarrocco(a)itu.int.
I look forward to hearing from you soon.
Kind regards,
Claudia Sarrocco
________________________________
Claudia Sarrocco
Strategy and Policy Unit
International Telecommunication Union
Place des Nations,
1211 Geneva, Switzerland
Tel: +41 (0)22 730 6301
Fax: +41 (0)22 730 6453
e-mail: claudia.sarrocco(a)itu.int
Interesting...I want to say I agree, but then I hesitate. I tend to associate community with CMC, maybe because much of what I've read on the subject relates to virtual/online community studies. More household technological innovations, however, will allow one to communicate via a host of devices that go beyond the PC. For example, smart device technology such as refridgerator inventory tracking systems that prompt you to buy (or order for you) food supplies when they are running low. While it might be argued that a computer chip stores the applications that drive this technology, it can also be argued that the hardware (fridge) is not a computer - assuming our household devices don't all fall under the general classification of a 'computer'. Is there community here? And what communication is being exchanged - other than pure inventory data?
-----Original Message-----
From: Sandeep Krishnamurthy [mailto:sandeep@u.washington.edu]
Sent: Monday, February 04, 2002 4:04 PM
To: air-l(a)aoir.org
Subject: [Air-l] Computer-Mediated-Communication.
Friends,
All of you have seen the term computer-mediated-communication(e.g.
http://www.ascusc.org/jcmc/) A friend recently asked me about the
PC-centric nature of this definition. "Why is this not
screen-mediated-communication or device-mediated communication?", he asked
me. I argued that, starting with the Internet, connectivity with others (or
community, if you like) had to be a component of CMC, but not other forms of
screen-based-communication. By this standard, communicating through PDAs or
e-mail devices such as Blackberry was, indeed, CMC. But, checking out the
weather on a kiosk was not.
What do you think? Is the term CMC too restrictive?
Best,
Sandeep
--
To learn more about me, visit-http://faculty.washington.edu/sandeep
_______________________________________________
Air-l mailing list
Air-l(a)aoir.org
http://www.aoir.org/mailman/listinfo/air-l
All,
I need to know if anyone is familiar with BLAISE or competing
products? Help in the form of URL's to product pages or personal
experiences using any of these products to deliver surveys via the WWW
or in person would be appreciated.
--JW
John-
I did some Blaise coding and part of the experimental design using it
for a political communication project here at Michigan a couple of
summers ago. We used it in a lab setting and had a very good experience.
Can't beat the upsides of having Ss do the data entry. It's also a very
flexible product, and you can insert AV stimuli in it. Some of the
downsides are that the code is not particularly straightforward and that
it wasn't designed to be a particularly user-friendly self administered
product. Still, there are some decent ways around it with patience.
There's a very big PDF manual online at
www.westat.com/blaise/pdf/RefManual.pdf but it isn't particularly
helpful or easy to use.
I can answer programming stuff off-list to the extent that I remember
the details. Mostly, myself and one other grad student self-taught and
did trial-and-error. The folks here at the Survey Research Center (part
of the Michigan ISR) have expertise for hire, I believe.
****************
Dmitri Williams
Ph.D. Candidate
University of Michigan
Department of Communication Studies
dcwillia(a)umich.edu
Colleagues
I thought the announcement below might be of interest to some with a view to
facilitating interaction among those doing this kind of work
Michel
===================
PRESS RELEASE
The Centre for information behaviour and the evaluation of research -Ciber-
(www.soi.city.ac.uk/is/research/ciber/) a new research unit within the
Department of Information Science, City University, London, has won a
prestigious research grant from the Diana, Princess of Wales, Memorial Fund, to
evaluate the web sites that they fund in order to determine their role in
providing greater access to information for disadvantaged young people. It is a
longitudinal study, conducted over a period of two years, examining in
particular changes in use and users over time. The purpose of the research is to
determine whether the Fund's money is being spent well and what lessons can be
learnt to inform and improve the quality of future web sites in this
educationally and socially very strategic area.
Ciber has developed a tried and tested methodology based on the analysis of
enormous public web sites, such as those of The Independent, The Times and
Sunday Times, NHS Direct Online, SurgeryDoor (a commercial consumer health
web site) and Northern Echo. Our expertise lies in the robust, data-rich
and user-centred analysis of web sites - employing bespoke and triangulated
web log analysis to the full. With the addition of the 'Diana' project CIBER
can claim to be UK leading research in the web evaluation field.
More Information:
Professor David Nicholas
Head of Department
Department of Information Science
City University
Northampton Square
London EC1V 0HB
Tel: 020-7040-8381/3
Fax: 020-7040-8584
Vacancies have come up in my life for Two
more Queens of Cultural Studies to complete
the deck.
