ecopolis

life in transformation

Archive for the ‘Internet’ tag

Politics of online video

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Saturday, November 21, 2009
By Geert Lovink

In his presentation the Glasgow-based Simon Yuill took us back to the 1980s and the media activism back then: films and videos produced during the miners strike and other riots and actions. This activity in the late 1990s transforms in ?citizen journalism?. Yuill here used the example of the Cluetrain Manifesto (1999). The emphasis here is on distributed conversations. It is the RSS feed that becomes the organizing principle of distributed realtime news production. This tool can be used by anyone and is not own or controlled by states and corporations. With Toni Negri one could say that APIs are becoming ?constitutional machines?. Yuill calls for ?critical constitutions? in order to prevent the use of closed and proprietary platforms by activists. The was no ?twitter revolutions? that came out of street in Iran. It was mainly users overseas, in other countries, that caused this hype.

Elizabeth Losh started with a montage of Barack Obama?s YouTube performances. In the talk called ?Official Channels? she discussed the different trends that emerge. YouTube is more state-like, and national then we often might think. How is online video used to maintain the status quo? Online video is fully integrated in the White House media strategy. The media apparatus is often shown explicitly, which Losh is calling ?mediated transparency?. Obama is put in the role of the leader that explains. Obviously Obama is not the first US president to use media techniques. Liz mentioned elements from Bush, Reagan, Roosevelt, Kennedy, and so on.

How much ?change? do we really have? In the White House Obama has been removed from the computer. Liz was able to find only one picture in which Obama holds his encrypted top-secret Blackberry. Most often we see him on the phone. The realm of the computer is left to the female secretaries outside of the Oval Office. An irony of Obama?s online video policy is that most schools in the USA block YouTube, in order to Then Liz Losh addressed the issues of the White House? dependency on Google/YouTube. Most of you will know about the important role of Google?s CEO Eric Schmidt?s role as a senior political advisor of this administration (more related interview video footage on vectorsdev.usc.edu/nehvectors/losh.

Stephen Crocker from Newfoundland, Canada, started with 1960s film footage of Fogo Island. The question then was not so much to represent people?s lives but how to ?create people?. How to overcome the problem of ?remoteness?? One of the solutions at the time was the resettlements of thousands of people to larger growth centres. The problem was defined as one of communication, ?information poverty? as it was called. Information was supposed to tell us something about human nature, and was associated by Marshall McLuhan and others as ?metaphysics?. For remote communities the origin of a film remained mysterious. The National Film Board had the task to change this. ?The
Things I Cannot Change? from 1967 for the first time explained the situation of poverty to a wider audience. From now on films did not have to be about the poor, but had to involve them, and had to be produced by them. Films about social change were screened to the people themselves. These days there is no collective public space anymore. What online video tools do is enable self-reflection. It is confessional and self-referential amateur material. Video sharing is addressed to anyone but no one in particular. With Lacan we could say that these images are both inadequate and compelling. Intimacy is
created, and not destroyed, by bureaucratic machines. How can we be with others in this new world of remoteness and loneliness? The ways of being together are different these days. The way we relate to
others is through the image.

via videovortex Digest, Vol 35, Issue 9.

Written by Luca

November 26th, 2009 at 3:59 pm

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Twitter Cops

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Written by Luca

July 9th, 2009 at 12:08 pm

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IRAN: a nation of bloggers

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Written by Luca

June 15th, 2009 at 5:54 pm

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It’s a political sensation

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With more than seven percent of the vote Sweden’s Pirate Party became the latest party to rock the political establishment in an EU Parliament election.

“It’s a political sensation,” concluded party leader Rick Falkvinge.

Falkvinge claimed the success signalled a generation shift in Brussels.

“This means that we can start work to secure citizens’ rights, something that we have fought for for three and a half years. This is a reminder to the political old guard that if they take money from the pockets of lobbyists then they will lose their jobs,” he told news agency TT.

The election result means that Christian Engström from Nacka in Stockholm will take his seat in the EU parliament in the autumn. He proposed several reasons to explain the sensational success of the party.

“We have spoken about issues that interest people, for example personal integrity. We have also raised issues that are actually EU matters. A third reason is that we have a movement of activists with people from across the country helping out.”

With the demise of the June List, who lost their parliamentary seats in the election, the challenge for the Pirate Party is now how to ensure that the same does not happen to them.

“The June List’s problem was that they had no clear areas in which they could make a telling difference. We have. The first thing that will happen in the the new EU parliament is the third reading of the telecom reform package. That is an issue that is completely ours,” Rick Falkvinge said.

via The Local

Written by Luca

June 9th, 2009 at 4:01 pm

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This night I’ve been killed by Google

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This night I’ve been killed by Google. When I woke up, I tried to enter my Google Account as usual, but what I got was only a short message:

«Sorry, your account has been disabled.»

