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> On Jan 27, 2015, at 16:29, liberationtech-requ...@lists.stanford.edu wrote:
> 
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> Today's Topics:
> 
>   1. Re: Open Source Videoconference platform (hellekin)
>   2. Re: Open Source Videoconference platform (marietta le)
>   3. Re: Open Source Videoconference platform (Douglas Bagnall)
>   4. The missing tech between TBB , Whoonix and Tails
>      (Fabio Pietrosanti (naif) - lists)
>   5. Re: Open Source Videoconference platform (ma...@wk3.org)
>   6. Re: The missing tech between TBB ,    Whoonix and Tails
>      (Eduardo Robles Elvira)
>   7. Re: Open Source Videoconference platform (Amin Sabeti)
>   8. Re: The missing tech between TBB ,    Whoonix and Tails
>      (Fabio Pietrosanti (naif) - lists)
>   9. Re: The missing tech between TBB ,    Whoonix and Tails
>      (Nathan of Guardian)
>  10. Re: Open Source Videoconference platform (Jens Kubieziel)
>  11. 3D Printing Prosthetics: A conversation with Jon    Schull    and
>      Jeremy    Simon of e-NABLE (January 22,    2015 | 10:00-11:00 am EST)
>      (Nick Martin)
>  12. Internet repression continues in Cuba (Myself)
>  13. Re: Open Source Videoconference platform (Griffin Boyce)
>  14. Re: Open Source Videoconference platform
>      (Andr?s Leopoldo Pacheco Sanfuentes)
>  15. CAMRI seminar 28/1: Clint Burnham on Slavoj ?i?ek and the
>      Internet (Christian Fuchs)
>  16. Re: CAMRI seminar 28/1: Clint Burnham on Slavoj ?i?ek and the
>      Internet (Travis Biehn)
>  17. Computational Epidemiology: The role of big data and
>      pervasive * 4:15PM, Wed January 21, 2015 in Gates B03 (Yosem Companys)
>  18. UC Berkeley CITRIS Research Exchange for the    Spring is now
>      online (Yosem Companys)
>  19. [SPAM:####] [SPAM:###] Davos 2015 takes aim at the future of
>      the internet (and cyber-security) (Andrea St)
>  20. mySociety's new $3.6M investment from Omidyar Network, seeks
>      to grow Poplus civic tech collaboration (Steven Clift)
>  21. Stanford Liberationtech Seminar: Will revolution    be tweeted?
>      - Jan 29 (Yosem Companys)
>  22. CfP - International Journal of Communication Special Issue -
>      (Un)civil Society in Digital China (Jiang, Min)
>  23. Net neutrality case in Slovenia (Mitar)
>  24. Re: Net neutrality case in Slovenia (Rejo Zenger)
>  25. Testers sought for PassLok privacy (Francisco Ruiz)
>  26. Teknokultura Journal - latest issue (Javier de Rivera)
>  27. Call ESA 2015 Conference: ?Critical Media Sociology Today?
>      (Christian Fuchs)
>  28. The Future of Security Journalism (J.M. Porup)
>  29. Re: The Future of Security Journalism (Eleanor Saitta)
>  30. Re: The Future of Security Journalism (J.M. Porup)
>  31. Free TechChange-USAID Course: How To Use Mobile Data
>      Solutions for Better Development Outcomes (Nick Martin)
>  32. Marisol Sandoval: From Corporate to Social Media (CAMRI
>      Seminar Feb 4) (Christian Fuchs)
>  33. Open Data Day Micro Grants - ODD is Feb 21st (Steven Clift)
>  34. Re: Iranian are bypass the Twitter censorship and sanction by
>      their mobile phones (Collin Anderson)
> 
> 
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------
> 
> Message: 1
> Date: Sun, 18 Jan 2015 22:19:14 -0300
> From: hellekin <helle...@gnu.org>
> To: liberationtech@lists.stanford.edu
> Subject: Re: [liberationtech] Open Source Videoconference platform
> Message-ID: <54bc5b92.4000...@gnu.org>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=windows-1252
> 
> -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
> Hash: SHA512
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>> On 01/18/2015 11:16 AM, Andr?s Leopoldo Pacheco Sanfuentes wrote:
>> Is there such a thing? Reliable? Skype sucks, and it is a Microsoft product
>> now (too flickery, etc.), and I don't know of others..
> *** Tox (https://tox.im/) is a promising alternative to Jitsi and
> XMPP/SIP.  It specifically aims at replacing Skype.  Still early, but
> already impressive.
> 
> ==
> hk
> 
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> 
> 
> ------------------------------
> 
> Message: 2
> Date: Mon, 19 Jan 2015 11:57:52 +0800
> From: marietta le <marie...@atlatszo.hu>
> To: a...@acm.org, liberationtech <liberationtech@lists.stanford.edu>
> Subject: Re: [liberationtech] Open Source Videoconference platform
> Message-ID: <97caf629-cf92-4f4e-80ca-eb3160670...@email.android.com>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
> 
> https://vline.com/
> maybe?
> 
>> On 18 January 2015 22:16:22 GMT+08:00, "Andr?s Leopoldo Pacheco Sanfuentes" 
>> <alps6...@gmail.com> wrote:
>> Is there such a thing? Reliable? Skype sucks, and it is a Microsoft
>> product
>> now (too flickery, etc.), and I don't know of others..
>> 
>> Best Regards | Cordiales Saludos | Grato,
>> 
>> Andr?s L. Pacheco Sanfuentes
>> <a...@acm.org>
>> +1 (347) 766-5008
>> 
>> 
>> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
>> 
>> -- 
>> Liberationtech is public & archives are searchable on Google.
>> Violations of list guidelines will get you moderated:
>> https://mailman.stanford.edu/mailman/listinfo/liberationtech.
>> Unsubscribe, change to digest, or change password by emailing moderator
>> at compa...@stanford.edu.
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> ------------------------------
> 
> Message: 3
> Date: Mon, 19 Jan 2015 21:03:03 +1300
> From: Douglas Bagnall <doug...@halo.gen.nz>
> To: liberationtech@lists.stanford.edu
> Subject: Re: [liberationtech] Open Source Videoconference platform
> Message-ID: <54bcba37.3010...@halo.gen.nz>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8
> 
>> On 19/01/15 03:16, Andr?s Leopoldo Pacheco Sanfuentes wrote:
>> Is there such a thing? Reliable? Skype sucks, and it is a Microsoft product
>> now (too flickery, etc.), and I don't know of others..
> 
> In a lightening talk at LCA 2015, Fran?ois Marier demonstrated a new
> browser button in Firefox 34 that provides a link setting up a WebRTC
> video connection:
> 
> https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=_n2TPYk5KaU#t=1060
> 
> It may not be the most featureful or secure alternative, and it uses
> the same underlying WebRTC technology as many others mentioned, but it
> does have the advantage of requiring no install or sign-up from either
> party.
> 
> https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/hello/ has a bit more.
> 
> cheers,
> Douglas
> 
> 
> ------------------------------
> 
> Message: 4
> Date: Mon, 19 Jan 2015 09:13:53 +0100
> From: "Fabio Pietrosanti (naif) - lists" <li...@infosecurity.ch>
> To: liberationtech <liberationtech@lists.stanford.edu>
> Subject: [liberationtech] The missing tech between TBB , Whoonix and
>    Tails
> Message-ID: <54bcbcc1.5000...@infosecurity.ch>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8
> 
> Hi all,
> 
> today when a user need to have some degree of protection for his network
> connectivity, for his browser experience, for his data stored and in the
> end for his "endpoint safety & integrity" (his computer) there are few
> options:
> - Tor Browser Bundle (an App)
> - Tails (an operating system replacement)
> - Whoonix (a virtual machine)
> 
>> From a security, technical and usability perspective we acknowledge how
> those approach are different each other.
> 
> I don't see a usable solutions that provide various advantages of Tails
> with the VM approach of Whoonix while behaving with the same usability
> of TBB (being an App).
> 
> To make it short:
> - Tor Browser Bundle is usable, the user does not need to change it's
> "operating environment"
> - Tails it's a pain to install and to use, force the user to change it's
> "operating environment" and use it in an exclusive way
> - Whoonix it's less a pain to install than Tails, force the user to
> change it's "operating environment" but it can be used in parallel to
> the existing "operating environment" (Windows, MacOS X)
> 
> Now, i see that there is something missing among all that various
> technologies that can be:
> * Deployed as a self-contained app (like TBB)
> * Works in parallel with the existing operating environment of the
> end-user (Like Whoonix)
> * Provide the safety of operating in a Virtual Machine (like Whoonix)
> * Be integrate within the user operating environment (like VMWare
> integration with Windows App)
> 
> The only similar approach i found is this "BitBox" made by the German
> company Sirrix, used by the German Government, that's basically a sort
> of "Whoonix" but usable like-an-app from the end-user perspective:
> http://www.sirrix.com/content/pages/BitBox_en.htm
> 
> It would be a very interesting and challenging project to see Tails or
> Whoonix or TBB to evolve in that direction, opening up tons of new users.
> 
> -- 
> Fabio Pietrosanti (naif)
> HERMES - Center for Transparency and Digital Human Rights
> http://logioshermes.org - https://globaleaks.org - https://tor2web.org - 
> https://ahmia.fi
> 
> 
> 
> ------------------------------
> 
> Message: 5
> Date: Mon, 19 Jan 2015 08:48:49 +0100
> From: "ma...@wk3.org" <ma...@wk3.org>
> To: liberationtech <liberationtech@lists.stanford.edu>
> Subject: Re: [liberationtech] Open Source Videoconference platform
> Message-ID: <20150119084849.ee17331264a1015406bf8...@wk3.org>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
> 
> Regarding all the web browser video conferencing tools. They are all WebRTC 
> aren't they?
> 
> In the end it is the browser which is doing the technical heavy-lifting, the 
> webpages are only for negotiating the channel for the different parties to 
> meet.
> 
> Regarding encryption, recording and multi-party conferencing: I'm also very 
> much interested in these topics as I didn't have had time to investigate this 
> technology much because I don't need it myself, but I'm asked about these 
> things very often.
> 
> 
> Sincerely,
> 
> Malte
> 
> 
> ------------------------------
> 
> Message: 6
> Date: Mon, 19 Jan 2015 10:05:26 +0100
> From: Eduardo Robles Elvira <edu...@agoravoting.com>
> To: liberationtech <liberationtech@lists.stanford.edu>
> Subject: Re: [liberationtech] The missing tech between TBB ,    Whoonix
>    and Tails
> Message-ID:
>    <CAHwZu3c8QkKh2v54-uTgtQcp3Y+=miyKDsU=x47-m2o4ugp...@mail.gmail.com>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8
> 
> Hello Fabio:
> 
> Do you know about Qubes OS? http://qubes-os.org/ It might be of interest to 
> you.
> 
> Regards,
> Eduardo Robles Elvira     @edulix             skype: edulix2
> http://agoravoting.org       @agoravoting     +34 634 571 634
> 
> 
> On Mon, Jan 19, 2015 at 9:13 AM, Fabio Pietrosanti (naif) - lists
> <li...@infosecurity.ch> wrote:
>> Hi all,
>> 
>> today when a user need to have some degree of protection for his network
>> connectivity, for his browser experience, for his data stored and in the
>> end for his "endpoint safety & integrity" (his computer) there are few
>> options:
>> - Tor Browser Bundle (an App)
>> - Tails (an operating system replacement)
>> - Whoonix (a virtual machine)
>> 
>> From a security, technical and usability perspective we acknowledge how
>> those approach are different each other.
>> 
>> I don't see a usable solutions that provide various advantages of Tails
>> with the VM approach of Whoonix while behaving with the same usability
>> of TBB (being an App).