The positions for the UK and for Canada
are already taken.
Prospective candidates, hopefully more
au fait with contemporary culture, please
apply to editors(a)london.com
Lachlan Brown
--
_______________________________________________
Sign-up for your own FREE Personalized E-mail at Mail.comhttp://www.mail.com/?sr=signup
Win a ski trip!
http://www.nowcode.com/register.asp?affiliate=1net2phone3a
Chris,
Have you considered space as defined in an Educational MOO? If not,
consider visiting LinguaMOO or Connections Moo. Both provide online
meeting space for classes and for other academic and special-interest
groups and allow their users to define/create virtual spaces. The
LinguaMoo folks, Haynes and Holmevik have written_High Wired_
concerning theory in educational MOOs
Here are the URLs
Lingua MOO at University of Texas Dallas (a web based moo)
http://lingua.utdallas.edu:7000/
Connections (strictly text based Moo)
http://web.nwe.ufl.edu/~tari/connections/
S. Crowson
Texas Woman's University
-------- Original Message --------
Subject: Konformist: Patriot Act "Anti-Terrorism" Raid
Date: Fri, 01 Feb 2002 00:04:52 -0800
From: "a.mount" <disinfo(a)seraphseven.com>
Reply-To: konformist-owner(a)yahoogroups.com
To: konformist(a)yahoogroups.com
Sounds like the 1989/1990 raids verbatim; could the Reclaim Guide and
similar documents become the new E911?
aadm mount
seraphseven: design. comics. zen.
-
An Interview with Sherman of RTF / LAAnarchists.org by mark
January 27 2002, Sun, 5:14pm
http://sf.indymedia.org/news/2002/01/114583.php
An interview with Sherman, formerly of RaiseTheFist.com and
LAAnarchists.org, whose home was raided by the LA Joint Terrorism Task
Force
on Jan. 24; the websites were shutdown and his computers confiscated.
Sherman denies involvement with any illegal activity, saying of the
Feds,
"They're afraid. And they're going to try and silence us any way they
can.
... My best advice is to not give in to their fear-tactics. Keep
fighting,
[Ed. note: This e-mail interview is reproduced uncut and unabridged.
Only
spelling, punctuation, and basic grammar have been corrected.]
Hello, feel free to publish my responses to your questions anywhere.
:: Was there any warning that investigation of your website was heating
up?
Yes. I have been monitoring government agencies connecting to the site
for a
long time. I'd been noticing more frequency with them coming back to the
site. They had also started intercepting all packets on my DSL line, and
seized one of my older AIM screen names for 12 days, so I knew something
was
going to happen - soon. It was really obvious. I even saw them outside
my
house at times. They have been monitoring the site very, very
extensively
LONG before the "incriminating content" which they were "concerned"
about
was posted onto the site. They simply used this content as an excuse to
obtain a warrant for the raid.
:: As a victim of one of the first post-Patriot Act anti-"terrorism"
raids,
why do you think the Feds chose you?
Simply because Raisethefist was effective in what I was doing. It's the
same
reason why Feds raid other activist organizations. They're effective.
And
effectiveness within our movement scares them. They're afraid. And
they're
going to try and silence us any way they can.
:: Do you have a copy of the warrant that was served? What did it say
they
were looking for?
I cannot post any contents of the warrant online. Yes I have a copy of
it.
The warrant contains a lot of bogus information and misinterpretations.
The
warrant has information on me since I was 14 (I'm 18 now, almost 19).
:: Any idea how many agents/officers participated in the raid?
Yep, there was about 25-30 of them. They surrounded my house with guns.
Blocked off the garage door with a big bench, had a door bammer, had
cars
all up and down the streets, then 2 agents knocked at my door, pulled me
outside, and the FBI came in and raided. My sister and her friends were
home
at the time, and she refused to answer the door. I was currently taking
a
nap and she woke me up to tell me that there were police and
undercover/FBI
people all up and down the streets looking at the house. That's when I
got
up and approached the door.
:: Can you remember any exact quotes that the agents told you - what
precisely did they say about 9-11, your web site, what they were looking
for, etc.
They told me the main reason for the raid was because of the content on
the
site, and they wanted to see who was looking at it. This was not the
main
reason. It was an excuse. The alledged content which they claim they
were so
concerned about is from the Reclaim Guide. It's posted on thousands of
other
web sites around the internet. Why didn't they raid those? Why did they
only
come after Raisethefist.com? Again, they've been watching the site for a
long time, long before the Reclaim Guide was even posted onto the site.