“This fucking password!”, I thought, and I retyped it. Same message. At the end of it there was a question mark with a link. I clicked on it, and this is what I read:

«If you’ve been redirected to this page from the sign in page, it means that access to your Google Account has been disabled.

In most cases, accounts are disabled because of a perceived violation of either the Google Terms of Service or product-specific Terms of Service.

Google reserves the right to:

* Suspend a Google Account from using a particular product or the entire Google Accounts system if the Terms of Service or product-specific policies are violated.
* Terminate your account at any time, for any reason, with or without notice.

If your Google Account has been disabled, please review the relevant Terms of Service before attempting to create another account. For guidelines on a specific Google product, please visit the product homepage for a link to its Terms of Service.

If you believe your account has been disabled in error, please contact us so that we can assist you.»

“Terminate your account at any time, for any reason, with or without notice”? Wow! If God exists, probably he is more democratic than Google. But, well, of course it’s a mistake. So, let’s fill the form.

I did it, and this is what I got:

«Thanks for contacting our Google Accounts team. Please note that we’ll only reply if we have additional information to share about your disabled account.»

I take a cigarette. “Hope is a good breakfast but a bad supper”, I think. Tons of emails, two blogs, about one hundred images, videos, documents, web pages, presentations, two years of work lost for… what? Because I believed in a fallible God.

I don’t believe in God, actually. That’s why I always have to understand what happens to my life. So, I start making some research. Google invites you to put your whole hard disk online. If you have a Google account, you can check your email, but you can also run one or more blogs. Picasa lets you share your pictures, and since Google bought Youtube, you can create and access a Youtube channel with the same username and password. Google Documents is a kind of Microsoft Office. You can create and share word documents, spreadsheets, Power Point presentations, databases. It’s far but easy to fascinate me, but if I find something useful, I use it. So, I run two blogs, I have a Picasa account, a Youtube channel, and several documents online – most of them being material I use for teaching, and that I share with my students. All under the same Google Account.

So, let’s check if everything is working. My email doesn’t work anymore. R.I.P. My blogs are still online, but I don’t have the right to edit, delete or update them anymore. Actually, I’m not the owner of these sites anymore. They are still there, but they aren’t mine – they belong to Google. I realize right now that they always did. As for my Youtube videos and my documents, the same as above: only Google can decide if my students can go on studying what I teach. Finally, I look for my Picasa channel: it’s gone.

“You asshole!”, you may say. “You are boring us with your fucking story, and it ends up that you uploaded some sex images or copyrighted material.” I didn’t. What I put on my Picasa account are just my photos: some holiday pictures (as private albums, accessible only to me – and Google of course) and some pics related to the exhibitions I organized up to now (as public albums). I go through the terms of agreement about one hundred times, and what I understand is that I didn’t violate any rule. Maybe the following one?

«4.5 You acknowledge and agree that while Google may not currently have set a fixed upper limit on the number of transmissions you may send or receive through the Services or on the amount of storage space used for the provision of any Service, such fixed upper limits may be set by Google at any time, at Google’s discretion.»

I don’t know how many megabytes I used – unlike for Flickr, there were no upper limits for Picasa till yesterday. Maybe I used too much disk space and they decided to kick me out?

I don’t know. Probably, I’ll never know. Since this morning, I wrote about 10 emails to Google, but I got no answer. I can just look back to my dead account and wonder: is it dead because God decided to kill it or because it violated some stupid rule?

Of course, I will migrate on other platforms. I’ll do even if my Google Account comes back from hell. Nothing is really lost, besides my time. But don’t forget: if it happened to me, it can happen to anybody, at any time, everywhere. Everything is there, in the contract you signed with God – or it was the Devil?:

«4.3 As part of this continuing innovation, you acknowledge and agree that Google may stop (permanently or temporarily) providing the Services (or any features within the Services) to you or to users generally at Google’s sole discretion, without prior notice to you.

4.4 You acknowledge and agree that if Google disables access to your account, you may be prevented from accessing the Services, your account details or any files or other content which is contained in your account.»

by Domenico Quaranta.

Written by Luca

June 7th, 2009 at 9:24 pm

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The Internet Pavilion at the Venice Biennale

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THE INTERNET PAVILION
03 June – 22 November 2009

Started by Miltos Manetas in 2009
Curator – Jan Aman
Producer – Art Production Fund

53rd International Art Exhibition -
La Biennale di Venezia
Collateral Events

Location: The Internet.

http://www.PadiglioneInternet.com

http://www.Biennale.net

General quarters: S.A.L.E, Magazzini del Sale.
Design and Propaganda – M/M (Paris)
Music – Mark Tranmer (GNAC), Howie B.
Architecture – Christian Wassmann
Film – Sonja Kroop
Web Design – Digital Club, London.