>> 
>> To make it short:
>> - Tor Browser Bundle is usable, the user does not need to change it's
>> "operating environment"
>> - Tails it's a pain to install and to use, force the user to change it's
>> "operating environment" and use it in an exclusive way
>> - Whoonix it's less a pain to install than Tails, force the user to
>> change it's "operating environment" but it can be used in parallel to
>> the existing "operating environment" (Windows, MacOS X)
>> 
>> Now, i see that there is something missing among all that various
>> technologies that can be:
>> * Deployed as a self-contained app (like TBB)
>> * Works in parallel with the existing operating environment of the
>> end-user (Like Whoonix)
>> * Provide the safety of operating in a Virtual Machine (like Whoonix)
>> * Be integrate within the user operating environment (like VMWare
>> integration with Windows App)
>> 
>> The only similar approach i found is this "BitBox" made by the German
>> company Sirrix, used by the German Government, that's basically a sort
>> of "Whoonix" but usable like-an-app from the end-user perspective:
>> http://www.sirrix.com/content/pages/BitBox_en.htm
>> 
>> It would be a very interesting and challenging project to see Tails or
>> Whoonix or TBB to evolve in that direction, opening up tons of new users.
>> 
>> --
>> Fabio Pietrosanti (naif)
>> HERMES - Center for Transparency and Digital Human Rights
>> http://logioshermes.org - https://globaleaks.org - https://tor2web.org - 
>> https://ahmia.fi
>> 
>> --
>> Liberationtech is public & archives are searchable on Google. Violations of 
>> list guidelines will get you moderated: 
>> https://mailman.stanford.edu/mailman/listinfo/liberationtech. Unsubscribe, 
>> change to digest, or change password by emailing moderator at 
>> compa...@stanford.edu.
> 
> 
> ------------------------------
> 
> Message: 7
> Date: Mon, 19 Jan 2015 10:42:06 +0000
> From: Amin Sabeti <aminsab...@gmail.com>
> To: a...@acm.org, liberationtech <liberationtech@lists.stanford.edu>
> Subject: Re: [liberationtech] Open Source Videoconference platform
> Message-ID:
>    <cakds_vea2ne0c+ju4zreo-1p-k-bt0wejik8tyrzjhxxyj7...@mail.gmail.com>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
> 
> Jitsi works perfectly for low-bandwidth consumption and easy to use for
> non-techies.
> 
> On 18 January 2015 at 23:06, Andr?s Leopoldo Pacheco Sanfuentes <
> alps6...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
>> Are these platforms scalable to many participants? easy to use for
>> non-techies? low-bandwidth consumption? easy to share live via ustream or
>> other live video streaming platform? easy to record and post later in
>> youtube or other widely available video platforms?
>> 
>> 
>> Best Regards | Cordiales Saludos | Grato,
>> 
>> Andr?s L. Pacheco Sanfuentes
>> <a...@acm.org>
>> +1 (347) 766-5008
>> 
>> On Sun, Jan 18, 2015 at 4:30 PM, Julian Oliver <jul...@julianoliver.com>
>> wrote:
>> 
>>> ..on Sun, Jan 18, 2015 at 08:16:22AM -0600, Andr?s Leopoldo Pacheco
>>> Sanfuentes wrote:
>>>> Is there such a thing? Reliable? Skype sucks, and it is a Microsoft
>>> product
>>>> now (too flickery, etc.), and I don't know of others..
>>> 
>>> Jitsi with XMPP (jabber) works well for me. I've given a few video
>>> lectures
>>> using it.
>>> 
>>>    https://jitsi.org/
>>>    https://jitsi.org/index.php/Register/Register
>>> 
>>> With Chromium or Chrome you can also use Jiti purely in the browser,
>>> albeit I
>>> haven't had great luck with it:
>>> 
>>>    https://meet.jit.si/
>>> 
>>> A similar offering is:
>>> 
>>>    http://talky.io
>>> 
>>> Cheers,
>>> 
>>> --
>>> Julian Oliver
>>> http://julianoliver.com
>>> http://criticalengineering.org
>>> PGP key: https://julianoliver.com/key.asc
>>> Beware the auto-complete life.
>> 
>> --
>> Liberationtech is public & archives are searchable on Google. Violations
>> of list guidelines will get you moderated:
>> https://mailman.stanford.edu/mailman/listinfo/liberationtech.
>> Unsubscribe, change to digest, or change password by emailing moderator at
>> compa...@stanford.edu.
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> ------------------------------
> 
> Message: 8
> Date: Mon, 19 Jan 2015 13:54:15 +0100
> From: "Fabio Pietrosanti (naif) - lists" <li...@infosecurity.ch>
> To: liberationtech <liberationtech@lists.stanford.edu>
> Subject: Re: [liberationtech] The missing tech between TBB ,    Whoonix
>    and Tails
> Message-ID: <54bcfe77.6090...@infosecurity.ch>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=windows-1252
> 
>> On 1/19/15 10:05 AM, Eduardo Robles Elvira wrote:
>> Hello Fabio:
>> 
>> Do you know about Qubes OS? http://qubes-os.org/ It might be of interest to 
>> you.
>> 
>> Regards,
>> Eduardo Robles Elvira     @edulix             skype: edulix2
>> http://agoravoting.org       @agoravoting     +34 634 571 634
> Qube-Os it's a great platform, but it require you to install a new
> operating system on your computer.
> 
> My topic of discussion is on how to provide "safe enough" applications
> in the existing operating environment, that the average
> non-computer-proficient user don't want / can't abbandon.
> 
> There are many people that use a computer "procedurally", the learned
> "procedure" to do stuff, and once those procedure completely because the
> entire operating environment change, it's likely "too hard" .
> 
> Sounds like there's no easy-go-solution for that kind of users
> 
> -- 
> Fabio Pietrosanti (naif)
> HERMES - Center for Transparency and Digital Human Rights
> http://logioshermes.org - https://globaleaks.org - https://tor2web.org - 
> https://ahmia.fi
> 
> 
> 
> ------------------------------
> 
> Message: 9
> Date: Mon, 19 Jan 2015 08:51:32 -0500
> From: Nathan of Guardian <nat...@guardianproject.info>
> To: liberationtech@lists.stanford.edu
> Subject: Re: [liberationtech] The missing tech between TBB ,    Whoonix
>    and Tails
> Message-ID:
>    <1421675492.2708736.215739065.6f66a...@webmail.messagingengine.com>
> Content-Type: text/plain
> 
> 
> 
> On Mon, Jan 19, 2015, at 03:13 AM, Fabio Pietrosanti (naif) - lists
> wrote:
>> Hi all,
>> 
>> today when a user need to have some degree of protection for his network
>> connectivity, for his browser experience, for his data stored and in the
>> end for his "endpoint safety & integrity" (his computer) there are few
>> options:
>> - Tor Browser Bundle (an App)
>> - Tails (an operating system replacement)
>> - Whoonix (a virtual machine)
>> 
>> From a security, technical and usability perspective we acknowledge how
>> those approach are different each other.
>> 
>> I don't see a usable solutions that provide various advantages of Tails
>> with the VM approach of Whoonix while behaving with the same usability
>> of TBB (being an App).
>> 
>> To make it short:
>> - Tor Browser Bundle is usable, the user does not need to change it's
>> "operating environment"
>> - Tails it's a pain to install and to use, force the user to change it's
>> "operating environment" and use it in an exclusive way
> 
> You can run TAILS as an app inside of QEMU or VirtualBox: 
> https://tails.boum.org/doc/advanced_topics/virtualization/tails_within_windows/index.en.html
> 
> Do you mean something more than that? Obviously work could be done on
> one-click boot from a shortcut etc but I think it wouldn't take much.
> 
> Obviously it isn't the safest approach, but within your goals it seems a
> viable solution.
> 
>> - Whoonix it's less a pain to install than Tails, force the user to
>> change it's "operating environment" but it can be used in parallel to
>> the existing "operating environment" (Windows, MacOS X)
>> 
>> Now, i see that there is something missing among all that various
>> technologies that can be:
>> * Deployed as a self-contained app (like TBB)
>> * Works in parallel with the existing operating environment of the
>> end-user (Like Whoonix)
>> * Provide the safety of operating in a Virtual Machine (like Whoonix)
>> * Be integrate within the user operating environment (like VMWare
>> integration with Windows App)
>> 
>> The only similar approach i found is this "BitBox" made by the German
>> company Sirrix, used by the German Government, that's basically a sort
>> of "Whoonix" but usable like-an-app from the end-user perspective:
>> http://www.sirrix.com/content/pages/BitBox_en.htm
>> 
>> It would be a very interesting and challenging project to see Tails or
>> Whoonix or TBB to evolve in that direction, opening up tons of new users.
>> 
>> -- 
>> Fabio Pietrosanti (naif)
>> HERMES - Center for Transparency and Digital Human Rights
>> http://logioshermes.org - https://globaleaks.org - https://tor2web.org -
>> https://ahmia.fi
>> 
>> -- 
>> Liberationtech is public & archives are searchable on Google. Violations
>> of list guidelines will get you moderated:
>> https://mailman.stanford.edu/mailman/listinfo/liberationtech.
>> Unsubscribe, change to digest, or change password by emailing moderator
>> at compa...@stanford.edu.
> 
> 
> -- 
>  Nathan of Guardian
>  nat...@guardianproject.info
> 
> 
> ------------------------------
> 
> Message: 10
> Date: Mon, 19 Jan 2015 16:31:25 +0100
> From: Jens Kubieziel <maill...@kubieziel.de>
> To: liberationtech@lists.stanford.edu
> Subject: Re: [liberationtech] Open Source Videoconference platform
> Message-ID: <20150119153125.gb1...@kubieziel.de>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1
> 
> * Andr?s Leopoldo Pacheco Sanfuentes schrieb am 2015-01-18 um 15:16 Uhr:
>> Is there such a thing? Reliable? Skype sucks, and it is a Microsoft product
>> now (too flickery, etc.), and I don't know of others..
> 
> Another viable solution is palava.tv. This service uses WebRTC. See
> <URL:https://palava.tv/> for details.
> -- 
> Jens Kubieziel                                   http://www.kubieziel.de
> Man kann aus jedem Gespr?ch, bei dem man selbst nicht dauernd redet,
> sondern ganz einfach zuh?rt, unendlich viel erfahren und lernen. Professor.
> Dr. Roman Herzog
> 
> 
> ------------------------------
> 
> Message: 11
> Date: Mon, 19 Jan 2015 16:01:15 -0000
> From: Nick Martin <n...@techchange.org>
> To: liberationtech@lists.stanford.edu
> Subject: [liberationtech] 3D Printing Prosthetics: A conversation with
>    Jon    Schull    and    Jeremy    Simon of e-NABLE (January 22,    2015 | 
> 10:00-11:00
>    am EST)
> Message-ID: <20150118150756.5202.32806@ip-10-185-135-33.ec2.internal>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
> 
> Want to learn about how 3D printing technologies are being used to promote 
> social good? 
> 
> TechChange <http://techchange.org/> will host this free one-hour live 
> conversation on January 22nd at 10:00am EST.
> 
> To participate, please register here 
> <http://techchange.org/live-events/tech-talks/3d-printing-prosthetics/>.
> 
> Once you have registered, you will receive an email about an hour before 
> the event begins with a reminder and link to join. You will not need to 
> register again if you register early.
> 
> Cheers,
> 
> Nick 
> 
> 
> ***
> 
> e-NABLE <http://enablingthefuture.org/> is a global online community of 
> humanitarian volunteers designing, building and disseminating inexpensive, 
> functional 3D-printed prosthetics.
> 
> ? e-NABLE 3D-printed prosthetic hands cost approximately $50, compared to 
> traditional devices priced in the thousands of dollars.
> 
> ? Providing affordable devices to children with upper-limb differences, 
> including missing fingers, increases opportunities for play and interaction 
> with the world around them.
> 
> ? Many children have to wait until they are fully grown in order to receive 
> their first prosthetic; with 3D printing, new and affordable custom 
> prosthetics can easily be made for children as they grow.
> 
> Please register in advance to participate in this free live event. If you 
> cannot attend the event live, the session will be recorded and archived so 
> anyone will still be able to sign up to see it after January 22.
