Calendars:Networked Media Calendar/Networked Media Calendar/19-03-2013 -Event 3: Difference between revisions

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De(centralized) practice


An afternoon of short presentations and discussion with Diana McCarthy, Reni Hofmueller, Seda Guerses and Femke Snelting.


*'''12:00 - 14:00''' Lunch with presentations by PZI students [more about this later, but think short 5-7 minutes presentations]
These are for BA students coming to town with Seda Guerses, Femke Snelting, Nicolas Maleve, Diana McCarthy and Reni Hofmueller


*'''14:00 - 15:00''' Seda Guerses on the idea of 'transparency'
Diana, Reni, Femke and Seda are part of communities that envision new ways of collaboration or practice using networks. Part of these pursuits entails building alternative tools and reconfiguring networks using open and decentralized solutions, and nurturing a sharp culture of critique of centralized or proprietary services.


*'''15:00 - 18:00''' Seminar
In this line of practice, dichotomous thinking may prevail. We may at times even use it to fuel our political/creative/alternative projects e.g., free vs. proprietary in the 90s, and centralized vs. distributed in the age of social media.


Yet, these dichotomies may become passé and even turn unproductive. How can we venture into undoing these dichotomies in order to take a critical look at our work, rethink and re-present its remarkable history, and identify the potentials of our "alternative networks" beyond these dichotomies?


*'''Seda Guerses''' is a researcher working in the group COSIC/ESAT at the Department of Electrical Engineering in K. U. Leuven, Belgium. She is interested in the topics of privacy technologies, participatory design, feminist critique of computer science, and online social networks. Seda is particularly excited about the topic of anonymity in technical as well as cultural contexts, the spectrum being anywhere between anonymous communications and anonymous folk songs.
This afternoon is jointly organised with the Ecole de Recherche Graphique, Brussels (The Networked Social http://www.networkedsocial.constantvzw.org/ ) and Institute of Networkcultures (Unlike Us http://networkcultures.org/wpmu/unlikeus/ )
Beyond her academic work, she also had the pleasure of collaborating with artistic initiatives including Constant vzw, Bootlab, De-center, ESC in Brussels, Graz and Berlin. http://www.esat.kuleuven.be/~sguerses


*'''Diana McCarty:''' Diana is a founding member of the radia.fm network of cultural radios, a network of radio stations that support citizen media. they made a content exchange platform between the radio stations, networking their  audiences/makers. she can contribute to the question of what makes an  "alternative" social network and how you can use existing  (social/digital/analog media) to do it.
with:
(Germany)


*'''Reni Hoffmueller:''' Reni is an artist, she worked on mur.at an project with started with the then novel goal of providing its user base (mostly artists) with free web services. that was  the alternative platform of 20 years ago, before "free" services took
Diana McCarty
over. nevertheless, mur.at exists. what does it mean for your vision to  get hi-jacked? and, how do you sustain your alternative social networks?  are questions that she can talk about extremely well.
(Austria)


*'''Nicolas Malevé''' is an artist, software programmer and data activist who lives between Brussels and Barcelona. He develops multimedia projects and web applications for and with cultural organisations. His current research is focused on cartography, information structures, metadata and the means to visually represent them.
diana  is a  founding member of the radia.fm network of cultural radios, a  network of radio stations that support citizen media. they made a  content exchange platform between the radio stations, networking their  audiences/makers. she can contribute to the question of what makes an  "alternative" social network and how you can use existing (social/digital/analog media) to do it.
Since 1998 Nicolas collaborates with Constant, a non-profit association, based and active in Brussels since 1997 in the fields of feminism, copyright alternatives and working through networks. Constant develops radio, electronic music and database projects by means of migrating from cultural work to work places and back again.(Belgium)
 
Reni Hoffmueller
 
Reni  is an artist, she worked on mur.at an project with started with the  then novel goal of providing its user base (mostly artists) with free  web services. that was  the alternative platform of 20 years ago, before  "free" services took  over. nevertheless, mur.at exists. what does it  mean for your vision to  get hi-jacked? and, how do you sustain your  alternative social networks?  are questions that she can talk about  extremely well.
 