Opening on June 03, at 12 PM, at the physical outlet of the project, S.A.L.E Magazzini del Sale, Vaporetto Zattere.

An Internet Pavilion for the 53rd International Art Exhibition – La Biennale di Venezia 2009.

The largest pavilion ever!

At the 53rd Venice Biennial, a completely new pavilion will be presented – the Internet Pavilion. With the theme for this year’s biennial, “Making Worlds”, it is only logical that the Internet is represented, for the first time, by a pavilion of its own. The Internet is a new part of our world that has never been represented in Venice. It is a different territory from the existing pavilions. The Internet is not defined by physical or geographical borders, nationalities, or a specific language. The Net is still new and developed with such speed that its legislation, as well as its impact on our lives, is under constant redefinition. The Internet is transforming our lives and senses; it is transforming the way we behave, communicate, share information and develop ideas. As this is what we often say art does, it is of special interest to present the Internet Pavilion at the Venice Biennial.

The Pavilion is composed by two websites:

- PadiglioneInternet.com, hosts a collaboration by Miltos Manetas and Rafael Rozendaal. It will open on June 03 and similar to the physical buildings of the Biennial, it will close down in November.

- Biennale.net, holds the discussion and the history of the project and at the same time, it is the “entrance” for a number of collateral exhibitions and projects.

Among them:

- “New Wave”, an online show with a physical component featuring Petra Cortright (US), Martijn Hendriks (NE), Harm Van den Dorpel (HO), Sinem Erkas (UK), Elna Frederick (US), Parker Ito (US), Oliver Laric (AU), Guthrie Lonergan (US) and Pascual Sisto (ES/US).

- The WikepediaArt Embassy hosted by Scott Kildall(US) and Nathaniel Stern (US)

- The latest work by Aleksandra Domanovic (SE)

- An online show with Chinese Internet artists. (it will open later this Summer)

- The second updated edition of “Random Rules”: A Chanel of Artists’ selections from YouTube curated by Marina Fokidis (it will open later this fall)

- “PAGES” by Christian Wassmann. A piece of architecture that turns Internet into space and space into Internet. Mr. Wassmann will build “PAGES”- which he brought it with him in pieces from NY-at S.A.L.E on June 03

A video that explains Mr. Wassmann mental process can be found at http://padiglioneinternet.com/architecture

- “Network of Love”, a performance by AIDS-3D (US) on June 03 at 12 AM at S.A.L.E

-The “Book of Si” by Colin Payne and Miltos Manetas. A modern “Book of Sand” in the tradition of Borges where a webpage can be found only once and never again.

During the preparation of the Internet Pavilion a number of stakeholders from the various ranks of the Internet industry has been contacted, commercial as well as non-commercial. This is an investigation of the fact the digital territory is introduced at the Venice Biennial for the very first time.

These might operate independently, outside of the “official” terrain of the Venice Biennial and the Padiglione Internet, creating a contrast between cultural elite and the different creative powers of the Net. Between others we highlight here the presence of Tiscali which will offering free WiFi via the visitors of Biennale.net and the PirateBay.org and their project Embassy of Piracy, also hosted by S.A.L.E.S

The Internet Pavilion is a project initiated by the Greek born, London based artist Miltos Manetas, curated by Jan Aman and produced by Art Production Fund.

Press Events:
Venice, 3-4 June, To be announced via Biennale.net

For more information, please contact:
Pelle Strandberg at Strandberg & Haage
and Chloé Nelkin at Exposure, London
(info@theinternetpavilion.com)
and Chiara Lunardelli at Light-Box.it
(chiara.lunardelli@light-box.it)

Thanks to:
- Charles de Jonghe d’Ardoye/think.21 for producing the AIDS-3D performance.
- the Media Machine team for the Book of Ci:
Colin Payne – Creative Director
Luigi Tommaseo – Software Construction Paul Marsh and James McKeown – Physical Design
Pino – Hardware Deconstruction

Thanks to

Rob Auten, Giampaolo Abbondio, Riccardo Lisi, Filipa Ramos, Marco Baravalle and all our friends at S.A.L.E at Light-box.it and at TPB

Dedicated to

Dr. Leonard Kleinrock who started it all in 1969.

Written by Luca

June 1st, 2009 at 4:09 pm

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Google Wave

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Google Wave is a new online communication and collaboration tool.

Written by Luca

May 29th, 2009 at 4:40 pm

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First try of Wolfram Alpha

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Seems a lot of people is trying it :)

and here’s the Wolfram|Alpha launch webcast, into the main control room.


Watch live video from Wolfram|Alpha on Justin.tv

Written by Luca

May 16th, 2009 at 7:34 pm

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