> 
> 
> <http://api.ning.com/files/1asLTm0wi-tl47FotZgKYWSOeNqYbiYLi1A985UxYB3VZfru7qnf7jaR*8UW5X7-UNFxzIhVpbJB5eoHfpDjPptE-6Th6b8O/enable2.jpg>
> 
> To participate, please register here: 
> http://techchange.org/live-events/tech-talks/3d-printing-prosthetics/
> 
> -- 
> Nick Martin
> Founder & President
> TechChange
> @ncmart <https://twitter.com/ncmart>
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> 
> ------------------------------
> 
> Message: 12
> Date: Mon, 19 Jan 2015 12:03:00 -0500
> From: Myself <falcoco...@gmail.com>
> To: liberationtech <liberationtech@lists.stanford.edu>
> Subject: [liberationtech] Internet repression continues in Cuba
> Message-ID:
>    <cakr3fcax5z5lvlzcd5cfxe8npa7d+uu+y9pkw2+drb84so5...@mail.gmail.com>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
> 
> For those following Cuba events:
> 
> Internet repression continues in Cuba. Young computer tech in Cuba sent to
> prison for sharing Internet access through Wi-Fi. The way this was working
> was several youth got together and shared the cost of an hour ($5 an hour,
> most Cubans make $20 a month) of access at one of the few hotels that allow
> Wi-Fi connections. The government is cracking down on these Wi-Fi
> gatherings once again, after the one way deals with the US.
> 
> Technical details: They were using the software "Connectify Hotspot" for
> sharing Internet access through Wi-Fi on their laptops.
> 
> http://www.cubanet.org/noticias/detienen-a-joven-informatico-por-compartir-internet/
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> 
> ------------------------------
> 
> Message: 13
> Date: Mon, 19 Jan 2015 17:45:39 -0500
> From: Griffin Boyce <grif...@cryptolab.net>
> To: liberationtech <liberationtech@lists.stanford.edu>
> Subject: Re: [liberationtech] Open Source Videoconference platform
> Message-ID: <1f9d4a62195f2d118bd842c895f3b...@cryptolab.net>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8; format=flowed
> 
> Jens Kubieziel wrote:
>> * Andr?s Leopoldo Pacheco Sanfuentes schrieb am 2015-01-18 um 15:16 
>> Uhr:
>>> Is there such a thing? Reliable? Skype sucks, and it is a Microsoft 
>>> product
>>> now (too flickery, etc.), and I don't know of others..
>> 
>> Another viable solution is palava.tv. This service uses WebRTC. See
>> <URL:https://palava.tv/> for details.
> 
> My preference is talky.io .  They also use WebRTC, and have a very 
> straightforward interface.  Their system is built on open-source free 
> software, which makes it an attractive choice.
> 
> ~Griffin
> 
> -- 
> "Cypherpunks write code, not flamewars."
> ~Jurre van Bergen
> 
> 
> 
> ------------------------------
> 
> Message: 14
> Date: Mon, 19 Jan 2015 17:47:08 -0600
> From: Andr?s Leopoldo Pacheco Sanfuentes <alps6...@gmail.com>
> To: liberationtech <liberationtech@lists.stanford.edu>
> Subject: Re: [liberationtech] Open Source Videoconference platform
> Message-ID:
>    <calz+f5ssv3a6aqrhknvbslj3uoddwvgnm2vwqtqab9p34te...@mail.gmail.com>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
> 
> Thanks are due to y'all people's suggestions, recommendations, terse
> reviews of open source videoconferencing sw.
> 
> I asked the question in part to get valuable info on alternatives to the
> 1%sw when it comes to connecting the other 95% in solidarity,  but also to
> test this list.
> 
> I have to confess that between the SNA sorry NAS sorry NSA paranoia and the
> plomo parejo between ultrarich-techie guanabis and hardcore militechtants,
> I didn't know if there were others out there for which this lemma was their
> motto:
> 
> "Cypherpunks write code, not flamewars." ~Jurre van Bergen" - thanks the
> last Guy that sent a suggestion for the inspiring signature quote!
> 
> Osea. We live. We breathe. Let's keep it that way for as many people as we
> can!
>> On Jan 19, 2015 4:45 PM, "Griffin Boyce" <grif...@cryptolab.net> wrote:
>> 
>> Jens Kubieziel wrote:
>> 
>>> * Andr?s Leopoldo Pacheco Sanfuentes schrieb am 2015-01-18 um 15:16 Uhr:
>>> 
>>>> Is there such a thing? Reliable? Skype sucks, and it is a Microsoft
>>>> product
>>>> now (too flickery, etc.), and I don't know of others..
>>> 
>>> Another viable solution is palava.tv. This service uses WebRTC. See
>>> <URL:https://palava.tv/> for details.
>> 
>> My preference is talky.io .  They also use WebRTC, and have a very
>> straightforward interface.  Their system is built on open-source free
>> software, which makes it an attractive choice.
>> 
>> ~Griffin
>> 
>> --
>> "Cypherpunks write code, not flamewars."
>> ~Jurre van Bergen
>> 
>> --
>> Liberationtech is public & archives are searchable on Google. Violations
>> of list guidelines will get you moderated: https://mailman.stanford.edu/
>> mailman/listinfo/liberationtech. Unsubscribe, change to digest, or change
>> password by emailing moderator at compa...@stanford.edu.
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> 
> ------------------------------
> 
> Message: 15
> Date: Tue, 20 Jan 2015 10:35:20 +0000
> From: Christian Fuchs <christian.fu...@uti.at>
> To: "liberationtech@lists.stanford.edu >> liberationtech"
>    <liberationtech@lists.stanford.edu>
> Subject: [liberationtech] CAMRI seminar 28/1: Clint Burnham on Slavoj
>    ?i?ek and the  Internet
> Message-ID: <54be2f68.7000...@uti.at>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8; format=flowed
> 
> CAMRI seminar
> Clint Burnham: The Subject Supposed to LOL: Slavoj ?i?ek and the Event 
> of the Internet
> Wed, 28/1, 14:00
> Univ of Westminster
> Harrow Campus
> Room A7.01
> 
> Registration is possible by e-mail to christian.fu...@uti.at
> 
> http://www.westminster.ac.uk/camri/research-seminars/clint-burnham-the-subject-supposed-to-lol-slavoj-iek-and-the-event-of-the-internet
> 
> Is the Internet an Event? Does it constitute, as ?i?ek argues an Event 
> should, a reframing of our experience, a retroactive re-ordering of 
> everything we thought we knew about the social but were afraid to ask 
> Facebook?
> 
> In this talk Clint Burnham will engage with ?i?ek?s recent work (Less 
> than Nothing, Event, Absolute Recoil) as a way to argue, first, that in 
> order to understand the Internet, we need ?i?ek?s ?immaterial 
> materialism,? and, in turn, to understand ?i?ek?s thought and how it 
> circulates today, we need to think through digital culture and social 
> media. ??As regards the Internet, then, no cynical disavowal, no 
> Facebook cleanses, no shutting off the wifi: les non-dupes errent, or 
> those who distance themselves from social media and the like are the 
> most deceived. Next: the Internet?s two bodies: digital culture is both 
> the material world of servers, clouds, stacks and devices and the 
> virtual or affective world of liking, networking, and the mirror stage 
> of the selfie. And here we must confront the ?obscene underside? of 
> digital culture: not only the trolls, 4chan porn, and gamergate bro?s, 
> but also the old fashioned exploitation of labour, be it iPhone 
> assembly-line workers at Foxconn, super-exploited ?blood coltan? miners 
> in the Congo, ?like farmers? in India, or social media scrubbers in the 
> Phillipines, who ensure your feeds are ?clean? of porn, beheadings, and 
> other #NSFW matter. These last concerns, then, mean we also have to 
> think about what ?i?ek calls the ?undoing of the Event? of the Internet, 
> the betrayal of the Internet, its diseventalization.
> 
> Clint Burnham teaches in the department of English at Simon Fraser 
> University, Vancouver, Canada. He is the author of more than a dozen 
> books of criticism, poetry, and fiction, including The Jamesonian 
> Unconscious: The Aesthetics of Marxist Theory (1995), The Only Poetry 
> that Matters: Reading the Kootenay School of Writing (2011), editor 
> (with Lorna Brown) of the public art catalogue Digital Natives (2011), 
> and editor (with Paul Budra) of From Text to Txting: New Media in the 
> Classroom (2012). His essay ?Slavoj ?i?ek as Internet Philosopher? is in 
> the recent Palgrave collection ?i?ek and Media Studies (eds. Matthew 
> Flisfeder and Louis-Paul Willis), and he is currently writing a book on 
> ?i?ek and digital culture called Does the Internet have an Unconscious? 
> In the winter of 2014-15 he is living and working in Vienna as part of a 
> residency with the Urban Subjects collective.
> 
> Forthcoming talks (open for registration)
> 
> Feb 4: Marisol Sandoval - From Corporate to Social Media: Critical 
> Perspectives on Corporate Social Responsibility in Media and 
> Communication Industries
> 
> http://www.westminster.ac.uk/camri/research-seminars/marisol-sandoval-from-corporate-to-social-media-critical-perspectives-on-corporate-social-responsibility-in-media-and-communication-industries
> 
> Feb 11: Justin Lewis - Beyond Consumer Capitalism: A Movie Screening and 
> Q&A with Justin Lewis
> 
> http://www.westminster.ac.uk/camri/research-seminars/justin-lewis-beyond-consumer-capitalism-a-movie-screening-and-q-and-a-with-justin-lewis
> 
> 
> 
> 
> ------------------------------
> 
> Message: 16
> Date: Tue, 20 Jan 2015 12:08:27 -0500
> From: Travis Biehn <tbi...@gmail.com>
> To: christian.fu...@uti.at, liberationtech
>    <liberationtech@lists.stanford.edu>
> Subject: Re: [liberationtech] CAMRI seminar 28/1: Clint Burnham on
>    Slavoj ?i?ek and the Internet
> Message-ID:
>    <CAKtE3zdhwt+QWWKqp_F=2szz_feaotoz_xmthm99ae-v40r...@mail.gmail.com>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
> 
> Will a feed be made available?
> 
> Thanks,
> -Travis
> 
> On Tue, Jan 20, 2015 at 5:35 AM, Christian Fuchs <christian.fu...@uti.at>
> wrote:
> 
>> CAMRI seminar
>> Clint Burnham: The Subject Supposed to LOL: Slavoj ?i?ek and the Event of
>> the Internet
>> Wed, 28/1, 14:00
>> Univ of Westminster
>> Harrow Campus
>> Room A7.01
>> 
>> Registration is possible by e-mail to christian.fu...@uti.at
>> 
>> http://www.westminster.ac.uk/camri/research-seminars/clint-
>> burnham-the-subject-supposed-to-lol-slavoj-iek-and-the-
>> event-of-the-internet
>> 
>> Is the Internet an Event? Does it constitute, as ?i?ek argues an Event
>> should, a reframing of our experience, a retroactive re-ordering of
>> everything we thought we knew about the social but were afraid to ask
>> Facebook?
>> 
>> In this talk Clint Burnham will engage with ?i?ek?s recent work (Less than
>> Nothing, Event, Absolute Recoil) as a way to argue, first, that in order to
>> understand the Internet, we need ?i?ek?s ?immaterial materialism,? and, in
>> turn, to understand ?i?ek?s thought and how it circulates today, we need to
>> think through digital culture and social media. As regards the Internet,
>> then, no cynical disavowal, no Facebook cleanses, no shutting off the wifi:
>> les non-dupes errent, or those who distance themselves from social media
>> and the like are the most deceived. Next: the Internet?s two bodies:
>> digital culture is both the material world of servers, clouds, stacks and
>> devices and the virtual or affective world of liking, networking, and the
>> mirror stage of the selfie. And here we must confront the ?obscene
>> underside? of digital culture: not only the trolls, 4chan porn, and
>> gamergate bro?s, but also the old fashioned exploitation of labour, be it
>> iPhone assembly-line workers at Foxconn, super-exploited ?blood coltan?