They
used this as an excuse to get a warrant for the raid and seize all
computer
equipment. I can't discuss the specifics over the internet, but I know
for
sure that they didn't raid simply because they wanted to see who was
looking
at the content on the site.
[Ed. note: The Reclaim Guide does not appear to be readily available
elsewhere, in its entirety, although the topics covered are.]
One of the first things one of the head agents conducting the raid asked
me
was, "why did you grow your hair out?" The picture they have of me is a
bit
older when I had short hair. They were acting as if I was trying to
"hide my
appearance" from them. They then sat me down, started asking me
questions,
etc. All this while the FBI was in my house with guns drawn, and seizing
all
computer equipment.
The FBI, Secret Service, LAPD and LASD (Sheriffs Dept.) participated in
the
raid. The Secret Service person kept asking me if I'd like to see Bush
killed. They were asking me a lot of loaded questions.
:: What exactly did the agents take? How many computers and how much was
it
all worth? What were some titles of the books, literature, and other
items
they confiscated?
I have about 12 computers. About 8 of them were running on the network.
They
took all of the computers in my house which had a hard drive in them.
Which
was basically all of them, except for the few broken ones which I was
working on fixing. So yeah, they basically took everything. They
ransacked
my entire room. I don't have any more computers. They took all the hubs,
DSL
modem, etc., etc. I had thousands of dollars worth of equipment which
was
seized until further notice. They told me I probably won't be getting it
back for a while (I doubt I ever will be) because they have to go
through
all of the files on all of the hard drives, which is a lot of data.
They also confiscated all of my political liturature. Everything from
independent political newspapers to protest flyers, etc., etc.
:: Why do you think the FBI raided RaiseTheFist.com? Do you think they
were
out to shutdown something unique to your site, such as the photos of
undercover cops?
They raided it simply because it was effective. It had a lot of
potential,
and was really moving, not just as a web site, but essentially as an
anarchist/activist collective - kids were starting to set up clubs in
their
schools called "Raisethefist" - we were also beginning to put together
an
anarchist collective for Los Angeles, amongst other things. I believe
one of
the main things that got them scared about the site, is that we called
for
an actual change. Raisethefist was a bit more radical than other web
sites,
and seeing how it was getting so popular, they wanted to shut it down.
:: Based on what the agents told you, and your suspicions, do you have
any
idea if other participants or contributors to the website, or other
websites, are also under investigation?
Yes. Those whose web sites I was hosting on the server will most likely
be
under investigation. How soon, or how much, I don't know. It could be
going
on right now. But i can't confirm. As far as I know, they are pretty
overwhelmed with all the paperwork and other stuff they have to do with
me,
so who knows. I just advise those to be careful. Nothing illegal was
being
done, but the FBI likes to interpret things with a lot of prejudice
against
anarchists/activists, especially now after 9-11.
:: Did RaiseTheFist.com have any external backup? Do you expect to get
your
computers back any time soon? Do you have any plans to resume web
operations?
I had the site backed up on a CD-ROM, which they took. Right now, we're
just
trying to find bits and pieces of the site in peoples cache so we can
get it
back up as soon as possible. There are people working on getting the
site
back up on another host. Getting the site back up is the first step,
then
trying to resume with it is the second step. It's going to take some
time to
get everything back together. I put alot of time into programming all of
the
things into the site. I don't think I'm going to get my computer
equipment
back. If I do, it won't be for a long time. They already told me that I
probably won't be seeing any of it any time soon. They also told me that
i
was in some "serious trouble," etc., etc.
:: A webposting states that you are "a kid" who lives with his parents.
Any
comment as to whether you are under or over 18, and who you live with?
I'm 18 years old, almost 19. I currently live with my mom. The computers
were also used for my job. I've been supporting myself through them
doing
independent programming. So not only is Raisethefist.com gone, but I'm
out
of a job for the time being.
By the way, there are a lot of stupid-ass rumors going on out there. I
think
I heard one about someone saying I was making "weapons of mass
destruction"
or something. Just shows the ignorance amongst a lot of people out
there.
:: Do you think the Bush Administration is just trying to see what it
can
get away with? What would you predict will be the outcome of this
episode?
They're going to try and get away with anything, and everything.
:: What does the future hold?
Nothing but a barcode.
What can we do to protect ourselves?
This was one of the main concerns Raisethefist.com addressed. My best
advice
is to not give in to their fear-tactics. Keep fighting, and fight hard.
Don't stop.
:: With a newly-empowered FBI, is the web perhaps too open a medium for
revolutionary expression? Are there alternatives whether through new
technology or the lack thereof?
There is less security on the internet, as there really has never been
any.
But I'd suggest not to be discouraged by it. Keep utilizing the internet
as
an information resource.
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