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söndag 26 februari 2012

We, the Web Kids...

We, the Web Kids is a manifesto written by Piotr Czerski (b. 1981-) who is a Polish poet, author, and founder of the band Towary Zastępcze (Replacement Goods), for whom he writes lyrics.
He is a philosophy student and has a degree in computer science.


The original text has been translated into English by: Marta Szreder.


"There is probably no other word that would be as overused in the media discourse as ‘generation’. I once tried to count the ‘generations’ that have been proclaimed in the past ten years, since the well-known article about the so-called ‘Generation Nothing’; I believe there were as many as twelve. They all had one thing in common: they only existed on paper. Reality never provided us with a single tangible, meaningful, unforgettable impulse, the common experience of which would forever distinguish us from the previous generations. We had been looking for it, but instead the groundbreaking change came unnoticed, along with cable TV, mobile phones, and, most of all, Internet access. It is only today that we can fully comprehend how much has changed during the past fifteen years.

We, the Web kids; we, who have grown up with the Internet and on the Internet, are a generation who meet the criteria for the term in a somewhat subversive way. We did not experience an impulse from reality, but rather a metamorphosis of the reality itself. What unites us is not a common, limited cultural context, but the belief that the context is self-defined and an effect of free choice.

Writing this, I am aware that I am abusing the pronoun ‘we’, as our ‘we’ is fluctuating, discontinuous, blurred, according to old categories: temporary. When I say ‘we’, it means ‘many of us’ or ‘some of us’. When I say ‘we are’, it means ‘we often are’. I say ‘we’ only so as to be able to talk about us at all.

1. We grew up with the Internet and on the Internet. This is what makes us different; this is what makes the crucial, although surprising from your point of view, difference: we do not ‘surf’ and the internet to us is not a ‘place’ or ‘virtual space’. The Internet to us is not something external to reality but a part of it: an invisible yet constantly present layer intertwined with the physical environment. We do not use the Internet, we live on the Internet and along it. If we were to tell our bildnungsroman to you, the analog, we could say there was a natural Internet aspect to every single experience that has shaped us. We made friends and enemies online, we prepared cribs for tests online, we planned parties and studying sessions online, we fell in love and broke up online. The Web to us is not a technology which we had to learn and which we managed to get a grip of. The Web is a process, happening continuously and continuously transforming before our eyes; with us and through us. Technologies appear and then dissolve in the peripheries, websites are built, they bloom and then pass away, but the Web continues, because we are the Web; we, communicating with one another in a way that comes naturally to us, more intense and more efficient than ever before in the history of mankind.

Brought up on the Web we think differently. The ability to find information is to us something as basic, as the ability to find a railway station or a post office in an unknown city is to you. When we want to know something - the first symptoms of chickenpox, the reasons behind the sinking of ‘Estonia’, or whether the water bill is not suspiciously high - we take measures with the certainty of a driver in a SatNav-equipped car. We know that we are going to find the information we need in a lot of places, we know how to get to those places, we know how to assess their credibility. We have learned to accept that instead of one answer we find many different ones, and out of these we can abstract the most likely version, disregarding the ones which do not seem credible. We select, we filter, we remember, and we are ready to swap the learned information for a new, better one, when it comes along.

To us, the Web is a sort of shared external memory. We do not have to remember unnecessary details: dates, sums, formulas, clauses, street names, detailed definitions. It is enough for us to have an abstract, the essence that is needed to process the information and relate it to others. Should we need the details, we can look them up within seconds. Similarly, we do not have to be experts in everything, because we know where to find people who specialise in what we ourselves do not know, and whom we can trust. People who will share their expertise with us not for profit, but because of our shared belief that information exists in motion, that it wants to be free, that we all benefit from the exchange of information. Every day: studying, working, solving everyday issues, pursuing interests. We know how to compete and we like to do it, but our competition, our desire to be different, is built on knowledge, on the ability to interpret and process information, and not on monopolising it.

2. Participating in cultural life is not something out of ordinary to us: global culture is the fundamental building block of our identity, more important for defining ourselves than traditions, historical narratives, social status, ancestry, or even the language that we use. From the ocean of cultural events we pick the ones that suit us the most; we interact with them, we review them, we save our reviews on websites created for that purpose, which also give us suggestions of other albums, films or games that we might like. Some films, series or videos we watch together with colleagues or with friends from around the world; our appreciation of some is only shared by a small group of people that perhaps we will never meet face to face. This is why we feel that culture is becoming simultaneously global and individual. This is why we need free access to it.

