Global Contact Meetups: Difference between revisions

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In what ways is free culture a solid basis for integrating oneself well in the digital world?
In what ways is free culture a solid basis for integrating oneself well in the digital world?


* Despite its being listed last in the alphabet, chronologically this event will be the first to take place, thus providing initial input for the rest of the network.  
* Despite its being listed last in the alphabet, chronologically this event will be the first to take place, thus providing initial input for the rest of the network in Dresden, Karlsruhe, New York and Wellington.  


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Revision as of 06:16, 14 October 2011

To support and synergize work already being done online and offline, organizers of the Contact Summit are coordinating resources for various conversations and projects (distributed Global Contact Meetups) to become aware of each other so that a network will emerge with a life of its own. To be part of the network, nodes should

  • self-identify on this wiki page
  • describe your focus (project or affinity),
  • identify a contact person or project lead, and
  • explain the help you need and/or the resources you have to offer.
  • post a link to your Meetup Everywhere group


Remote Meetup groups

Germany, Berlin

Germany, Dresden (hashtag = #datenspuren)

  • Selected sessions of this event are to be blogged in English (see descriptions of selected sessions below the horizontal line) http://datenspuren.de/ will take place at the hackerspace c3d2 described in this free online book.

Germany, Karlsruhe

  • We are currently (8/18/2011) three individuals trying to spread the word about Contactcon and the Freedombox. We have access to some technical equipment in a meeting room at at the hackerspace Entropia described in this free online book.


New Zealand, Wellington

  • Retake the Net is an initiative connecting people with concrete projects to help keep the net free and open. We were inspired by the Contact Summit but have a special Kiwi-focus. More about us: http://retakethe.net/about/faq
  • We have a ~35 member meetup group who is getting together every 6 weeks or so to share updates on the projects: http://www.meetup.com/Contact/Wellington
  • On 29 October 2011 we'll hold the inaugural Retake the Net Barcamp in Wellington: http://wiki.retakethe.net
  • Our website: http://retakethe.net
  • Contact: sibylle AT retakethe.net, or on Twitter at @retakethenet

Switzerland, Yverdon (hashtag = #forumeculture)

  • Reporting in English by thomas AT thomasruddy.org from this French-language event on "Ethics on the Internet and Social Networks" featuring:
    • Anne Collier from USA (www.connectsafely.org)
    • Florence Devouard on Wikipedia images
    • Olivier Philippot on Green IT

The following is a report on two sessions, one on "ethical ISP contracts" and another one intended to be an interactive exploration of general topics like the ones hinted at in the questions listed four paragraphs below.

In the first session intended for SMEs the speaker, a lawyer and author of a chapter in the free PDF book on international FOSS law, gave negotiation advice derived from his extensive practice. Michel Jaccard, co-author of an article in this brand-new open-source law book available in free fulltext.

In the latter workshop there was a perceptible gap between the participants' dissatisfaction with Facebook and any awareness of the alternative distributed social networking under principles of user-centricity or even FOSS. Ironically these same participants then went into the auditorium to listen to the sophisticated and comparatively radical critique by Richard Stallman of proprietary software.

Thus, one can conclude that the organizers, who have impeccable FOSS credentials, had undertaken the job of giving the local public free access to the event to realize objectives of continuing education. These participants, however, as one must qualify the assessment, still have a long way to go before they could be said to have reached an understanding of FOSS principles, even though Stallman assumed they could follow the argumentation offered in his good French.

Organizers in Yverdon had posed the questions (here translated into English):

What are the bases for being able to use computer science with regard to principles of sustainable development, materials, networks and software – both individually and collectively?

How to use the Internet in a confident manner without having to fear viruses, plagiarism, abuse, spontaneity, cyber-harassment or other concrete risks?

Ethical points of reference and limits with Facebook, Twitter and other social networks?

What generic pedagogical scenarios are the most appropriate for getting the participants of a group involved in co-creation, as on Wikipedia?

In what ways is free culture a solid basis for integrating oneself well in the digital world?

  • Despite its being listed last in the alphabet, chronologically this event will be the first to take place, thus providing initial input for the rest of the network in Dresden, Karlsruhe, New York and Wellington.

Short descriptions of selected sessions in Dresden

1) As decentrality is very important in new Social Media services, OStatus and buddycloud will be presented.

2) Work on a PhD dissertation in the area of network covert channels and protocol engineering will be summarized.

3) In Dresden there are to be two sessions on hosting and how to avoid it: Firstly, Michiel from unhosted.org will present. Secondly, Benjamin Kellermann, an employee at the Chair for Data Protection and Data Security at the Dresden Polytechnic, will show how to make a user more self-sufficient from his provider and host. Calculations needed for cryptographic protocols can be done with JavaScript, which precludes any client-side installation (zero-footprint).

4) Malte Spitz, a 27-year-old politician with the 90 Alliance/ Greens, famous for having his day tracked by his mobile phone and published, will speak on data retention; a debate will follow.

5) Alexander Heidenreich will speak on Mesh-Networks, emailbox- Networks, Offline networking and Packet Radio.

6) There will be a demonstration of "how simple is to get into networks as an attacker and to read content".

7) A journalist will demonstrate the use of his CD published and updated in a major German computer magazine intended to make a user independent of any computer he may have to borrow. The speaker has an extensive German Website of advice on privacy.