>> miners in the Congo, ?like farmers? in India, or social media scrubbers in
>> the Phillipines, who ensure your feeds are ?clean? of porn, beheadings, and
>> other #NSFW matter. These last concerns, then, mean we also have to think
>> about what ?i?ek calls the ?undoing of the Event? of the Internet, the
>> betrayal of the Internet, its diseventalization.
>> 
>> Clint Burnham teaches in the department of English at Simon Fraser
>> University, Vancouver, Canada. He is the author of more than a dozen books
>> of criticism, poetry, and fiction, including The Jamesonian Unconscious:
>> The Aesthetics of Marxist Theory (1995), The Only Poetry that Matters:
>> Reading the Kootenay School of Writing (2011), editor (with Lorna Brown) of
>> the public art catalogue Digital Natives (2011), and editor (with Paul
>> Budra) of From Text to Txting: New Media in the Classroom (2012). His essay
>> ?Slavoj ?i?ek as Internet Philosopher? is in the recent Palgrave collection
>> ?i?ek and Media Studies (eds. Matthew Flisfeder and Louis-Paul Willis), and
>> he is currently writing a book on ?i?ek and digital culture called Does the
>> Internet have an Unconscious? In the winter of 2014-15 he is living and
>> working in Vienna as part of a residency with the Urban Subjects collective.
>> 
>> Forthcoming talks (open for registration)
>> 
>> Feb 4: Marisol Sandoval - From Corporate to Social Media: Critical
>> Perspectives on Corporate Social Responsibility in Media and Communication
>> Industries
>> 
>> http://www.westminster.ac.uk/camri/research-seminars/
>> marisol-sandoval-from-corporate-to-social-media-critical-perspectives-on-
>> corporate-social-responsibility-in-media-and-communication-industries
>> 
>> Feb 11: Justin Lewis - Beyond Consumer Capitalism: A Movie Screening and
>> Q&A with Justin Lewis
>> 
>> http://www.westminster.ac.uk/camri/research-seminars/
>> justin-lewis-beyond-consumer-capitalism-a-movie-screening-
>> and-q-and-a-with-justin-lewis
>> 
>> 
>> --
>> Liberationtech is public & archives are searchable on Google. Violations
>> of list guidelines will get you moderated: https://mailman.stanford.edu/
>> mailman/listinfo/liberationtech. Unsubscribe, change to digest, or change
>> password by emailing moderator at compa...@stanford.edu.
> 
> 
> 
> 
> -- 
> Twitter <https://twitter.com/tbiehn> | LinkedIn
> <http://www.linkedin.com/in/travisbiehn> | GitHub <http://github.com/tbiehn>
> | TravisBiehn.com <http://www.travisbiehn.com> | Google Plus
> <https://plus.google.com/+TravisBiehn>
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> 
> ------------------------------
> 
> Message: 17
> Date: Tue, 20 Jan 2015 10:31:03 -0800
> From: Yosem Companys <compa...@stanford.edu>
> To: Liberation Technologies <liberationt...@mailman.stanford.edu>
> Subject: [liberationtech] Computational Epidemiology: The role of big
>    data and pervasive * 4:15PM, Wed January 21, 2015 in Gates B03
> Message-ID:
>    <canhci9ekrdcnzsajaqcjz-p3crbjdl+k59l4o+t5gxeww2o...@mail.gmail.com>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
> 
> Stanford EE Computer Systems Colloquium
>  4:15PM, Wednesday, January 21, 2015
> NEC Auditorium, Gates Computer Science Building Room B3
> http://ee380.stanford.edu
> 
> 
> Computational Epidemiology: The role of big data and pervasive informatics
> 
>  Madhav Marathe
> Network Dynamics and Simulation Science Laboratory
> Virginia Bio-Informatics Institute
> Dept. of Computer Science
> Virginia Tech
> 
> *CORRECTION: This talk will be given January 21 not January 14 as
> previously announced.*
> *About the talk: *
> 
> Pandemics such as H1N1 influenza are global outbreaks of infectious
> disease. Human behavior, social contact networks, and pandemics are closely
> intertwined. The ordinary behavior and daily activities of individuals
> create varied and dense social interactions that are characteristic of
> modern urban societies. They provide a perfect fabric for rapid,
> uncontrolled disease propagation. During the course of an epidemic,
> individuals and institutions modify their normal behavior based on their
> perceived severity and risk. The resulting co-evolution of individual and
> collective behaviors, contact networks and epidemics must be taken into
> account while designing effective planning and response strategies.
> 
> Recent advances in high performance pervasive computing and big data have
> created new opportunities for collecting, integrating, analyzing and
> accessing information about evolving social interactions. The advances in
> network and information science that build on this new capability provide
> entirely new ways for reasoning and controlling epidemics.
> 
> In this talk I will overview of the state of the art in computational
> networked epidemiology with an emphasis on computational thinking and high
> performance computing oriented decision-support environments to support
> planning and response in the event of pandemics. I will describe our
> approach within the context of a specific recent application: modeling to
> support Ebola Outbreak Response in West Africa.
> 
> *Slides: *
> 
> There is no downloadable version of the slides for this talk available at
> this time.
> 
> *Videos: *
> 
> 
>   -  Join the live presentation.
>   <http://coursematerials.stanford.edu/live/ee380.asx> Wednesday January
>   21, 4:15-5:30.  Requires Microsoft Windows Media player.
>   - View video by lecture sequence.
>   <https://mvideos.stanford.edu/graduate#/SeminarDetail/Winter/2015/EE/380>
>   Winter 2015 only, HTML5. Available after 8PM on the days of the lecture.
>   - View Video on YouTube about 24 hours after the day of the lecture.
> 
> *About the speaker: *
> 
>  [image: [speaker photo]]  Madhav Marathe is the director of the Network
> Dynamics and Simulation Science Laboratory and professor in the Department
> of Computer Science, Virginia Tech. His research interests are in
> computational epidemiology, network science, design and analysis of
> algorithms, computational complexity, communication networks and high
> performance computing.
> 
> Before coming to Virginia Tech, he was a Team Leader in the Computer and
> Computational Sciences division at the Los Alamos National Laboratory
> (LANL) where he led the basic research programs in foundations of computing
> and high performance simulation science for analyzing extremely large
> socio-technical and critical infrastructure systems. He is a Fellow of the
> IEEE, ACM and was recently elected as an AAAS Fellow.
> 
>  *Contact information: *
> 
> Madhav Marathe
> Email:   mmara...@vbi.vt.edu
> 
> *ABOUT THE COLLOQUIUM:*
> 
> See the Colloquium website, http://ee380.stanford.edu, for scheduled
> speakers, FAQ, and additional information. Stanford and SCPD students can
> enroll in EE380 for one unit of credit. Anyone is welcome to attend; talks
> are webcast live and archived for on-demand viewing over the web.
> -------------- next part --------------
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> 
> ------------------------------
> 
> Message: 18
> Date: Tue, 20 Jan 2015 11:26:59 -0800
> From: Yosem Companys <compa...@stanford.edu>
> To: Liberation Technologies <liberationt...@mailman.stanford.edu>
> Cc: Yvette Subramanian <yvet...@berkeley.edu>
> Subject: [liberationtech] UC Berkeley CITRIS Research Exchange for the
>    Spring is now online
> Message-ID:
>    <CANhci9GF5bWsNRn7NvG=vpfbeluwyzvcswmiurym9kuijvn...@mail.gmail.com>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
> 
> If you are in the area, please check out the great seminar series from our
> friends at UC Berkeley.
> 
> For those outside the area, you can always watch the YouTube video after
> the event.
> 
> Best,
> Yosem
> 
> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
> From: Yvette Subramanian <yvet...@berkeley.edu>
> Date: Tue, Jan 20, 2015 at 9:53 AM
> Subject: CITRIS Research Exchange for the Spring is now online
> 
> The first talk of the CITRIS Research Exchange seminar series will take
> place on Wednesday, January 28. The seminars are held on Wednesdays from
> 12:00-1:00pm in the Banatao Auditorium of Sutardja Dai Hall on the UC
> Berkeley campus, and box lunches are provided at UC Berkeley with
> registration. All talks are posted to our YouTube site after the event:
> https://www.youtube.com/citris.
> 
> http://citris-uc.org/spring-2015-citris-research-exchange-seminar-series/
> 
> Starting this semester, CITRIS is joining with ITS and TRUST to host a new
> seminar series on Resilience: http://citris-uc.org/spring-
> 2015-resilience-seminar-series/
> 
> Registration for each event (by the Monday prior at 3pm) is required to
> ensure lunch at UC Berkeley at http://citris.eventbrite.com/
> 
> --------------------
> CITRIS Research Exchange, Spring 2015
> 
> January 28
> Reza Abbaschian,  UC Riverside
> "Trends in Materials Science and Engineering (MSE) Education"
> 
> February 4
> Emily Jacobi, Digital Democracy
> "Harnessing Technology to Empower Marginalized Communities"
> 
> February 11
> Meredith Fowlie, UC Berkeley
> "Field Experimentation on the Demand Side of Electricity Markets"
> 
> February 18
> Pat Hanrahan, Stanford University
> "Scientific Visualization and Big Data"
> 
> February 25
> Stephen Wheeler,  UC Davis
> "Appropriate Technology for Sustainable Cities"
> 
> March 4
> Kathy Kim, UC Davis
> "Social Networking in Cancer Care"
> 
> March 11
> Michael Cohen, UC Berkeley
> "The Open Town Hall"
> 
> March 18
> Stavros G. Vougioukas, UC Davis
> "Automated Agriculture"
> *242 and 250 Sutardja Dai Hall
> 
> March 25
> No talk, spring break week
> 
> April 1
> David Hochschild, CA Department of Energy
> "Sunrise from the West: The Growth of Renewable Energy in California"
> 
> April 8
> Brad Pollock,  UC Davis
> "Preventing Disease and Shaping Health Policy"
> 
> April 15
> William Nazaroff, UC Berkeley
> "Sustainably Improving Indoor Environmental Quality"
> 
> April 22
> Jay Lund, UC Davis
> "Better Managing California's Droughts with Data, Modeling, and People"
> *This seminar is part of the new Resilience Seminar Series on campus:
> http://citris-uc.org/spring-2015-resilience-seminar-series/*
> 
> April 29
> Reg Kelly, UCSF QB3
> "Innovating Innovatively at UC"
> 
> May 6
> Lise Getoor, UC Santa Cruz
> "Reasoning with Uncertainty"
> -----------
> 
> WEBCAST URL for live viewing during the event.
>    http://video.citris.berkeley.edu/playlists/webcast (Flash format)
> 
> Live webcasting of each CITRIS Research Exchange seminar is available at
> these CITRIS campuses:
> 
> CITRIS@Davis: 1065 Kemper Hall, UC Davis
> CITRIS@Merced: COB 322-Willow (Classroom and Office Building), UC Merced
> CITRIS@Santa Cruz: School of Engineering Building 2, Room 595B, UC Santa
> Cruz
> 
> More information about CITRIS and the Banatao Institute@CITRIS Berkeley can
> be found at http://www.citris-uc.org/. We hope to see you at the talks.
