Dear teachers,

As platforms structure our lives - politically/economically/socially, and
often in ways that are detrimental to our individual and collective
welfare, resistance is building ... (read article on Amazon, below my mail)

While regulation/ policy is essential to shape the macro environment to
counter the platform power, at an individual level, we can (and should)
make choices wherever possible to prefer alternatives to the platform
giants, such as -

   1. Duckduckgo search engine <https://duckduckgo.com/> instead of Google
   search (duckduckgo does not store your searches and sell them to
   advertisers)
   2. Firefox browser instead of Chrome browser (Chrome collects
   information of your web access ... and Google collates this with all other
   information it takes from you through Gmail, maps, albums, translate, etc.)
   3. Telegram instead of Whatsapp

Our research report on the platform economy
<https://itforchange.net/sites/default/files/add/Summary-Platform%20Planet_Development_in_the_intelligence_economy.pdf>
discusses the role of platforms and how policy is required to counter their
power... and also possible alternatives such as platform co-operatives ...

regards,
Guru

Activists Build a Grass-Roots Alliance Against Amazon

https://www.nytimes.com/2019/11/26/technology/amazon-grass-roots-activists.html
<https://www.nytimes.com/2019/11/26/technology/amazon-grass-roots-activists.html?action=click&module=Well&pgtype=Homepage&section=Technology>

SAN FRANCISCO — Amazon flourished over its first two decades with little
opposition and less scrutiny. A new coalition and a report unveiled on
Tuesday make clear that era is over.

The coalition, Athena <https://athenaforall.org/>, comprises three dozen
grass-roots groups involved in issues like digital surveillance, antitrust
and working conditions in warehouses. The goal is to encourage and unify
the resistance to Amazon that is now beginning to form.

The report, from the
<https://economicrt.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/Too-Big-to-Govern.pdf>Economic
Roundtable
<https://economicrt.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/Too-Big-to-Govern.pdf>,
a nonprofit research group that focuses on social and economic issues in
Southern California, delves into the largely unexplored topic of what
Amazon is costing the communities where it has warehouses. The short
answer: a lot.

While the simultaneous arrival of Athena and the report are a coincidence,
they are linked by their attempts to understand and ultimately influence
Amazon’s push into almost every aspect of modern life. The internet
conglomerate hired 97,000 employees over the summer
<https://www.geekwire.com/2019/amazon-tops-750000-employees-first-time-adding-nearly-100000-people-three-months/>,
nearly the total employment of Google. The report is bluntly titled “Too
Big to Govern.”

“This is a company functioning at a scale that was previously left to
government,” said Tom Perriello of the Open Society Foundations. Founded by
the billionaire George Soros, Open Society is providing some of the seed
funding for Athena. The coalition is raising $15 million to cover its first
three years.

“It has incredible impact,” Mr. Perriello said of Amazon. “Who could
possibly shape its future and direction?”

Amazon, like Facebook, Apple and Google, has drawn the attention of
Washington regulators
<https://www.nytimes.com/2019/09/08/technology/antitrust-amazon-apple-facebook-google.html>,
state attorneys general and at least a few politicians in the last year.
The central question being asked about all of the companies: When does a
tech platform become too big and powerful, ultimately hurting the society
it once dazzled?

In Amazon’s case, the situation is particularly complicated. Its
aspirations long ago exceeded online retail to encompass fresh groceries,
devices that connect your home to the internet, front-door and neighborhood
surveillance, professional services like plumbing and contracting, health
care, government procurement, internet infrastructure and Hollywood
entertainment. Just about everything, really.

Amazon declined to comment for this article.

Athena springs out of several unexpectedly successful grass-roots efforts
to rein in Amazon’s power.

Last fall, the retailer was forced to begin paying a $15 hourly minimum
wage nationwide. In February, it abandoned plans to establish a new
headquarters in New York
<https://www.nytimes.com/2019/02/14/nyregion/amazon-hq2-queens.html> after
opponents mobilized against Amazon and the politicians who had approved the
deal. This month, an attempt to stack the City Council
<https://www.nytimes.com/2019/10/18/technology/amazon-seattle-council-election.html>
in Seattle, the company’s hometown, with members more acceptable to Amazon
backfired with voters.

These setbacks could be attributed to many factors, but one of them was the
influence of labor and immigrant organizations. Now some of those groups
are joining together under Athena.

“We’re learning from what makes Amazon back down, and looking to replicate
that as much as possible with as many people as possible,” said Dania
Rajendra, the Athena director.

Athena will be run from New York, but the real work will be done out in the
field where most of the member organizations are. They include the Awood
Center, a Minneapolis nonprofit that has organized Amazon workers from East
Africa; Warehouse Workers for Justice, which is based in Chicago; and Fight
for the Future
<https://www.nytimes.com/2017/12/07/technology/net-neutrality-protests-opposition.html>,
a group that focuses on digital issues, in Massachusetts.

In a separate move on Monday, Fight for the Future and other groups called
on Congress to investigate Amazon’s surveillance products, including the
Ring front-door monitor and Rekognition facial tracking software
<https://www.nytimes.com/2019/04/03/technology/amazon-facial-recognition-technology.html>.
The products threaten “our privacy and civil liberties, especially in brown
and black communities,” the groups said.

The effort against Amazon will not be easy, said Lauren Jacobs of the
Partnership for Working Families, a coalition member in Oakland. Amazon is
projected to have $238 billion in sales this year with 750,000 employees.

