«Computing history shows us that the “computer revolution” was never really meant to be a revolution in any social or political sense. People who were not seen as worthy of wielding power were deliberately excluded, even when they had the required technical skills. To a great extent, that process continues today. Now, as then, hierarchies are constructed through high tech to preserve powerful social and political structures.»
(from "How to Kill Your Tech Industry" by Marie Hick)
"Through efforts around the world, we use new information and communication technologies, especially mobile telephony, to facilitate well-being, community organization and personal and collective autonomy. Our approach combines regulatory activism and reform, development of decentralized telecommunications infrastructure, direct community involvement and participation, and critical engagement with new technologies."
"All computing networks have a political system which gains in importance as the userbase scales. This makes the design of the network a civic practice as much as it is technical. The developers must consider the political ramifications of their designs."
review of "The Known Citizen: A History of Privacy in Modern America" by Sarah Igo
"The midcentury fear that a subliminally designed newspaper advertisement could invade your headspace seems laughable compared to Facebook ads tailored to your browsing history, friends, and previous clicks."
"Where Cities Help Detain Immigrants - Contracts that rent local beds to ICE for immigrant detention are spread out across the country—including in liberal counties."
"From mass surveillance to the over-commercialization of the World Wide Web, the concept of a free and open Internet is continously threatened by corporate interests and over-reaching governments. Radical Networks is a festival and a conference, designed to foster critical discussions around these issues and to create opportunities to learn more about policy, DIY networking and the future of the Internet." https://radicalnetworks.org/
" The borders that separate one country from another are an artifact of politics and history: They have no material reality in themselves but were born of violence; their maintenance demands violence, increasingly so as the cycles of capitalism drive both mass migration and repression. "