> 
> best, Yvette
> 
> -- 
> - - - - - - - - - - - - -
> yvette subramanian, ph.d. | CITRIS special projects
> 356-C Sutardja Dai Hall, UC Berkeley campus
> (510) 643-4866 | (510) 642-1800 fax | yve...@citris-uc.org
> 
> Center for Information Technology Research in the Interest of Society
> (CITRIS) and the Banatao Institute@CITRIS Berkeley
> http://www.citris-uc.org/
> http://www.facebook.com/citris
> Follow us on Twitter: #citrisnews
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> 
> ------------------------------
> 
> Message: 19
> Date: Tue, 20 Jan 2015 21:35:56 +0100
> From: Andrea St <and...@gmail.com>
> To: liberationtech <liberationtech@lists.stanford.edu>
> Subject: [liberationtech] [SPAM:####] [SPAM:###] Davos 2015 takes aim
>    at the future of the internet (and cyber-security)
> Message-ID:
>    <caj7-gzzgrrdatt_m9yd7vkt4jblniroxi9c6i15fzwogqis...@mail.gmail.com>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
> 
> Dear list,
> this is my latest comment on Huffington Post about Davos and its panels on
> cyber security. Several panels with Jonathan Zittrain, Kaspersky, Merkel,
> Toomas Hendrik Ilves and Bradford L. Smith.
> 
> Link:
> http://www.huffingtonpost.com/andrea-stroppa/davos-2015-takes-aim-at-t_b_6505286.html?utm_hp_ref=davos
> 
> 
> 
> Comments are welcome,
> 
> 
> -- 
> Andrea Stroppa
> 
> http://huffingtonpost.com/andrea-stroppa
> @andst7
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> 
> ------------------------------
> 
> Message: 20
> Date: Wed, 21 Jan 2015 11:36:27 -0600
> From: Steven Clift <cl...@e-democracy.org>
> To: newswire <newsw...@groups.dowire.org>
> Cc: Tom Steinberg <t...@mysociety.org>, Myf Nixon <m...@mysociety.org>
> Subject: [liberationtech] mySociety's new $3.6M investment from
>    Omidyar Network, seeks to grow Poplus civic tech collaboration
> Message-ID:
>    <cao9tz0wq2ujjhejs2vdtw2czz_hbuc1yosi3detirxnwmar...@mail.gmail.com>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8
> 
> This is very exciting news for the civic technology and open
> government movement.
> 
> You'll note that Tom Steinberg references Poplus in his post below.
> Poplus website: http://bit.ly/poplus
> 
> In my view, Poplus represents the next generation of collaborative and
> shared civic tech development. Think code "components" or Lego
> building blocks you can use to adapt code across borders and different
> political systems.
> 
> If you want to tap into mySociety's very global momentum _combined_
> with other orgs like FCI in Chile, g0v in Taiwan, Sinar in Malaysia,
> SimSim in Morocco, etc. and forward thinking
> coders/companies/governments/etc., I strongly encourage you to join
> the Poplus Google Group:
>     http://bit.ly/poplusgroup
> And join in our fresh round of introductions: http://bit.ly/poplusintros
> 
> E-Democracy is excited to further announce we've been commissioned by
> mySociety to lead an effort to boost global Poplus participation via
> online engagement. So join in!
> 
> Congrats mySociety! Thank you Omidyar Network.
> 
> Steven Clift
> Poplus.org and E-Democracy.org
> 
> P.S. We just had a Poplus Meetup teleconference today with updates
> spanning the global. See the raw notes and listen to the recording:
> http://bit.ly/poplusmeetup  The next virtual Meetup is on Feb. 18:
> http://bit.ly/poplusFeb2015calRSVP  (this will be geared toward people
> *new* to Poplus, definitely join the online group for details:
> http://bit.ly/poplusgroup )
> 
> 
> See:
> http://bit.ly/mysocomidyar
> 
> Omidyar Network backs mySociety
> 
> Posted by Tom Steinberg 21st January 2015
> 
> 
> Much of mySociety?s work is only possible thanks to generous funding
> from a number of philanthropic foundations.
> 
> Today, we are delighted to announce that we have been awarded a major
> strategic investment from Omidyar Network totalling up to $3.6m over
> three years.
> 
> This is the third time we?ve been supported by Omidyar Network, and
> this represents the biggest investment we?ve ever had. Alongside
> organisations like the Open Society Foundation, Google.org and the
> Indigo Trust, Omidyar has been central in our transformation from a
> tiny UK-focused non-profit, to a global social enterprise of nearly 30
> staff.
> 
> Being supported by Omidyar Network means more than just vital
> financial support. It means access to their amazing networks of other
> investees, and advice and guidance from a range of sources. And, also
> crucial for an organisation that seeks technical excellence, it means
> the stamp of support from an organisation that ultimately traces its
> DNA back to the giant internet successes that are eBay and Paypal.
> 
> What is the money for?
> 
> mySociety?s main ambition, over the next three years, is to help a
> couple of dozen other organisations, spread around the world, to grow
> popular citizen empowerment tools that are big enough to really matter
> to the citizens of a wide range of countries. This means building and
> growing tools that help people to check up on politicians, demand
> information and answers, or report and track problems, in hugely
> varying contexts.
> 
> In addition to this, we will continue to maintain and grow the network
> of users of our technology and support the growing Poplus -
> http://bit.ly/poplus - federation.
> 
> It?s a tough goal, and one that will require even more from the
> organisations we partner with, than from our own colleagues. But the
> very fact that we can even try to help groups at this scale, is
> because Omidyar Network enables us to imagine it.
> 
> 
> 
> Steven Clift  -  Executive Director, E-Democracy
> 
> 
> ------------------------------
> 
> Message: 21
> Date: Fri, 23 Jan 2015 13:14:45 -0800
> From: Yosem Companys <compa...@stanford.edu>
> To: Liberation Technologies <liberationt...@mailman.stanford.edu>
> Subject: [liberationtech] Stanford Liberationtech Seminar: Will
>    revolution    be tweeted? - Jan 29
> Message-ID:
>    <CANhci9GGCF3me+FV7oLPifEzYF36KSgTGBbS=b6_=bmuwur...@mail.gmail.com>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
> 
> From: Kathleen Barcos <kbar...@stanford.edu>
> 
> 
> 
> 
> The Center on Democracy, Development and Rule of Law
> presents
> 
> 
> 
> * The Program on Liberation Technology Seminar Series *
> *Will the Revolution be Tweeted? Information & Communication Technology and
> Conflict *
> 
> *Speaker*
> *Navid Hassanpour,*
> Postdoctoral Research Associate,
> Niehaus Center for Globalization and Governance (NCGG)
> 
> 
>  Thursday, January 29, 2015
> 4:15 PM - 5:30 PM
> 
> *S*chool of Education
> Room 128
>  FSI Contact
> Kathleen Barcos
> <http://cddrl.fsi.stanford.edu/libtech/people/kathleen_barcos>
> 
> kbar...@stanford.edu
> *Abstract*
> 
> Is communication technology conducive to collective violence? Recent
> studies have provided conflicting answers to the same question. While some
> see the introduction of cellular communication as a contributing factor to
> civil conflict in Africa (Pierskalla and Hollenbach APSR 2013), others
> ascribe an opposite effect to mobile communications in Iraq (Shapiro and
> Weidmann IO forthcoming). During the talk, I will further explore the logic
> behind "Why the revolution will not be tweeted", and argue that the answer
> lies in contagion processes of collective action at the periphery, not the
> hierarchical schemes of central coordination as was argued before. To
> provide evidence, I will draw on historical accounts of social revolutions,
> a GIS study of the Syrian Civil War, a convenience survey sample from the
> 2011 Egyptian Revolution, as well as network experiments of collective
> risk-taking in a controlled setting.
> Speaker Bio
> 
> Navid Hassanpour
> <http://wws.princeton.edu/faculty-research/faculty/nh6> (Ph.D.s
> in Political Science from Yale'14, and Electrical Engineering from
> Stanford'06) studies political contestation, in its contentious and
> electoral forms. Following an inquiry into collective and relational
> dimensions of contentious politics, currently he is working on a project
> that examines the history, emergence, and the dynamics of representative
> democracy outside the Western World. This year he is a Niehaus postdoctoral
> fellow at Princeton's Woodrow Wilson School of public and International
> Affairs. His work has appeared in Political Communication as well as IEEE
> Transactions on Information Theory. His book project, Leading from the
> Periphery, is under consideration at Cambridge University Press' Structural
> Analysis in the Social Sciences Series.
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> 
> ------------------------------
> 
> Message: 22
> Date: Fri, 23 Jan 2015 22:32:17 +0000
> From: "Jiang, Min" <min.ji...@uncc.edu>
> To: "liberationtech@lists.stanford.edu"
>    <liberationtech@lists.stanford.edu>
> Subject: [liberationtech] CfP - International Journal of Communication
>    Special Issue - (Un)civil Society in Digital China
> Message-ID:
>    <bae0d1559da43940a291afcc90d9a5110ef7c...@rpitsexms4.its.uncc.edu>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="windows-1252"
> 
> Dear colleagues,
> 
> Please see the following CfP and kindly share it with our colleagues. 
> Apologies for cross-posting. Many thanks!
> 
> Min
> 
> ____________________________________________________________________
> 
> Min Jiang (Ph.D. Purdue), Associate Professor of Communication Studies
> Affiliate Faculty, International Studies
> Co-coordinator, Digital Arts, Sciences & Technologies (DAST) 
> <http://clas-pages.uncc.edu/dast/>
> 5011 Colvard N., UNCC, 9201 University City Blvd. Charlotte, NC 28223
> 704-687-0768 | min.ji...@uncc.edu<mailto:min.ji...@uncc.edu> | 
> Web<http://clas-pages.uncc.edu/min-jiang/>site<http://clas-pages.uncc.edu/min-jiang/>
>  | Twitter<http://www.twitter.com/mindyjiang> | 
> LinkedIn<http://www.linkedin.com/in/minjiang>
> 
> Research Affiliate
> Center for Global Communication Studies, University of Pennsylvania
> _____________________________________________________________________
> 
> 
> (Un)civil Society in Digital China
> Special Issue for Publication in the International Journal of Communication
> Call for Proposals
> 
> 
> Editors
> 
> Min Jiang (Ph.D.), Associate Professor of Communication Studies, UNC 
> Charlotte, USA
> Ashley Esarey (Ph.D.), Visiting Assistant Professor of Political Science, 
> University of Alberta, Canada
> 
> 
> Rationale
> 
> Civil society?s role in furthering democratization and the development of a 
> public sphere has long attracted scholars whose work has traced the 
> historical roots of civil society in China and celebrated its emergence 
> offline and online. While decades of economic reforms have empowered myriad 
> civil society organizations, volatile contention has arisen among social 
> groups along ideological, class, ethnic, racial and regional fault lines. 
> Uncivil exchanges, amplified by the Internet and social media, often work at 
> cross purposes and fail to produce consensus or solutions to public problems. 
> These disputes, and the underlying social/political/cultural schisms, 
> threaten to undermine constructive citizen engagement and the promise of 
> civil society in China. They also challenge the notion of a unified civil 
> society standing in solidarity against a monolithic, authoritarian state.
> 
> Consider the following examples:
> 
> o   The Internet flame war between Han Han and Fang Zhouzi that delegitimized 
> the notion of ?public intellectual? in China
> 
> o   Left-Right debate amongst China?s intellectual communities that spill 
> over into street brawls
> 
> o   Vigilantism and breaches of privacy (i.e. instances of ?human flesh 
> search engine? and the Guo Meimei Red Cross scandal)
> 
> o   Online conflicts between ?haves? and ?have-nots? amidst extreme inequality
> 
> o   Virtual contention between Han and ethnic minorities over the status of 
> Tibet and Xinjiang
> 
> o   Racial discourse on mixed-race Chinese and immigrants
> 
> o   Clashes over Taiwan?s ?sunflower movement? expressed on the Internet
> 
> o   Divergent online opinions about the ?umbrella movement? in Hong Kong
> 
> This special issue invites contributors to unpack the multilayered, 
> multidimensional reality and contradictions that define the Chinese Internet, 
> focusing on the big-picture ramifications of online contention. With a 
> population of nearly 650 million, Chinese Internet users are more diverse 
> than the tech-savvy, liberal elites who first went online two decades ago. 
