Dear all - Seeing Jeremy Hunsinger's message about "Open Access Day" prompted me to wonder what, if anything, people are doing to celebrate OneWebDay on September 22. For those unfamiliar, OneWebDay (http://onewebday.org) is like Earth Day for the Internet: it was created by Prof. Susan Crawford (now at Michigan Law School) so there would be a single day where everyone across the globe could join together to celebrate the Web, reflect on its role in our lives, and take steps to ensure its survival as a sphere for public discourse, the open flow of ideas, spread of knowledge, fostering of communities, etc, etc. OWD celebrations are planned worldwide for Sept 22 (see http:// www.onewebday.org/base/index.php/Main_Page). At our local event in Milwaukee, we're featuring talks on Net Neutrality and Internet Policy Issues; Internet Globalism and Ethics; Ethics, Gaming, and Virtual Worlds; and Privacy, Social Networks, and Online Life. We also plan to have educational kiosks for students to learn how to edit and contribute (constructively) to Wikipedia, as well as how to tweak the privacy settings on their Facebook profiles. (see <http://www.onewebday.org/base/index.php/Milwaukee> for more details). What are others doing?? -michael. -- Michael Zimmer, PhD Assistant Professor, School of Information Studies Associate, Center for Information Policy Research University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee e: zimmerm@uwm.edu w: www.michaelzimmer.org