User:Roelroscama/gradreserach

From XPUB & Lens-Based wiki
< User:Roelroscama
Revision as of 16:17, 6 October 2013 by Roelroscama (talk | contribs) (Created page with "= Descriptions of previous work = === Border Check === Border Check (BC) is a browser extension that illustrates the physical and political realities of the internet's infra...")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

Descriptions of previous work

Border Check

Border Check (BC) is a browser extension that illustrates the physical and political realities of the internet's infrastructure using free software tools. As one surfs the net, data packets are sent from the user's computer to the target server. These data packets go on a journey hopping from server to server, potentially crossing multiple countries, until the packets reach the desired website. In each of the countries that are passed different laws and practices can apply to the data, influencing whether or not authorities can inspect, store or modify that data. BC lets it's users know which countries and networks they pass as they browse the web. It illustrates this process on a world map and provides metadata about each server one passes.

Telewar

Telewar is a research project by The Force of Freedom and Dave Young on the topic of drone warfare. The project was initiated in november 2012 during a three week residency at Upominki in Rotterdam. The result of the residency was a self-published booklet containing an heavily illustrated essay. In it we try to make some sense of the drone warfare phenomenon by looking at how the users of military UAVs represent themselves both officially and unofficially. This is done by examining places, images or artifacts where an official and regulated narrative on drones intersects with with a more spontaneous and uncensored one. Examples include public facebook profiles of UAV squadrons, the online second hand market for drone-related insigna and offical documents conerning the topic.

The latest iteration of the project consists of two film loops. One is a taxonomy of UAV uniform patches. In this film a collection of patches is categorized and classified into four distinct topics, animals, flight hours, mythology and the earth as a grid. By making this taxonomy and studying the symbols for their connotation and their history the viewer gets a better insight in how UAV operators view themselves and the world. The second film is a lexicon of drone terminology. By juxtaposing military jargon with images it tries to scrutinize the pentagon euphemisms that are used to talk about UAVs and the Global War on Terror.

upo3.png

Freekea Workshop + VITRA hack

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E6rwQy75U8M