> The groups active online today include politically conservative, 
> nationalistic, apathetic, and even reactionary individuals. They also evince 
> complicated attitudes towards the state, business and other demographic 
> segments. The complex make-up of Chinese civil society and the nature of its 
> self-representation thus challenge, on the one hand, an idealized notion of 
> civil society that is independent from the private sphere, government and 
> business, and on the other, the implicit assumption prevalent in Chinese 
> Internet studies of a liberal subject demanding social justice, media freedom 
> and political reform.
> 
> Questions for contributors:
> 
> o   What are the characteristics of Chinese civil society? What is its 
> potential or limitations? Does the proliferation of the Internet in China 
> necessarily empower civil society in China? Is the opposite possible?
> 
> o   Is civil society always civil? Can it be uncivil, fractious and even 
> reactionary? How does the Chinese Internet amplify or mitigate (un)civil 
> tendencies? To what extent is online public debate or collective action 
> becoming more fragmentary, working at cross purposes, or resulting in ?echo 
> chamber? effects and polarization? Do nationalistic, jingoistic and even 
> reactionary forces overwhelm and dominate ?civil? discourse?
> 
> o   Are the ?uncivil? tendencies of the Chinese Internet inevitable in a 
> society composed of increasingly diverse groups? To what extent do commercial 
> and state institutions influence uncivil tendencies online through 
> intervention or even manipulation? What roles do powerful Internet businesses 
> and elite personalities play?
> 
> o   Under what circumstances might incivility online prove advantageous for 
> political or social change?
> 
> o   What evidence do we have for (un)civil society in China? Examples might 
> include the formation of informal groups and formal organizations, 
> discourses, and their intersection with collective action, social movements, 
> and other social behavior.
> 
> Contributions to this special issue will map a spectrum of key actors, 
> issues, and orientations of a contentious civil society that has been 
> submerged under a larger body of research on China and established 
> democracies that assume state-society confrontation and fail to explore 
> intra-societal tensions. Collectively, the contributions promise to produce a 
> theoretically-interesting and empirically rich body of work that expands and 
> deepens Chinese Internet research dominated by work focused on such topics as 
> Chinese Internet censorship and propaganda, online activism, civic 
> associations, deliberation and online culture. Insights generated from this 
> special issue will in turn inform and advance research on civil society by 
> debating its essence and examining the conditions conducive or unfavorable to 
> its growth, with implications going beyond China. Although contributions will 
> emphasize what polarizes Chinese society and sometimes seem to tear it apart, 
> we welcome contributions that a
 na
> lyze the prospects for rising above incivility, bridging sociopolitical 
> schisms, and building consensus without compromising self-expression and 
> personal security.
> 
> 
> Affiliated Conference
> 
> We encourage interested contributors to attend the 13th Chinese Internet 
> Research Conference (CIRC) that includes as its theme ?(un)civil society in 
> digital China.? The conference will be held at the University of Alberta, 
> Canada on May 27-28, 2015. The deadline for submitting paper abstracts (400 
> words) is February 15, 2015. For more information, please visit:
> http://www.china.ualberta.ca/Conferences/Chinese-internet-research-conference.aspx
> 
> 
> Proposed Schedule
> 
> 
> Abstract Deadline                                         Jul 1, 2015
> Notice of Abstract Acceptance                     Aug 1, 2015
> Full Paper Deadline                                      Jan 1, 2016
> 
> Reviews Deadline                                         Mar 1, 2016
> Revisions Deadline                                       May 1, 2016
> Finalized Paper                                             Jul 1, 2016
> 
> 
> 
> Paper Guidelines
> 
> 
> o   Submitted papers will go through double-blind peer review.
> 
> o   The maximum word count is 9,000 words (including the abstract, keywords, 
> images with captions, references, and appendices, if any).
> 
> o   Abstracts submitted for pre-screening should be less than 500 words.
> 
> o   Submitted full papers are not guaranteed acceptance.
> 
> o   Formatting of the special issue follows the general guidelines of the 
> International Journal of Communication (IJoC).
> 
> 
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> ------------------------------
> 
> Message: 23
> Date: Fri, 23 Jan 2015 20:29:02 -0800
> From: Mitar <mmi...@gmail.com>
> To: liberationtech <liberationtech@lists.stanford.edu>
> Subject: [liberationtech] Net neutrality case in Slovenia
> Message-ID:
>    <CAKLmikM0CkSHfLHfs=rbsob0z_teeeaach7_lv24pkq8g7f...@mail.gmail.com>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8
> 
> Hi!
> 
> In Slovenia we have net neutrality law. And our FCC has just made a
> judgement that our ISPs have been breaking it by offering their own
> mobile services like Spotify, DropBox and Netflix clones for free (for
> other services you have to pay for mobile Internet data usage, but
> theirs you could use for free). This is a great example how ISPs can
> misuse their position to have an advantage over other services. This
> is why net neutrality is important.
> 
> http://www.delo.si/znanje/infoteh/akos-razsodil-telekom-slovenije-in-simobil-krsita-nevtralnost-interneta.html
> 
> 
> Mitar
> 
> -- 
> http://mitar.tnode.com/
> https://twitter.com/mitar_m
> 
> 
> ------------------------------
> 
> Message: 24
> Date: Sat, 24 Jan 2015 09:23:38 +0100
> From: Rejo Zenger <r...@zenger.nl>
> To: liberationtech@lists.stanford.edu
> Subject: Re: [liberationtech] Net neutrality case in Slovenia
> Message-ID: <20150124082338.gh...@ix.home>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii; format=flowed
> 
> ++ 23/01/15 20:29 -0800 - Mitar:
>> In Slovenia we have net neutrality law. And our FCC has just made a
>> judgement that our ISPs have been breaking it by offering their own
>> mobile services like Spotify, DropBox and Netflix clones for free (for
>> other services you have to pay for mobile Internet data usage, but
>> theirs you could use for free). This is a great example how ISPs can
> 
> In other words, your NRA decided the ISP's are violating the NN 
> provisions and forced the ISP's to stop doing so? 
> 
> -- 
> Rejo Zenger
> E r...@zenger.nl | P +31(0)639642738 | W https://rejo.zenger.nl  
> T @rejozenger | J r...@zenger.nl
> OpenPGP   1FBF 7B37 6537 68B1 2532  A4CB 0994 0946 21DB EFD4
> XMPP OTR  271A 9186 AFBC 8124 18CF  4BE2 E000 E708 F811 5ACF
> 
> 
> ------------------------------
> 
> Message: 25
> Date: Sun, 25 Jan 2015 12:47:07 -0600
> From: Francisco Ruiz <r...@iit.edu>
> To: liberationtech <liberationtech@lists.stanford.edu>
> Subject: [liberationtech] Testers sought for PassLok privacy
> Message-ID:
>    <caao5wsxlqdgypoj981+bs+h6+yyrkd0humw66pc5j-12tnu...@mail.gmail.com>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
> 
> PassLok is a comprehensive cryptography and steganography toolkit in the
> form of a web app. Designed for power and ease of use, it sits alongside
> your regular email or any other program to encrypt, decrypt, or hide text
> and files. If the browser is webRTC-compatible, it also does real-time chat
> involving text, files, audio, and even video.
> 
> PassLok combines several open-source libraries to provide auditable
> security. The web app consists of a single html file, which can be saved
> locally and used offline. Hashes are published for each new version along
> with authenticating videos for the SHA256 hash.
> 
> The PassLok code is already two years old and is available from several
> servers, plus the Chrome, Android, and iOS stores, but it is still little
> known. This is why we are asking the Liberation Tech community to take a
> look at it and uncover flaws and propose enhancements. Our goal is to make
> PassLok the safest, strongest, simplest, most useful app we can.
> 
> Many thanks in advance.
> 
> Francisco Ruiz
> 
> 
> Sources:
> 
> Web app:
> https://passlok.com
> 
> https://www.autistici.org/passlok
> 
> https://passlok.site44.com
> 
> https://fruiz500.github.io/passlok
> 
> 
> Github repo:
> https://github.com/fruiz500/passlok
> 
> Chrome:
> https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/passlok-privacy/epcchpdljafmfegifkigklfcmkphfmbh
> 
> Android:
> https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.fruiz500.passlok
> 
> iOS:
> https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/passlok-privacy/id879861603?mt=8&uo=4
> 
> Info website:
> http://passlok.weebly.com
> 
> 
> Current version of PassLok is: 2.1.02
> Made on 1/19/15
> 
> SHA256 for all web sources:
> edc8-a959-c4bf-d20a-3850-d387-2312-646a-df6c-e9d3-03ab-d779-5420-269a-8cfd-f96a
> 
> MD5: 811f-b505-8d84-bcfd-eb7a-04b3-41f1-18b8
> 
> SHA1: 8c55-3ef0-5a7f-6451-8dec-b3db-e205-c820-bfcc-60bc
> 
> See me reading the SHA256 in this video:
> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TP-dCu_PiLo
> 
> Thank you once again.
> 
> -- 
> Francisco Ruiz
> Associate Professor
> MMAE department
> Illinois Institute of Technology
> 
> PL21ezLok=1iw+0_y5xyh_66nby_u12x1_hmdw8_iioou_6yhud_a8/i9_jd4fj_fvv6i_swkrn_u773t_jb7yr_+d9nn_/b4h6_880py_vtf4L_o4zwr_6207u_v/bdd=354ad_7836e_52c1a_2cae9=PL21ezLok
> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A0LtNkM2RSs <https://www.youtube.com>
> 
> get the PassLok privacy app at: https://passlok.com <http://passlok.com>
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> 
> ------------------------------
> 
> Message: 26
> Date: Mon, 26 Jan 2015 10:41:36 +0100
> From: Javier de Rivera <jav...@socialmediasociology.com>
> To: liberationtech <liberationtech@lists.stanford.edu>
> Subject: [liberationtech] Teknokultura Journal - latest issue
> Message-ID: <54c60bd0.9010...@socialmediasociology.com>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
> 
> Hi all,
> 
> Here is the Teknokultura Journal <http://teknokultura.net>lastest issue.
> 
> It opens with an article by Langdon Winner about technology, politics
> and economy: Facing the Plague: Economic and Political Inequality
> <http://teknokultura.net/index.php/tk/article/view/246>
> And also includes several articles on surveillance, such as Big Data,
> Actionable Information, Scientific Knowledge and the Goal of Control
> <http://teknokultura.net/index.php/tk/article/view/239> by Chris Hables
> Gray, and a very interesting review on Bauman, Z. and Lyon, D. (2013).
> Liquid Surveillance. <http://teknokultura.net/index.php/tk/article/view/248>
> 
> I hope it is of you interest, and want to remind you that we are always
> open for new submissions.
> 
> Best regards,
> 
> Javier de Rivera
> @teknokultura <http://twitter.com/teknokultura>
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> 
> ------------------------------
> 
> Message: 27
> Date: Mon, 26 Jan 2015 12:53:28 +0000
> From: Christian Fuchs <christian.fu...@uti.at>
> To: liberationtech@lists.stanford.edu
> Subject: [liberationtech] Call ESA 2015 Conference: ?Critical Media
>    Sociology Today?
> Message-ID: <54c638c8.3080...@uti.at>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8; format=flowed
> 
> Call: RN18 Panel ?Critical Media Sociology Today?
> 12th Conference of the European Sociological Association
> August 25-28, 2015. Prague
> 
> Abstract Submission Deadline: Feb 1
> Submission: http://esa12thconference.eu/abstract-submission
> 
> Call text: http://fuchs.uti.at/1338/
> 
> Critical Media Sociology Today
> 
> We live in times of ongoing crisis, the extension and intensification of 
> inequalities concerning class, gender, and race, a return of the 
> importance of the economy and political economy, a lack of imaginations 
> of alternatives to neo-liberalism and capitalism, an intensification of 
> right-wing extremism and fascism all over Europe, a lack of visions and 
> power of the political Left, an intensification and extension of 
> extremely repressive forms of state power such as communications 
> surveillance conducted by secret services, ideological scapegoating 
> conducted by conservative and far-right parties, and law and 
> order-politics. Left-wing movements and parties have in some countries 
> emerged or been strengthened, but the crisis has overall brought a 
> further political shift towards the right and an intensification of 
> capitalism and inequality.