This does not mean that we demand that all products of culture be available to us without charge, although when we create something, we usually just give it back for circulation. We understand that, despite the increasing accessibility of technologies which make the quality of movie or sound files so far reserved for professionals available to everyone, creativity requires effort and investment. We are prepared to pay, but the giant commission that distributors ask for seems to us to be obviously overestimated. Why should we pay for the distribution of information that can be easily and perfectly copied without any loss of the original quality? If we are only getting the information alone, we want the price to be proportional to it. We are willing to pay more, but then we expect to receive some added value: an interesting packaging, a gadget, a higher quality, the option of watching here and now, without waiting for the file to download. We are capable of showing appreciation and we do want to reward the artist (since money stopped being paper notes and became a string of numbers on the screen, paying has become a somewhat symbolic act of exchange that is supposed to benefit both parties), but the sales goals of corporations are of no interest to us whatsoever. It is not our fault that their business has ceased to make sense in its traditional form, and that instead of accepting the challenge and trying to reach us with something more than we can get for free they have decided to defend their obsolete ways.

One more thing: we do not want to pay for our memories. The films that remind us of our childhood, the music that accompanied us ten years ago: in the external memory network these are simply memories. Remembering them, exchanging them, and developing them is to us something as natural as the memory of ‘Casablanca’ is to you. We find online the films that we watched as children and we show them to our children, just as you told us the story about the Little Red Riding Hood or Goldilocks. Can you imagine that someone could accuse you of breaking the law in this way? We cannot, either.

3. We are used to our bills being paid automatically, as long as our account balance allows for it; we know that starting a bank account or changing the mobile network is just the question of filling in a single form online and signing an agreement delivered by a courier; that even a trip to the other side of Europe with a short sightseeing of another city on the way can be organised in two hours. Consequently, being the users of the state, we are increasingly annoyed by its archaic interface. We do not understand why tax act takes several forms to complete, the main of which has more than a hundred questions. We do not understand why we are required to formally confirm moving out of one permanent address to move in to another, as if councils could not communicate with each other without our intervention (not to mention that the necessity to have a permanent address is itself absurd enough.)

There is not a trace in us of that humble acceptance displayed by our parents, who were convinced that administrative issues were of utmost importance and who considered interaction with the state as something to be celebrated. We do not feel that respect, rooted in the distance between the lonely citizen and the majestic heights where the ruling class reside, barely visible through the clouds. Our view of the social structure is different from yours: society is a network, not a hierarchy. We are used to being able to start a dialogue with anyone, be it a professor or a pop star, and we do not need any special qualifications related to social status. The success of the interaction depends solely on whether the content of our message will be regarded as important and worthy of reply. And if, thanks to cooperation, continuous dispute, defending our arguments against critique, we have a feeling that our opinions on many matters are simply better, why would we not expect a serious dialogue with the government?

We do not feel a religious respect for ‘institutions of democracy’ in their current form, we do not believe in their axiomatic role, as do those who see ‘institutions of democracy’ as a monument for and by themselves. We do not need monuments. We need a system that will live up to our expectations, a system that is transparent and proficient. And we have learned that change is possible: that every uncomfortable system can be replaced and is replaced by a new one, one that is more efficient, better suited to our needs, giving more opportunities.

What we value the most is freedom: freedom of speech, freedom of access to information and to culture. We feel that it is thanks to freedom that the Web is what it is, and that it is our duty to protect that freedom. We owe that to next generations, just as much as we owe to protect the environment.

Perhaps we have not yet given it a name, perhaps we are not yet fully aware of it, but I guess what we want is real, genuine democracy. Democracy that, perhaps, is more than is dreamt of in your journalism."
~Piotr Czerski

____________________________________________________

Originally published on February 11, 2012, in a local Polish newspaper "The Baltic Daily".
The manifesto has also been re-published in German on Zeitonline.
You can find more translations here.
The Swedish version was translated by: Emma Marie Andersson, Jan Lindgren, Christer Jansson, Emil Isberg and Rick Falkvinge.

