Re: [Air-L] Inside, Outside, Upside, Down - Privacy and Public presence in the Internet age
i think with the examples i have in mind, i am always thinking of orlikowski's idea of constitutive entanglement: looking not only at what technology leverages or only at the meaning people give to it, but to see how the two are constitutively entangled. for example manu luksch worked with people communicating in sign language and the fact that their conversation gets captured by cctv cameras and cctv workers. this is a loss of privacy that those communicating using sound will in most cases still be able to maintain. further, most telecommunication companies keep sms messages and use them for content and community analysis. hence, the communication may become more private with respect to the surroundings of those communicating, but by virtue of being text communication through a curious provider, sms are less private then a conversation using mobile phones (unless of course, the state of the art in voice recognition allows all conversations to be smoothly transcribed, searched, analyzed, etc.). Disclaimer: http://www.kuleuven.be/cwis/email_disclaimer.htm
The pirate virus reaches Portugal?... Not sure who we are supposed to "send it" to but I thought it was interesting anyway.. cheers, Mathieu Subject: [fcf_discussion] Supporting The Minister of Science and Technology of Portugal' statement To: fcforum_discussion@list.fcforum.net, info@conservas.tk FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE (Sign it while you send it) The Minister of Science and Technology of Portugal, Mr. Mariano Gago, stated that Internet "piracy" on a wide scale brings some positive developments, such as an enormous increased value to producers who see their content distributed all over the world. Mr. Gago added that this is not surprising, since piracy has always been a source of progress and globalization. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zJS3N9ThTm8 Pressure from the content industry lobby forced Mr. Gago to publicly retract his statement. Actually, historic and contemporary facts strongly support his claims. An important account is given by professor Doron Ben-Altar in his book "Trade Secrets: Intellectual Piracy and the Origins of American Industrial Power": "During the first decades of America's existence as a nation, private citizens, voluntary associations, and government officials encouraged the smuggling of European inventions and artisans to the New World. These actions openly violated the intellectual property regimes of European nations. [...] What fueled 19th century American boom was a dual system of principled commitment to an intellectual property regime combined with absence of commitment to enforce these laws. This ambiguous order generated innovation by promising patent monopolies. At the same time, by declining to crack down on technology pirates, it allowed for rapid dissemination of innovation that made American products better and cheaper." Moreover, thanks to the small costs of European books for which copyright was not paid, the USA managed to fight illiteracy of the population at a faster rate than Europe. During the last century, American film-makers moved to California in order to avoid paying expensive patent fees of Edison, and founded Hollywoodland. As a consequence, the American movie industry quickly became, and still is, the most developed and powerful movie industry in the world. Nowadays, non-commercial wide scale Internet exchange is again beneficial for the market. It has managed to create and sustain completely new businesses, as a massive quantity of truly independent studies show: http://www.laquadrature.ne<http://www.laquadrature.net/wiki/Studies_on_file_sharing_eng> t <http://www.laquadrature.net/wiki/Studies_on_file_sharing_eng> /wiki/Studies_on_file_sharing_eng<http://www.laquadrature.net/wiki/Studies_on_file_sharing_eng> . It has also increased access to knowledge, particularly amongst the disadvantaged and those in developing economies. The following organizations express their regret for the claims by the copyright industry lobbies which manage to silence any dissenting voice, including the one of a minister,any effort to think and contextualize the issues of the new forms of returns for the creative community and the society in a way different from what is imposed by the content industry. Attacking all new opinions and minds open to new models of economy will only bring high costs to the civil society and new entrepreneurs but will not stop the inevitable progress of the digital age. FCForum ScambioEtico eXgae Transform! Italia Amelia Andersdotter/Piratpartiet Contact: http://FcForum.net <http://fcforum.net/> info@fcforum.net ----- +info http://list.fcforum.net/wws/info/fcforum_discussion ----
participants (2)
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Mathieu ONeil -
Seda Guerses