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[ecrea] CfP Journal of Peer Production: Alternative Internets
Wed Dec 10 17:37:48 GMT 2014
States are attempting to consolidate their control over the Internet,
turning it into an instrument for minute surveillance, whilst a handful
of tech-corporations seek to use it as a means to manipulate human
behaviour toward their own objectives and siphon off the wealth from
local and national markets. In response, alternative technologies have
arisen, aiming to restore the Internet’s initial values of net
neutrality, distributed control, freedom of speech, and
self-organization. Community networks, offline networks, darknets,
peer-to-peer systems, encryption, anonymization overlays, digital
currencies, and distributed online social networks appear today as
examples of alternative technologies aiming at emancipation,
redistribution, and maximal autonomy. However, these tools are as
ambiguous as the contradictory values and claims that have been invested
in them. We can therefore expect alternative infrastructures to be
appropriated for ends deemed illegitimate, such
as tax evasion or arms trading, thus renewing the calls for restoring
“law and order” on the Internet.
Can we learn from the past and avoid the transformation of the utopian
promises of these technologies into a dystopian future as, arguably, is
happening to the promises of the early Internet?
In order to address such concerns, this special Journal of Peer
Production issue seeks to document and critically assess past and
ongoing efforts to alter the commercial development process of
mainstream Internet technologies in order to build viable alternatives.
What are the futures awaiting these alternatives, which contradictions
and ambiguities will they undergo, and which steps can be taken today to
avoid failures and disappointments?
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
•Technical, social, political, economic and legal hurdles faced by
alternative projects.
•The evolution of utopian imaginaries when mediated through
socio-technical artifacts and the conflicting interests of multiple
stakeholders.
•The strategic trade-off between “voice and exit”: going off-grid,
developing offline and online alternative networks, or engaging in the
public sphere on mainstream platforms.
•The politics of self-organization: actors, local and global
institutions, trust, design, regulation, ambiguities. What is an
“alternative” imagined to be, how is it concretely realised?
•Lessons learned from the history of the Internet and other communcation
networks.
•Utopias, dystopias, and pragmatic imaginaries of the future Internet
and its role in society.
•How market or state actors develop their own visions of alternative
Internets to foster business interests (e.g. the proposition for a
tiered Internet by dominant telecom operators) or facilitate social
control (e.g. Iran’s “halalnet”).
•Hijackings and détournements of existing infrastructures to serve
purposes other than those first intended.
•The environmental challenges raised by communications technologies and
possible responses for ensuring their sustainability and resilience in
the face of the mounting ecological crisis.
Submission abstracts of 300-500 words are due by February 8, 2015 and
should be sent to (alternets /at/ peerproduction.net). All peer reviewed papers
will be reviewed according to Journal of Peer Production guidelines.
Full papers and materials (peer reviewed? papers around 8,000 words;
testimonies, self-portraits and experimental formats up to 4,000 words)
are due by June 31st, 2015 for review.
While the issue will be mainly comprised of academic papers, we also
welcome 1-page poster-like “visual”, more or less artistic, submissions,
without format restrictions, on stories from the past (alternatives to
the current Internet that didn’t survive), today’s alternative
technologies, real-life experiences and case studies, as well as future
imaginaries. These contributions which could range from diagrams and
cognitive maps to paintings, photos, installations, even poems, will be
included as an appendix to the main volume. The deadline for submission
is June 31st, 2015.
Editors: Félix Tréguer (EHESS), Panayotis Antoniadis (ETH Zurich), Johan
Söderberg (Göteborgs Universitet)
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