This work was released under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License. 

söndag 29 januari 2012

Stoppa ACTA!


I kölvattnet av den massiva motreaktionen som fick USAs kongress att backa och "tills vidare" lägga SOPA på is så har nu uppmärksamheten riktats mot europas egna motsvarighet, ACTA-avtalet.

Den har funnits med oss ett tag men byråkraterna har ändå under en tid lyckats göra det mesta bakom stängda dörrar. Nu är dock all info kring ACTA offentliggjord men jag vill ändå påstå att det är tack vare reaktionerna kring SOPA som satt större fokus på just ACTA, tur i oturen helt enkelt. Och inte en dag för tidigt!

Vad är ACTA då och hur påverkas du?
Watch!




Du kan och bör agera emot detta. Hur? Besök gärna: Avazz.org - ACTA: The new threat to the net (med 1 miljon påskrifter, and counting) och Black March. Men läs även Opassande.se för att se hur just du kan göra en insats.


Läs även:
HAX: Rapporter från Bryssel - Nästa hot mot internet: ACTA
Christian Engström, Pirate MEP - Polish Minister Telling Lies to Get ACTA Signed 
ACTA-bloggen - ACTA-avtalet är underskrivet – handlingen i sig är dock föga betydelsefull
LaQuadrature.net - ACTA rapporteur (Kader Arif, Socialist MEP France) denounces ACTA masquerade
Christian Engström, Pirate MEP - ACTA: Nu har det blivit åka av
Piratpartiet: Fördömer svensk underskrift av Acta-avtalet
Falkvinge.net - The Only Thing You Need to Know About ACTA
Henrik Alexandersson - ACTA-avtalet i detalj

I media:
Nyheter24 - Acta: Kravaller i Polen - men i Sverige är det locket på
DN - Sverige skrev under Acta-avtalet
Aftonbladet - Acta-avtalet vållar protester i Europa 
SR.se - Röster om ACTA

onsdag 18 januari 2012

Global internet "Black Out" day!


Event though SOPA is temporarily crippled it is not yet dead, and PIPA (the lesser of two evils?) is still going strong. So the fight against internet censorship i all but over... it has just begun.

In fact today Wednesday January 18th will be a global internet "Black Out" day, basically an internet strike. This in protest againt SOPA and PIPA.

Wikipedia, Reddit, Mozilla, WordPress, BoingBoing, and many others will shut down their sites for different lengths of time (Wikipedia a full 24 hours) in protest today.

Even Google are doing their part and although they will not go dark today they will however be linking to anti-SOPA/PIPA information that will be seen by millions of users worldwide.

Even political parties are taking a stand....

Today the Swedish Pirate Party and It´s youth league, Young Pirates join in on the worldwide web strike.

"Today, Wednesday January 18th, a significant proportion of the Internet is on strike against the proposed U.S. censorship laws SOPA/PIPA. True adding a black screen or otherwise censoring their websites organizations, companies and individuals are taking part in this global “Black Out”.

Legislative packages SOPA/PIPA opens for the possibility that at any time and without a proper legal process shut down sites that are suspected of copyright infringement.

- Even today, the copyright industry is acting extremely aggressively and uses accusations of copyright infringement as a means to silence people and organizations, says Anna Troberg, leader of the Swedish Pirate Party. With the support of the SOPA/PIPA it would be an even greater threat to our right to freedom of expression, fundamental rule of law and democracy.

- It is extremely important to show how much of what we all take for granted in our every day life would be lost if SOPA/PIPA legislation goes through, says Troberg. Internet is not copyright industry's private youth center, which they can lock the door to when they feel like it. The Internet is a democratic tool that belongs to us all.

SOPA/PIPA and other similar legislation are a real threat to individuals' opportunities to gain a voice in public debate. The ability for individual users to enrich the internet’s waste ecosystem would suffer greatly as these laws in principle would prevent user-generated material, such as comments, twitter and other social media.

- We hope that the strike will cause the politicians to become aware of how great off impact this kind of repressive legislation may have on the society we have built on and around the internet, says Troberg. Today, anyone who has a blog or website can make a real difference for our common future. I hope that as many as possible take the chance."
To read the pressrelease in Swedish.

Our sister parties in Australia, New Zealand, Canada, the United Kingdom and Germany are also joining in on the protest against SOPA/PIPA!




