Hi folks,

this might be interesting for Freenet contributors and developers, who live in 
the UK or could imagine to travel to london if they don't have to pay the 
costs. I guess it would be a good idea if one of us participates and holds a 20 
min. presentation based on the one we already have - 
http://draketo.de/proj/freenet-funding/slides.pdf . If travel costs are a 
problem, try to get a scholarship for it, so that you don't have to pay your 
travel costs. I can't do so, because I don't have the time, feel unqualified 
for it and don't live in the UK.

>>> http://p2pvalue.eu/blog/floss4p2p-workshop-call-participation

C&P:

What is FLOSS4P2P Workshop?

It's a 2-day London workshop in March, gathering FLOSS projects that are 
building software for peer production and organization, with a focus on 
distributed platforms. *Scholarships* to attend are offered to grassroots 
communities.



** Context **

We know that the Internet was originally decentralized, with protocols and 
services built by hackers. However, with the arrival of the celebrated Web 2.0, 
centralization and corporations proprietary platforms seem to have taken over. 
Moreover, this centralized structure is used by governments to increase 
surveillance (following Snowden’s revelations), to blackout internet whenever 
it is needed (e.g. Egypt, Syria, or San Francisco’s BART) or to choke annoying 
activist organizations (such as Wikileaks).

On the other hand, in the last few years we have seen the emergence of 
Internet-enabled collaborative communities building shared libre/open 
resources. Commons-based Peer to Peer Production (CBPP) is rapidly growing: not 
just for software and encyclopedias, but also for information (OpenStreetMap, 
Wikihow), hardware (FabLabs, Open Source Ecology), accommodation (Couchsurfing) 
and currency (Bitcoin, Altcoins).

In the last few years, it has become clear to many that it is not enough to 
develop free/libre/open source (FLOSS) alternatives, but we also need to 
re-decentralize the Internet. Many initiatives are being undertaken under this 
premise (e.g. Ethereum, Diaspora, OwnCloud, MediaGoblin, Sandstorm). These new 
software tools may also be useful to boost CBPP communities further. In this 
workshop, we will gather those working around the decentralized FLOSS that 
could help CBPP/P2P communities. Hackers, academics, activists and interested 
stakeholders are welcome.



**When**

March 16-17th 2015



**Where**

Fab Lab London

http://fablablondon.org



**Call for Proposals**

We welcome proposals for:

    Lightning talks (2m-5m): summarise your idea & receive feedback

    Show & Tell presentations (20m): explain your project/tech/research

    Tutorials on software tools (1h)

Please email: lu.yang at surrey.ac.uk with your idea/proposals.

The workshop will have both presentations and unconference-style participatory 
dynamics for finding points of collaboration and extraction of conclusions.



** Topics **

    Focus on FLOSS software with some of the following features:

        Social: communication

            e.g. social-networking, microblogging, reworked email

        Social: collaboration

            e.g. wikis, pads, wave, shared file hosting, multimedia repositories

        Alternative to proprietary choices

        Federated / Distributed / Interoperable

        Open Standards

        Secure / Encrypted

        Encouraging Peer Production communities

        Encouraging the construction/maintenance of Commons

    Potential cases for discussion:

        Diaspora (federated social network)

        Wave (federated real-time collaboration)

        Lorea (federated social network)

        DarkWallet (distributed wallet & social network)

        Ethereum (P2P infrastructure)

        MaidSafe (P2P infrastructure)

        Sandstorm.io (facilitates federated sw)

        Mailpile (encripted email)

        MediaGoblin (federated multimedia repository)

        OwnCloud (file hosting)


 (your case)



**Scholarships**

There are a few scholarships for potential participants who wish to attend the 
event. The scholarship will cover participant’s travel and subsistence cost, 
up to €400. If you are interested in applying for the scholarship, please 
email: lu.yang at surrey.ac.uk before 28 February 2015, with a paragraph 
stating why you think your FLOSS is relevant, plus a short bio. Priority will 
be given to those with low resources, innovative FLOSS within the topics of the 
call, and being a grassroot community.

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