Seda Guerses
 
  is  a researcher working in the group  COSIC/ESAT at the Department of  Electrical Engineering in K. U. Leuven,  Belgium. She is interested in  the topics of privacy technologies,  participatory design, feminist  critique of computer science, and online  social networks. Seda is  particularly excited about the topic of  anonymity in technical as well  as cultural contexts, the spectrum being  anywhere between anonymous  communications and anonymous folk songs. Beyond her academic work, she  also had the pleasure of collaborating  with artistic initiatives  including Constant vzw, Bootlab, De-center, ESC in Brussels, Graz and  Berlin. http://www.esat.kuleuven.be/~sguerses
 
Femke Snelting
 
Femke  Snelting is an artist and designer, developing projects at the intersection of design, feminism and free software. She is a core  member  of the Brussels based association for arts and media, Constant.  Femke co-initiated the design- and research team Open Source Publishing  (OSP)  and formed De Geuzen (a foundation for multi-visual research)  with Renée Turner and Riek Sijbring. Currently she coordinates the Libre  Graphics Research Unit, a partnership of four European medialabs to investigate interrelations between tools and practice. http://snelting.domainepublic.net/

Revision as of 18:44, 5 March 2013

De(centralized) practice

An afternoon of short presentations and discussion with Diana McCarthy, Reni Hofmueller, Seda Guerses and Femke Snelting.


Diana, Reni, Femke and Seda are part of communities that envision new ways of collaboration or practice using networks. Part of these pursuits entails building alternative tools and reconfiguring networks using open and decentralized solutions, and nurturing a sharp culture of critique of centralized or proprietary services.

In this line of practice, dichotomous thinking may prevail. We may at times even use it to fuel our political/creative/alternative projects e.g., free vs. proprietary in the 90s, and centralized vs. distributed in the age of social media.

Yet, these dichotomies may become passé and even turn unproductive. How can we venture into undoing these dichotomies in order to take a critical look at our work, rethink and re-present its remarkable history, and identify the potentials of our "alternative networks" beyond these dichotomies?

This afternoon is jointly organised with the Ecole de Recherche Graphique, Brussels (The Networked Social http://www.networkedsocial.constantvzw.org/ ) and Institute of Networkcultures (Unlike Us http://networkcultures.org/wpmu/unlikeus/ )

with:

Diana McCarty

diana is a founding member of the radia.fm network of cultural radios, a network of radio stations that support citizen media. they made a content exchange platform between the radio stations, networking their audiences/makers. she can contribute to the question of what makes an "alternative" social network and how you can use existing (social/digital/analog media) to do it.

Reni Hoffmueller

Reni is an artist, she worked on mur.at an project with started with the then novel goal of providing its user base (mostly artists) with free web services. that was the alternative platform of 20 years ago, before "free" services took over. nevertheless, mur.at exists. what does it mean for your vision to get hi-jacked? and, how do you sustain your alternative social networks? are questions that she can talk about extremely well.

Seda Guerses

 is  a researcher working in the group  COSIC/ESAT at the Department of  Electrical Engineering in K. U. Leuven,  Belgium. She is interested in  the topics of privacy technologies,  participatory design, feminist  critique of computer science, and online  social networks. Seda is  particularly excited about the topic of  anonymity in technical as well  as cultural contexts, the spectrum being  anywhere between anonymous  communications and anonymous folk songs. Beyond her academic work, she  also had the pleasure of collaborating  with artistic initiatives  including Constant vzw, Bootlab, De-center,  ESC in Brussels, Graz and  Berlin. http://www.esat.kuleuven.be/~sguerses

Femke Snelting

Femke Snelting is an artist and designer, developing projects at the intersection of design, feminism and free software. She is a core member of the Brussels based association for arts and media, Constant. Femke co-initiated the design- and research team Open Source Publishing (OSP) and formed De Geuzen (a foundation for multi-visual research) with Renée Turner and Riek Sijbring. Currently she coordinates the Libre Graphics Research Unit, a partnership of four European medialabs to investigate interrelations between tools and practice. http://snelting.domainepublic.net/