Related:
Newsmill - Därför stänger vi ner Wikipedia
SvD Ledarblogg - SOPA möter hårt motstånd
Anne-Marie Eklund-Löwinder .SE - SOPA är död – PIPA lever?
Henrik Alexandersson - Onsdag: Strejk på internet
Full Mental Straightjacket - Tänk om Internet inte fanns?
Hultins tankegång - Far åt PIPA:n SOPA

Swedish media:
SvD | Metro | Aftonbladet

International media:
BBC | The Washington Post | CNN | TIME | Global Voices | The Guardian

fredag 18 november 2011

EU joins in on SOPA criticism



"What a world we live in... when foreign countries are speaking out publicly against American censorship. For a country whose identity has been built around its strong support of the First Amendment and free speech rights, to reach the level where others are condemning our own failings on free speech is really sad. The EU Parliament has adopted, "by a large majority," a statement warning the US to refrain "from unilateral measures to revoke IP addresses or domain names" due to the "need to protect the integrity of the global internet and freedom of communications."

EU Adopts Resolution Against US Domain Seizures

"The European Parliament has adopted a resolution which criticizes domain name seizures of “infringing” websites by US authorities. According to the resolution these measures need to be countered as they endanger “the integrity of the global internet and freedom of communication.” With this stance the European Parliament joins an ever-growing list of opposition to the Stop Online Piracy Act."


"Responding to an intervention by EDRi at a hearing recently on attacks against computer systems, the European Parliament today adopted, by a large majority, a resolution on the upcoming EU/US summit stressing “the need to protect the integrity of the global internet and freedom of communication by refraining from unilateral measures to revoke IP addresses or domain names.” 

With legislative proposals such as the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA) and the PROTECT IP Act claiming worldwide jurisdiction for domain names and IP addresses. The definitions in SOPA are so broad that, ultimately, it could be interpreted in a way that would mean that no online resource in the global Internet would be outside US jurisdiction." 

On 15 November, over 60 civil and human rights organizations wrote a letter to Congress (co-signed by EDRi,  Access, the Association for Progressive Communications, Reporters Without Borders, Center for Technology and Society at FGV in Brazi and many more) urging the rejection of SOPA. The letter argues that the Act "is as unacceptable to the international community as it would be if a foreign country were to impose similar measures on the United States." 

The Swedish Pirate Party also condemns the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA) and the PROTECT IP Act (PIPA) (scroll down for english translation) 

Quote from the parties press release:

"- It is quite clear that the copyright industry will stop at nothing in its pursuit of file sharers, says Anna Troberg, leader of the Swedish Pirate Party. It is therefore important that lawmakers take their responsibilities and set clear boundaries for them. It is not reasonable that an industry of pure self-interest are allowed to dismantle the fundamental rights that people have fought for centuries to get.

The bills SOPA and PIPA abolishes both the rule of law and presumption of innocence. Under the proposals, it is enough that someone in the copyright industries believe that a site breaks their monopoly, in order to be able to shut down the site from the net and cut off all their income. A link on the site that is posted by a single user is enough."


Also check out the numbers and screenshots from

torsdag 17 november 2011

More voices against SOPA and PIPA!


Via boingboing.net:

"The undersigned Internet and technology companies write to express our concern with legislative measures that have been introduced in the United States Senate and United States House of Representatives, S. 968 (the “PROTECT IP Act”) and H.R. 3261 (the “Stop Online Piracy Act”)."

AOL Inc.
eBay Inc. 
Facebook Inc. 
Google Inc. 
LinkedIn Corporation 
Mozilla Corp. 
Twitter, Inc. 
Yahoo! Inc. 
Zynga Game Network  


Congressional SOPA hearings: no opponents of the bill allowed
Irony Alert!
"The House is holding hearings on sweeping Internet censorship legislation this week -- and it's censoring the opposition! The bill is backed by Hollywood, Big Pharma, and the Chamber of Commerce, and all of them are going to get to testify at the hearing.