> 
> We today require politically a renewal of the Left. For critical media 
> sociology this means that it needs to ask questions, theorise, and 
> conduct critical analysis of media and communications in the context of 
> capitalism, class, ideologies, racism, fascism, right-wing extremism, 
> gender, state power, activism and social movements, challenges for 
> public service, media reforms, crisis, globalisation, the rise of China, 
> digitalisation, consumer and advertising culture, 
> information/cultural/media work, digital labour, the new international 
> division of cultural and digital labour, warfare and military conflicts, 
> the new imperialism, financialisation, etc.
> 
> ESA RN 18 calls for contributions that shed new light on questions that 
> Critical Media Sociology needs to ask today and on theoretical and 
> analytical insights that help to shape Critical Media Sociology in the 
> 21st Century.
> 
> RN18?s panel at the ESA 2014 Prague Conference ?Differences, 
> Inequalities Sociological Imagination? and its contributions are 
> organised in the form of specific session topics.
> 
> ESA RN18 calls for contributions to the following sessions:
> 
> RN18_1: Critical Media Sociology and Karl Marx Today:
> What is the role and legacy of Karl Marx?s works and Marxist theory for 
> critical media sociology today?
> 
> RN18_2: Critical Media Sociology and Capitalism Today:
> How does capitalism shape media and communications today?
> 
> RN18_3: Critical Media Sociology and Critical Theory Today:
> What is a critical theory of 21st century society? What role do 
> communication, media and culture play in such a theory?
> 
> RN18_4: Critical Media Sociology and Stuart Hall Today:
> How do Stuart Hall?s works, projects, and collaborations matter for 
> critical media sociology today?
> 
> RN18_5: Critical Media Sociology and Cultural Materialism Today:
> How does Raymond Williams? approach of cultural materialism matter today 
> for understanding the sociology of media and communications?
> 
> RN18_6: Critical Media Sociology, Patriarchy and Gender Today:
> What is the role of and relationship of identity politics and 
> anti-capitalism for feminist media sociology today?
> 
> RN18_7: Critical Media Sociology and the Critique of the Political 
> Economy of the Internet and Social Media:
> How does capitalism shape the Internet and social media?
> 
> RN18_8: Critical Media Sociology and Ideology Critique Today:
> What are the main forms of ideology today and how do they operate in the 
> media? Which forms and approaches of ideology critique do we need to 
> understand them?
> 
> RN18_9: Critical Media Sociology, Right-Wing Extremism and Fascism Today:
> What is the relationship of far-right movements and parties, the media 
> and communication?
> 
> RN18_10: Critical Media Sociology and Digital Labour Today:
> What forms of digital labour and digital class struggles are there and 
> how can they best be theorised, analysed, and understood?
> 
> RN18_11: Critical Media Sociology and the Left:
> How could a 21st century Left best look like and what is the role of 
> media and communications for such a Left? What is the historical, 
> contemporary, and possible future relationship of critical media 
> sociology to the Left? What is the role of media, communications, the 
> Internet, and social media in left-wing movements? What problems do such 
> movements face in relation to the media, communications, the Internet, 
> and social media?
> 
> RN18_12: Critical Media Sociology and China:
> How can critical media sociology understand the media in China and the 
> role of China and Chinese media in global capitalism? What are 
> differences and commonalities between European and Chinese media 
> understood with the help of critical media sociology?
> 
> RN18_13: Critical Media Sociology, Democracy and the Public Sphere Today:
> How can we best theorise and understand potentials and limits for the 
> mediated public sphere in the 21st century?
> 
> RN18_14: Critical Media Sociology, the Commons, and the Alternatives Today:
> What are the problems and post-capitalist potentials of alternative 
> projects such as cultural and media co-operatives, left-wing and radical 
> media projects, alternative social media, alternative online platforms, 
> alternative media, community media projects, commons-based media, peer 
> production projects, etc.?
> 
> RN18_15: Critical Media Sociology and State Power Today:
> How does the relationship of media, communication and state power?s 
> various forms of regulation, control, repression, violence and 
> surveillance look like?
> 
> RN18_16: Critical Media Sociology, the University and Academia Today:
> What are the challenges and problems for teaching and conducting 
> research about the media and communication from a critical perspective? 
> What can be done to overcome existing limits and problems?
> 
> RN18_17: Critical Media Sociology and Cultural and Communication Labour:
> What are characteristics of cultural and communication labour in 
> capitalism today? Are there potentials that they can transcend 
> precarity? What is the role of alternative economic models such as 
> co-operatives (self-managed companies) in this respect?
> 
> RN18_18: Critical Media Sociology and Political Communication:
> What is the role of political communication for a critical sociology of 
> the media?
> 
> Notes
> Please submit only to one session. Abstracts should not exceed 250 
> words. Each paper session will have the duration of 1.5 hours. Normally 
> sessions will include 4 papers. Abstracts must be submitted online to 
> the submission platform, see below. Abstracts sent by email cannot be 
> accepted. Abstracts will be peer-reviewed and selected for presentation 
> by the Research Network; the letter of notification will be sent by the 
> conference software system in early April 2015.
> http://esa12thconference.eu/abstract-submission
> 
> Conference fee: http://esa12thconference.eu/fee
> 
> ESA/RN18 membership:
> Paying members of ESA and RN18 have strongly reduced conference fees:
> http://www.europeansociology.org/membership.html
> 
> Mailing list, Facebook:
> You can join RN18?s media sociology mailing list 
> http://lists.jacobs-university.de/mailman/listinfo/esa-rn18 and follow 
> RN18 on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/esarn18?ref=ts&fref=ts
> 
> 
> 
> 
> ------------------------------
> 
> Message: 28
> Date: Mon, 26 Jan 2015 21:06:15 +0000
> From: "J.M. Porup" <j...@porup.com>
> To: liberationtech <liberationtech@lists.stanford.edu>
> Subject: [liberationtech] The Future of Security Journalism
> Message-ID: <54c6ac47.40...@porup.com>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8
> 
> A couple of days ago, Quinn Norton published the following piece:
> 
> 
> We Should All Step Back from Security Journalism
> I?ll Go First
> 
> https://medium.com/message/we-should-all-step-back-from-security-journalism-e474cd67e2fa
> 
> 
> Here's my reply:
> 
> Security Journalism, Full Speed Ahead!
> I?ll Go First
> 
> https://medium.com/@toholdaquill/security-journalism-full-speed-ahead-34e490742056
> 
> JMP
> 
> --
> J.M. Porup
> www.JMPorup.com
> 
> 
> ------------------------------
> 
> Message: 29
> Date: Mon, 26 Jan 2015 21:22:56 +0000
> From: Eleanor Saitta <e...@dymaxion.org>
> To: liberationtech <liberationt...@mailman.stanford.edu>
> Subject: Re: [liberationtech] The Future of Security Journalism
> Message-ID: <54c6b030.6050...@dymaxion.org>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8
> 
>> On 2015.01.26 21.06, J.M. Porup wrote:
>> Here's my reply:
>> 
>> Security Journalism, Full Speed Ahead! I?ll Go First
>> 
>> https://medium.com/@toholdaquill/security-journalism-full-speed-ahead-34e490742056
> 
> What a shocking failure at understanding what she wrote.
> 
> E.
> 
> -- 
> Ideas are my favorite toys.
> 
> 
> ------------------------------
> 
> Message: 30
> Date: Mon, 26 Jan 2015 22:11:54 +0000
> From: "J.M. Porup" <j...@porup.com>
> To: liberationtech@lists.stanford.edu
> Subject: Re: [liberationtech] The Future of Security Journalism
> Message-ID: <54c6bbaa.50...@porup.com>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8
> 
> Eleanor Saitta:
>> On 2015.01.26 21.06, J.M. Porup wrote:
>>> Here's my reply:
>>> 
>>> Security Journalism, Full Speed Ahead! I?ll Go First
>>> 
>>> https://medium.com/@toholdaquill/security-journalism-full-speed-ahead-34e490742056
>> 
>> What a shocking failure at understanding what she wrote.
> 
> I am happy to take criticism, but perhaps you could be more specific?
> 
> JMP
> 
> 
> ------------------------------
> 
> Message: 31
> Date: Tue, 27 Jan 2015 11:58:57 -0500
> From: Nick Martin <n...@techchange.org>
> To: liberationtech@lists.stanford.edu
> Subject: [liberationtech] Free TechChange-USAID Course: How To Use
>    Mobile Data Solutions for Better Development Outcomes
> Message-ID:
>    <cab8bgp6vzjoteimgum3sssoe7jabtspwlaywtsgi9u66g3d...@mail.gmail.com>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
> 
> Hi Liberation Tech Folks,
> 
> Check out the new two hour online course we just finished with USAID and
> FHI360 on mobile data solutions
> <http://techchange.org/media/mobile-data-solutions/>. Read more below and
> start learning today.
> 
> Cheers,
> Nick
> 
> ***
> [image: usaid-mobile-data-course]
> <http://techchange.org/media/mobile-data-solutions/>
> 
> Leading global development organizations are just beginning to utilize
> mobile technologies to improve the efficiency and quality of the data they
> collect, manage, analyze, and share. However, there is so much more the
> international development community could be doing with this powerful
> technology to make better decisions and meet broader global development
> goals.
> 
> Thankfully, you can now learn the secrets of how to use mobile technologies
> to more effectively collect and disseminate data and achieve better
> development outcomes through a free interactive online course on Mobile
> Data Solutions <http://techchange.org/media/mobile-data-solutions/>.
> 
> This two-hour self-paced online course developed by the Digital Development
> team <http://www.usaid.gov/digital-development> at USAID, the mSTAR Program
> <https://twitter.com/mstar_project> at FHI 360, and TechChange
> <http://techchange.org/>, explores these opportunities and offers a
> comprehensive introduction to key terms, concepts, technologies, and
> strategies, including:
> 
>   - How to assess a mobile data collection project and required resources
>   - How to design a project to achieve the maximum impact possible
>   - How to implement a project to take advantage of appropriate
>   technologies
>   - How to visualize and share the collected data with relevant communities
> 
> Sign up now <http://techchange.org/media/mobile-data-solutions/> for this
> fun and practical learning environment with a mixture of animations, video
> interviews, scenario-based case studies, and interactive exercises
> including designing and undertaking a survey using mobile tools.
> 
> It is free, and accessible from anywhere with an internet connection and
> anytime no matter your time zone.
> 
> [image: concerns] <http://techchange.org/media/mobile-data-solutions/>
> 
> -- 
> Nick Martin
> Founder & President
> TechChange
> 240-505-2324
> @ncmart <https://twitter.com/ncmart>
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> 
> ------------------------------
> 
> Message: 32
> Date: Tue, 27 Jan 2015 18:23:38 +0000
> From: Christian Fuchs <christian.fu...@uti.at>
> To: "liberationtech@lists.stanford.edu >> liberationtech"
>    <liberationtech@lists.stanford.edu>
> Subject: [liberationtech] Marisol Sandoval: From Corporate to Social
>    Media (CAMRI Seminar Feb 4)
> Message-ID: <54c7d7aa.6010...@uti.at>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8; format=flowed
> 
> CAMRI Seminar
> Marisol Sandoval
> From Corporate to Social Media: Critical Perspectives on Corporate 
> Social Responsibility in Media and Communication Industries
> Univ of Westminster
> Wed, Feb 4, 2015
> 14:00
> Harrow Campus, room A7.1
> 
> Launch of the paperback edition of the corresponding book
> 
> Registration per e-mail to christian.fu...@uti.at
> 
> http://www.westminster.ac.uk/camri/research-seminars/marisol-sandoval-from-corporate-to-social-media-critical-perspectives-on-corporate-social-responsibility-in-media-and-communication-industries
> 
> In this talk, Marisol Sandoval presents her recent book ?From Corporate 
> to Social Media: Critical Perspectives on Corporate Social 
> Responsibility in Media and Communication Industries?, Routledge 2014, 
> http://www.routledge.com/books/details/9780415722568/
> 
> The corporate and the social are crucial themes of our times. In the 
> first decade of the twenty-first century, both individual lives and 
> society were shaped by capitalist crisis and the rise of social media. 
