[P2P-F] Fwd: openhere festival Dublin 28/06-01/07
Kevin Flanagan
kev.flanagan at gmail.com
Mon Jul 2 08:46:02 CEST 2012
Looks good.
Sorry I'm not going to be in the country for it.
Kevin F
On 12 June 2012 04:12, Kevin Carson <free.market.anticapitalist at gmail.com>wrote:
>
>
> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
> From: Rachel O' Dwyer <rachel.odwyer at gmail.com>
> Date: Mon, Jun 11, 2012 at 1:53 PM
> Subject: openhere festival Dublin 28/06-01/07
> To: building-a-distributed-decentralized-internet at googlegroups.com
>
>
> Hi there,
>
> I'm curating openhere, a 4 day festival in Dublin at the end of this month
> all about the digital commons.
> *Open*here www.openhere.data.ie will bring together a transdisciplinary
> community of
> critical theorists, engineers, artists, designers and industry
> professionals to expand debates surrounding the digital commons. Key
> points of discussion will include the conflictive spaces of the
> digital commons, digital policy, disruptive
> wireless practices, alternative spectrum ownership models,
> next-generation networks and the political economy of infrastructure.
>
> I'm really hoping you could forward this might be of interest to you and
> that you might take a moment to forward this information to your
> respective networks. I'm also attaching a flyer.
>
> Kind Regards,
>
> Rachel O'Dwyer
>
>
> [image: Inline image 1]
>
>
>
> OpenHere 28/06-01/07
> Where: Science Gallery and CTVR headquarters, Trinity College Dublin,
> Ireland
> When: 28th of June – 1st July 2012
> Admission: Events are free, but booking is recommended, & essential for
> workshops
> with limited capacity.
> More info: openhere.data.ie
>
>
> What does it mean to be open today?
>
> CTVR / The Telecommunications Research Centre, in collaboration with
> the Dublin Art and Technology Association (D.A.T.A) present Openhere,
> a free four day festival that addresses social, technological and
> cultural issues surrounding the notion of the digital commons.
>
> If we speak of ‘the commons’ today as a general phenomenon, this has
> much to do with the modes of production, consumption and distribution
> that have emerged over the last two decades around information and
> communication technologies. This period has seen a growing emphasis on
> the social and juridical implications of sharing in the online domain,
> where a range of nonmarket and non-proprietary activities such as open
> source software, remix cultures and commons-based peer-production have
> lead some to propose the advent of a ‘digital socialism’. However, as
> sharing and openness become the watchwords of the new corporation - as
> the commons is increasingly central to capitalism - such positions are
> no longer straightforward.
>
> Open Here will bring together a transdisciplinary community of
> critical theorists, engineers, artists, designers and industry
> professionals to expand debates surrounding the digital commons. Key
> points of discussion will include the conflictive spaces of the
> digital commons, tactical media, net-art, digital policy, disruptive
> wireless practices, alternative spectrum ownership models,
> next-generation networks and the political economy of infrastructure.
>
> This festival takes the form of talks, presentations, workshops,
> discussions and screenings. It will be held in The Science Gallery and
> in CTVR headquarters in Trinity College from June 28th to July 1st,
> 2012.
>
>
> Participants include: Amelia Andersdotter (SE), Michel Bauwens (BE),
> Ralph Borland, (ZA) Sarah Browne (IRL), Alexander Chemeris (RU),
> Florian Cramer (NE), CTVR (IRL), DATA (IRL), Linda Doyle (IRL),
> Fairwaves (RU), Jessica Foley (IRL), Tim Forde (IRL), Benjamin Gaulon
> (FR/IRL), Saoirse Higgins (IRL) Robert Horvitz (US), Dmytri Kleiner
> (UA/CA), Franco Iacomella (AR), Nicolas Maigret (FR), Rachel O’Dwyer
> (IRL), Julian Oliver (NZ), Nora O’Murchu (IRL) Jussi Parikka (FI), Tom
> Rondeau (US), Lourens Rozema (NL), Paul Sutton (IRL), Danja Vasiliev
> (RU), Martin Weiss (US), Harald Welte (DE), Mick Wilson and Thomas
> Wilson (IRL).
>
> Open Here is curated by Linda Doyle, Benjamin Gaulon and Rachel
> O’Dwyer and supported by ESOF2012, CTVR, & Science Gallery, Trinity
> College Dublin.
>
>
> All events are free but booking is recommended, especially for
> workshops with limited capacity. For more information and to book a
> place see www.openhere.data.ie.
>
>
> --
>
> www.interferencejournal.com
> www.data.ie
>
> CTVR
> Dunlop Oriel House
> Trinity College Dublin
> 01 8964243
> 085 7023779
>
>
>
> --
> Kevin Carson
> Karl Hess Chair in Social Theory, Research Associate
> Center for a Stateless Society http://c4ss.org
>
> "You have no authority that we are bound to respect" -- John Perry Barlow
> "We are legion. We never forgive. We never forget. Expect us" -- Anonymous
>
> Homebrew Industrial Revolution: A Low-Overhead Manifesto
> http://homebrewindustrialrevolution.wordpress.com
> Desktop Regulatory State http://desktopregulatorystate.wordpress.com
>
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