But the bill's opponents -- tech companies, free speech and human rights activists, and hundreds of thousands of Internet users -- won't have a voice"


From Techdirt.com:
"With the hearings this morning (more on that later), there were also more statements publicly made against SOPA this morning. Two key ones are, unfortunately, behind Politico's paywall, so I can't link or quote too much. The first, by former Homeland Security Assistant Secretary and former NSA General Counsel, Stewart Baker, was raised a few times during the hearings. Baker focused on the problems of SOPA and PROTECT IP and their impact on online security. He notes that the DNS blocking portions of both bills "run directly counter" to the government's cybersecurity efforts:
Because “block and redirect” is exactly what crooks are doing today to bank customers. If the bills become law, the security system won’t be able to tell the difference between sites that have been blocked by law and those that have been sabotaged by hackers. Indeed, it isn’t hard to imagine crooks redirecting users to sites that say, “You were redirected here because the site you asked for has violated copyright,” while at the same time planting malware on the user’s computer.
There's much more in the article as well, noting that these laws won't actually help Hollywood and will "leave the rest of us hurting and poorer for years." The really tragic part of the hearing is that when all of the panelists were asked about Baker's statement, every single one of them admitted that they didn't understand the technology enough to really comment. The best that the MPAA's Michael O'Leary could blurt out was that he "didn't agree."


"Today, we’re joining pretty much every major internet and technology company in voicing our opposition to the PIPA (PROTECT IP Act) and SOPA (Stop Online Piracy Act) legislation before the House and Senate. For those who have never heard of these two acts, they are proposals before Congress that give incredibly aggressive censorship controls to our government (acting on behalf of rights holders).

The way copyright is currently protected on the web in the U.S.A. was established by the DMCA (Digital Millenium Copyright Act). The DMCA created the principle of ‘safe harbor’ for ‘service providers’ (like Google, Facebook, Twitter, or foursquare). What ‘safe harbor’ means is that a site with content from its users doesn’t have to censor everything that is posted, so long as it acts in good faith to remove infringing content and links as they’re alerted to them. Openness coupled with responsibility.

The PIPA and SOPA proposals turn that model on its head, restricting openness and imposing preemptive censorship. If a couple of rogue links are found in our Tips, PIPA and SOPA could allow the government to shut foursquare down. So, either we censor all our users (and sites like Google, Facebook, and Twitter do the same) or risk being shut down by the government."

"Tumblr, Firefox and Reddit drew broad black lines on their websites Wednesday to protest a proposed U.S. law that Internet companies have dubbed “censorship” and entertainment companies “piracy protection.”

Their symbolic design tweaks coincide with what several open Internet advocacy organizations have declared American Censorship Day — a day some of the Internet’s biggest web companies have dedicated to encouraging users to speak out against the Stop Online Piracy Act (called the Protect IP Act in the Senate)."

More to come....

onsdag 16 november 2011

The end of a free internet?





PROTECT IP Act Breaks The Internet from Fight for the Future on Vimeo.


"Google knows it. Viacom knows it. The Chamber of Commerce knows it. Internet democracy groups know it. BoingBoing knows it. But, the Internet hasn't been told yet -- we're going to get blown away by the end of the year. The worst bill in Internet history is about to become law. Law is very real here in the United States and legal language is often different than stated intentions -- this law would give government and corporations the power to block sites like BoingBoing over infringing links on at least one webpage posted by their users. Believe the EFF, Public Knowledge, Google when they say this bill is about much more than copyright, it's about the Internet and free speech everywhere."


"Everyone, the entire Internet community needs to stand together if we don't want to see this bill actually become law. Internet and democracy groups are planning an Internet-wide day of protest called American Censorship Day on Wednesday, November 16th for the day Congress holds a hearing on these bills to create the first American Internet censorship system. Every single person with a website can join and needs to.

Boing Boing, Grooveshark, Free Software Foundation, The Electronic Frontier Foundation, Public Knowledge, Demand Progress, Open Congress/PPF, TechDirt, Fight for the Future and dozens of other sites have created this day to ask you to join them to stop S. 978 and HR 3261, as hard as you can. Write them, protest, call them, protest, support your favorite sites, protest, sign a letter, block out your site, protest. "

Andra som bloggat: Opassande, HAX, Juristens Funderingar, Beelzebjörn

onsdag 9 november 2011

Hope and unity!

One of the most inspirational speeches in recorded history was given by a comedian by the name of Charlie Chaplin.
Just listen to the words...  I feel this is more true now than ever.
But is also installs a certain degree of hope.