> But what marks the distinctively social character of "social media"? And 
> how does it relate to the wider social and economic context of 
> contemporary capitalism? The concept of Corporate Social Responsibility 
> (CSR) is based on the idea that a socially responsible capitalism is 
> possible; this suggests that capitalist media corporations can not only 
> enable social interaction and cooperation but also be socially responsible.?
> 
> This presentation provides a critical and provocative perspective on 
> Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) in media and communication 
> industries. It examines both the academic discourse on CSR and actual 
> corporate practices in the media sector, offering a double critique that 
> reveals contradictions between corporate interests and social 
> responsibilities. Marisol Sandoval?s political economic analysis of 
> Apple, AT&T, Google, HP, Microsoft, News Corp, The Walt Disney Company 
> and Vivendi shows that media and communication in the twenty-first 
> century are confronted with fundamental social responsibility challenges.
> 
> ?From software patents and intellectual property rights to privacy on 
> the Internet, from working conditions in electronics manufacturing to 
> hidden flows of eWaste ? Marisol Sandoval?s book encourages the reader 
> to explore the multifaceted social (ir)responsibilities that shape 
> commercial media landscapes today. It makes a compelling argument for 
> thinking beyond the corporate in order to envision and bring about truly 
> social media.
> 
> Marisol Sandoval is a lecturer at City University London?s Department of 
> Culture and Creative Industries. Her research critically deals with 
> questions of power, responsibility, commodification, exploitation, 
> ideology and resistance in the global culture industries. She is 
> co-editor of the collected volumes Internet and Surveillance (2012, 
> http://www.routledge.com/books/details/9780415633642/), Critique, Social 
> Media and the Information Society (2013, 
> http://www.routledge.com/books/details/9780415841856/), and of the 
> tripleC-special issue ?Philosophers of the World Unite! Theorising 
> Digital Labour and Virtual Work - Definitions, Dimensions and Forms? 
> (http://www.triple-c.at/index.php/tripleC/issue/view/29). She is 
> co-editor of the open access online journal tripleC: Communication, 
> Capitalism & Critique (http://www.triple-c.at). Her book From Corporate 
> to Social Media? (Routledge, 2014, 
> http://www.routledge.com/books/details/9780415722568/) looks beyond 
> common understandings of the term social media by providing a critical 
> analysis of corporate social (ir)responsibility in the global media and 
> communication industries.
> 
> Forthcoming talk (open for registration):
> 
> Feb 11: Justin Lewis - Beyond Consumer Capitalism: A Movie Screening and 
> Q&A with Justin Lewis
> 
> http://www.westminster.ac.uk/camri/research-seminars/justin-lewis-beyond-consumer-capitalism-a-movie-screening-and-q-and-a-with-justin-lewis
>  
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> ------------------------------
> 
> Message: 33
> Date: Tue, 27 Jan 2015 15:34:13 -0600
> From: Steven Clift <cl...@e-democracy.org>
> To: newswire <newsw...@groups.dowire.org>, "E-Democracy. Org Projects
>    Group" <proje...@forums.e-democracy.org>, liberationtech
>    <liberationt...@mailman.stanford.edu>, OGP Civil Society group
>    <o...@dgroups.org>, poplus <pop...@googlegroups.com>, brigade
>    <brig...@codeforamerica.org>
> Subject: [liberationtech] Open Data Day Micro Grants - ODD is Feb 21st
> Message-ID:
>    <CAO9TZ0W_-PuQ-fagp=DSc=2nPKK0yQN4GCAa1mWi0HD2DSk=z...@mail.gmail.com>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8
> 
> OPEN DATA DAY 2015 is coming and a coalition of partners have come
> together to provide a limited number of micro-grants designed to
> support communities organise ODD activities all over the world !
> 
> All the details from the Open Knowledge Foundation:
> 
>     http://bit.ly/opendatadaymicrogrants
> 
> 
> More ...
> 
> Here are the emerging events:
> 
>    http://wiki.opendataday.org/Main_Page
> 
> If you want to get involved, join their online group:
> 
>     https://groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/open-data-day
> 
> Also note Code Across events as well:
> 
>      http://www.codeforamerica.org/events/codeacross-2015/
> 
> You need to check with wiki, map and the Code Across list to see what
> is emerging this is as OKF puts it "As a volunteer led event, with no
> organisation behind it, Open Data Day provides the perfect opportunity
> for communities all over the world to convene, celebrate and promote
> open data in ways most relevant to their fellow citizens."
> 
> See the 2014 sheet for events from last year too - starting one in
> your city with other who did this before is worth at try:
> 
>      
> https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1Ruewy74XVCCyp89YzqsyeoKTjLmyzNHo0hrjr3djiyQ/edit?usp=sharing
> 
> Lastly, as part of the Coalition supporting this effort with some
> in-kind promotion, note our tips on digital outreach for unconferences
> and hackathons. If set up an event, these very tactical tips will help
> to get people in the room!
> 
>     http://e-democracy.org/digout
> 
> Steven Clift  -  Executive Director, E-Democracy
> 
> * Support E-Democracy. Pledge drive to raise $10,000 US:
>      http://e-democracy.org/donate?ft  - Only $890 to 2015 Goal
> 
> 
> ------------------------------
> 
> Message: 34
> Date: Tue, 27 Jan 2015 19:28:51 -0500
> From: Collin Anderson <col...@averysmallbird.com>
> To: liberationtech <liberationtech@lists.stanford.edu>
> Subject: Re: [liberationtech] Iranian are bypass the Twitter
>    censorship and sanction by their mobile phones
> Message-ID:
>    <cac+vslv_tqrzzozbxky-jksjhcmncirlqmrsg6spdyxp-es...@mail.gmail.com>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
> 
> Support for Iran, Cuba and a number of other countries has been added to
> Twitter: http://mashable.com/2015/01/27/twitter-iran-cuba/
> 
> On Sun, Nov 23, 2014 at 4:18 PM, Nariman Gharib <nariman...@gmail.com>
> wrote:
> 
>> Hi John,
>> 
>> On Sun, Nov 23, 2014 at 8:41 PM, John Adams <j...@retina.net> wrote:
>> 
>>> This series of posts conflicts about three different problems. It's
>>> hard to tell what you're having an issue with: Government censorship,
>>> lack of SMS, or 2-factor in the places.
>>> 
>>> From what I know:
>>> 
>>> 1. If any censorship of Twitter is going on, it's Iran, and not
>>> Twitter that is censoring the communications. If the telcos are
>>> blocking messages from Twitter's SMS source, it's the telcos.
>>> 
>>> 2. It's possible Twitter doesn't have a business relationship with any
>>> SMS carriers in the country, so that can break phone verification. You
>>> can still download the client on ios or android and use the code
>>> generation in the client to verify a device, if Twitter is reachable
>>> across the Internet from Iran.
>> 
>> ?Google does? Facebook does? you can't activate your 2step verification
>> via app without adding your phone number in Twitter as far as I know.?
>> 
>> 
>>> 
>>> 3. Who blocked this "Trick" of modifying the page with +98? The page
>>> is completely in SSL, so if that change isn't working anymore then
>>> most likely,  Twitter modified the page.
>>> 
>> 
>> ?Twitter did that.?
>> 
>> 
>>> 
>>> 4. "I wonder if there's a way to get Twitter to remove the restriction
>>> for users based in Iran." --  This is a problem that the Iranian
>>> government needs to solve, not Twitter.
>>> 
>> ?Yes you are right. But 'I think' Twitter have a concern about activists
>> and high profile internet users in Iran, because the verification code
>> comes from a text message to the phone number, it's easy for the Government
>> or IRGC to find those Twitter accounts owners.
>> 
>>> 
>>> It's easier to figure out how to fix these things when you're clear in
>>> the way that you express the problem.
>>> 
>> ?You are right and I'm sorry.?
>> 
>> 
>>> 
>>> -j
>>> 
>>> 
>>> On Sun, Nov 23, 2014 at 9:44 AM, Griffin Boyce <grif...@cryptolab.net>
>>> wrote:
>>>>  I wonder if Twitter restricts accounts to one per phone number. Phone
>>>> verification is readily bypassed with something like twilio, but only
>>> the
>>>> *most* advanced users would be able to pull this off.  It would be worth
>>>> setting up an app to allow Iranian users to bypass it
>>> semi-automatically,
>>>> but spambots and abusers would *decimate* it.
>>>> 
>>>>  I wonder if there's a way to get Twitter to remove the restriction for
>>>> users based in Iran. There's not really a good reason for it in the
>>> first
>>>> place =/
>>>> 
>>>> ~Griffin
>>>> 
>>>> Nariman Gharib wrote:
>>>>> 
>>>>> no it doesn't. they blocked this 'trick' and also many Iranian users
>>>>> can't register to Twitter anymore because it require phone
>>>>> verification on sign-up page.
>>>>> 
>>>>> On Sun, Nov 23, 2014 at 5:11 PM, Kate Krauss <ka...@critpath.org>
>>>>> wrote:
>>>>> 
>>>>>> Does this still work?
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> Thanks,
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> Katie
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> On Thu, Aug 7, 2014 at 5:34 PM, Nariman Gharib
>>>>>> <nariman...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> Hi,
>>>>>>> Basically as you knew Iran is not on the country list of Twitter.
>>>>>>> I've reached to Twitter and they know about this issue.
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> Iranians are gets very active on Twitter after 2009 Pres.Election
>>>>>>> till now and the numbers of the users all of the time are growing.
>>>>>>> It's sad we see Twitter hasn't Iran on the list while Google and
>>>>>>> other networks are supporting Iran's telephone numbers for give
>>>>>>> the users the option to enable the 2step verification.
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> so today I wrote an article on my blog and teach iranians how they
>>>>>>> can active their twitter telephone number(SMS service and active
>>>>>>> their 2step verification) from inside iran.
>>>>>>> https://twitter.com/ListenToUs/status/497374522426015744 [1]
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> how: actually when you are going to submit a number of twitter
>>>>>>> website, with Inspect element on chrome you can add +98 on the
>>>>>>> form and write your in the telephone number field and twitter will
>>>>>>> send you a text message and everything is going to successful.
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> and many iranians are now have twitter verification on their
>>>>>>> phones and some of them like this man:
>>>>>>> https://twitter.com/ziarlarimi/status/497484191613726720 [2]
>>>>>>> texting from IRAN without using any circumvention tools.
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> I hope twitter will decide to add Iran to the 'INTERFACE' of the
>>>>>>> website,because on the backend everything is fine.
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> Thanks
>>>>>>> Nariman
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> --
>>>> Liberationtech is public & archives are searchable on Google.
>>> Violations of
>>>> list guidelines will get you moderated:
>>>> https://mailman.stanford.edu/mailman/listinfo/liberationtech.
>>> Unsubscribe,
>>>> change to digest, or change password by emailing moderator at
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>>> --
>>> Liberationtech is public & archives are searchable on Google. Violations
>>> of list guidelines will get you moderated:
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>>> Unsubscribe, change to digest, or change password by emailing moderator at
>>> compa...@stanford.edu.
>>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> --
>> PGP: 0xa53963936999cbb6
>> 
>> --
>> Liberationtech is public & archives are searchable on Google. Violations
>> of list guidelines will get you moderated:
>> https://mailman.stanford.edu/mailman/listinfo/liberationtech.
>> Unsubscribe, change to digest, or change password by emailing moderator at
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>> 
> 
> 
> 
> -- 
> *Collin David Anderson*
> averysmallbird.com | @cda | Washington, D.C.
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> 
> -- 
> Liberationtech is public & archives are searchable on Google. Violations of 
> list guidelines will get you moderated: 
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