“*This is a David and Goliath story,” she said. “David took what he had and
turned it into a winning strategy. We’re taking what we have — the voices
of the members of our various organizations, our collective knowledge and
experience and deep understanding of the economy around Big Tech, and the
experience we’ve had with making this company shift its behavior — and
trying to build a more humane economy.”*

Athena’s $15 million budget is modest for the scale of change it hopes to
bring about. “This is grass-roots democracy,” said Barry Lynn of Open
Markets Institute, a Washington think tank and coalition member focused on
antitrust issues. “There’s no money in it. Just people.”

Mr. Perriello of the Open Society Foundations said updating protest
movements for the digital era was an interesting challenge.

“Uncertainty is now baked into the model,” he said. “You don’t know where
the fight is going to be two months from now or two years from now. So you
need the ability to organize citizens of very different political stripes
across geographies and across demographics, where traditionally you had to
organize in place.”

The name Athena is associated with democracy, freedom and wisdom. But it
has another advantage for the coalition.

“We didn’t want to have Amazon in the name — People Against Amazon or
whatever — because part of the strategy is to offer a better vision for how
the economy could work,” said Stacy Mitchell of the Institute for Local
Self-Reliance, a nonprofit in Maine that opposes corporate concentration
and advocates local community development. “To be for something, not just
against.”

Sheheryar Kaoosji of another coalition member, the Warehouse Worker
Resource Center in Ontario, east of Los Angeles, said Athena was not
planning a boycott of Amazon but more interested in trying to sway it —
including its employees and customers.

“Half the households in America have an Amazon Prime account,” Mr. Kaoosji
said. “That gives them a huge amount of power to change the company.” His
group is dedicated to improving conditions in what is sometimes called “the
goods movement sector.”

The resource center is in California’s Inland Empire, where the work gets
done to process those packages that appear on porches in Santa Monica and
Newport Beach as if by magic.

Amazon workers and Amazon customers exist in two different worlds, the
Economic Roundtable said. The report calculates that a little over half of
Amazon warehouse workers in Southern California live in substandard
housing. And for every $1 in wages, they receive 24 cents in public
assistance.

“Every day, ships, trucks, trains and airplanes bring an estimated 21,500
diesel truckloads of merchandise to 21 Amazon warehouses in the four-county
region,” the Economic Roundtable report said. It calculated that Amazon
trucks last year created $642 million in “uncompensated public costs” for
noise, road wear, accidents and harmful emissions.

Almost as an aside, the report indicated how adept Amazon, with a stock
market value of nearly $900 billion, is at getting funding from California
and local communities. This included $25 million from the California Film
Commission to subsidize six productions, including the third season of
“Sneaky Pete,” an Amazon crime drama, and $1.2 million from the California
Office of Business and Economic Development toward an office building in
Irvine for programmers.

The report noted on its title page that it was underwritten by the Los
Angeles County Federation of Labor, which represents more than 800,000
members of 300 unions. The Economic Roundtable said that did not affect the
results.

Among the report’s suggestions: that Amazon raise its minimum wage to $20
an hour, that it require its logistics subcontractors to do the same, that
it provide child care at its warehouses and that it build affordable
housing in its logistics communities.

The report draws on California Public Records Act requests filed with
communities with Amazon facilities. Many of them nevertheless came up
empty. The report noted that very little of Amazon’s business was known to
anyone but Amazon. Communities are in the dark.

“Our conclusion is that it’s time for Amazon to come of age and pay its own
way,” said Daniel Flaming, a co-author of the report. “This means paying
its full costs to the communities that host it and the workers who create
its profits.”

David Streitfeld has written about technology and its effects for twenty
years. In 2013, he was part of a team that won a Pulitzer Prize for
Explanatory Reporting.


Education Team
IT for Change
Bangalore
www.ITforChange.net
080 26654134

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1.ವಿಷಯ ಶಿಕ್ಷಕರ ವೇದಿಕೆಗೆ  ಶಿಕ್ಷಕರನ್ನು ಸೇರಿಸಲು ಈ  ಅರ್ಜಿಯನ್ನು ತುಂಬಿರಿ.
 
-https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSevqRdFngjbDtOF8YxgeXeL8xF62rdXuLpGJIhK6qzMaJ_Dcw/viewform
2. ಇಮೇಲ್ ಕಳುಹಿಸುವಾಗ ಗಮನಿಸಬೇಕಾದ ಕೆಲವು ಮಾರ್ಗಸೂಚಿಗಳನ್ನು ಇಲ್ಲಿ ನೋಡಿ.
-http://karnatakaeducation.org.in/KOER/index.php/ವಿಷಯಶಿಕ್ಷಕರವೇದಿಕೆ_ಸದಸ್ಯರ_ಇಮೇಲ್_ಮಾರ್ಗಸೂಚಿ
3. ಐ.ಸಿ.ಟಿ ಸಾಕ್ಷರತೆ ಬಗೆಗೆ ಯಾವುದೇ ರೀತಿಯ ಪ್ರಶ್ನೆಗಳಿದ್ದಲ್ಲಿ ಈ ಪುಟಕ್ಕೆ ಭೇಟಿ ನೀಡಿ -
http://karnatakaeducation.org.in/KOER/en/index.php/Portal:ICT_Literacy
4.ನೀವು ಸಾರ್ವಜನಿಕ ತಂತ್ರಾಂಶ ಬಳಸುತ್ತಿದ್ದೀರಾ ? ಸಾರ್ವಜನಿಕ ತಂತ್ರಾಂಶದ ಬಗ್ಗೆ ತಿಳಿಯಲು 
-http://karnatakaeducation.org.in/KOER/en/index.php/Public_Software
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