User:Pedro Sá Couto/Graduate Research Seminar Trim 5/Chapter 01 06022020

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From the XPUB PAD
https://pad.xpub.nl/p/psc_chapter_01_03

Part 1: Bridging between Surveillance and Publishing


Point A: Bypassing surveillance
Argument 1 : Alternative publishing channels became fundamental to engage locally, spread information and freely publish thoughts
Parallel publishing streams
Overcoming repressive power structures with publishing
Impact of analogue technology shaping these parallel streams
Zine Culture and self-published media
Argument 2 : Contrasting fast paced spaces
Spreading is now viral.
Political statements are online.
Memes as a tool to free speech
Memes as a virus, upfront and hidden messages


Point B: Analyzing strategies that enable digital access
Argument 1 : Archives and libraries provide spaces to access sensitive media
From shadow libraries to .onion libraries, how their structure influences who gets to access them.
Preserving sensitive information and its' digital memory, how do archives document and organize perishable material?
Infrastructures and counter-strategies demanded to publish and to cease control over knowledge
Research focus
Linking how printed media was used to challenge repressive power structures and what communities still use alternative publishing channels. What are the efforts to preserve these kinds of media, and how are they digitally available?
Summary
In this chapter, I will start by creating a link with the introduction, where I delved into governmental surveillance and Digital authoritarianism. From understanding how the internet is a valuable asset to be controlled and to control the flow of information, I will compare it to the press control in authoritarian regimes. This sets as a base ground from where I will explore how printed media played a vital role in the past to tackle oppressive regimes and its use to bypass censorship. I will also point out some strategies that were used to share different media within this context.
With the introduction of technology as the mimeograph or the photocopier, communities found a way to share printed publications faster, more accurately, and cheaper. I will explore what these developments meant to these communities and how they are compared with the use of VPNs and browser extensions to bypass surveillance nowadays. The introduction of the internet shaped this discourse differently, making it easier, faster and viral while opening a space where the propagation of files and political ideas started to occur more quickly and within a bigger audience.
I will finish this first chapter by delving into some strategies implemented in digital archives and libraries, providing spaces to access media that come from alternative channels. It is essential to understand what efforts have already been put in place to archive illegal and extra-legal documents. While creating these archives, strategies are set to limit who accesses them and how technology plays a political role within them. What is the current impact of these? What are its positions while preserving the digital memory of sensitive information?