http://www.onewebday.org/?p=240

OneWebDay, Sept. 22, is an Earth Day for the internet.

Here’s a very short overview video that will give you the idea  
http://youtube.com/watch?v=twDyBfjUXv8 and a Rocketboom interview about 
OneWebDay http://www.rocketboom.com/vlog/rb_07_aug_20/flash. The first 
OneWebDay took place in 2006.

It’s easy to take the web for granted. But it’s worth taking a moment to 
reflect on what the web could mean to humankind in the future. That’s the 
purpose of OneWebDay, held each September 22.

There are substantial threats to the free flow of information online, all over 
the world. Many governments censor online content. (see http://opennet.net ). 
Many people in developing nations can’t get online at all. We need to ensure 
that the internet used by future generations will be open and empowering — 
access to the internet is central to the future of humanity.

The idea behind OneWebDay is to encourage people to think of themselves as 
responsible for the internet, and to take good and visible actions on Sept. 22 
that (1) celebrate the positive impact of the internet on the world and (2) 
shed light on the problems of access and information flow.

OneWebDay is a global, decentralized event. We’re encouraging people around the 
world to meet up on Sept. 22 to talk about how the web could change lives 
around the world in the future. We’re aiming for at least fifty of these 
events, and thanks to the Internet Society and others we’ve already heard from 
Poland, Italy, Colombia, the Philippines, Bulgaria, Kenya, Syria, Iraq, Egypt, 
Belgium, Ethiopia, Tunisia, and other countries. In the US, there will be 
events in Los Angeles, Boston, Austin, and New York.

Click on http://www.onewebday.org/wiki/index.php/Main_Page page to see these 
events.

These events can range from sponsoring a teaching event (how to edit a wiki, 
how to post a photo online etc) to helping a school or town set up internet 
connections, to having a panel of speakers talk about the ways the world has 
been/will be changed by the internet. We’re working with the Internet Society 
and the Internet Archive to encourage these offline events, but anyone not 
affiliated with these groups is more than welcome to get involved. In the US, 
the American Libraries Association, the Sunlight Foundation, the Center for 
Democracy & Technology 
http://communities.justicetalking.org/blogs/day14/default.aspx  and other 
groups are working on OneWebDay-related announcements and events.

If readers would like to stage an offline OneWebDay event, let us know at 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] what you’re thinking of, and we’ll make sure there’s a wiki 
page for you on onewebday.org to help your planning.

*Online,* we’re encouraging people to make their own short videos and post them 
on blip.tv or youtube or dotsub.com tagged “onewebday2007?. Suggested topics:

+ how the web has changed your life

+ how you’d like the web to change the world in the future

+ highlights of what you’ve seen online the day you make the video

+ your favorite online event ever

+ something you’ve done online with other people in other countries

The internet is made of people, not just machines. It’s up to us to protect it. 
We can use OneWebDay around the world to raise awareness of the threats to the 
internet — including censorship, inadequate access, control of various kinds — 
and to celebrate the positive impact of the internet on human lives.

====

Specifics for NY:

New York City, 3-4pm, Washington Square Park Speakers to include Jimmy Wales, 
founder of Wikipedia; Andrew Baron, founder of Rocketboom; Dana Spiegel, 
NYCWireless; Birju Pandya, charityfocus.org; Lauren Klein, One Laptop Per Child.

Rain Location: For Your Imagination, 22 West 27th Street, 6th Floor, New York, 
NY 10001

Sept. 22, Noon to 2:30pm, free public classes in honor of OneWebDay at NYU’s 
Interactive Telecommunications Program, 721 Broadway, 4th Floor (cross street 
Waverly Place), *must rsvp at [EMAIL PROTECTED] to attend.*

Subjects to include:
-how to build a router antenna and turn your home into a neighborhood hotspot
-how to live stream video online
-how to set up a blog and podcast
-all about Creative Commons

Plus, the iCommons/OneWebDay Party: part of 50 Great Parties Around the World.

Time: 10pm

Date: Sept. 22

Place: For Your Imagination, 22 West 27th Street, 6th Floor, New
York, NY 10001

Who should attend: Anyone who likes the internet and its
transformative effect on human lives

Why you should attend: The internet is under threat around the
world, and it’s up to us to celebrate and protect it.


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