Changes between Version 1 and Version 2 of internet_rights_workshop


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Timestamp:
Jun 22, 2008, 6:35:46 PM (17 years ago)
Author:
Jamie McClelland
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  • internet_rights_workshop

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    11= The Internet Rights Workshop =
    22
    3 The Internet Rights Workshop is ....
     3The Internet Rights Workshop is an organizing tool developed by May First/People Link to develop our skills in participatory democracy and build a consensus on the rights we should be fighting for on the Internet. The workshop is politically grounded in the [http://mayfirst.org/organicinternet Organic Internet].
    44
     5== Workshop description ==
    56
    6 We've done the workshop at ....
     7During the Internet Rights workshop, activists join together to examine and discuss one of the largest, most important and powerful human movements in recent history.
     8
     9With over a billion people engaging in a collective activity, today's Internet is one of humanity's largest social movements, reflecting the kind of social
     10interaction and collective achievement activists like us struggle for world-wide: fundamentally collaborative, democratic and based almost entirely
     11on tools and software that has been produced collaboratively, developed by large, democratic communities and distributed freely. It is truly
     12international and resilient against constant attempts to control its direction and curtail its positive growth.
     13
     14Even more inspiring, the Internet has grown in this progressive way against considerable relentless opposition by powerful forces that don't want a
     15"better world" for most of us. As such, it represents one of the progressive movement's most significant and important victories.
     16
     17In this workshop, we seek to collaboratively write an Internet Justice Bill of Rights. We break the audience into small groups of 4 - 5 people.  Each small group speaks with one voice via a "scribe" who enters the group's proposed rights into a web-based system. A dynamic, projected display of the current state of the aggregate Bill of Rights is visible to all.
     18
     19All ideas belong to the entire workshop: any group can edit any Right, whether they wrote the original version or not  All revisions of a given Right are stored, but only the most recent edit is projected to the group as a whole. The group which creates a new version of a right automatically endorses that right, but otherwise holds no special connection to it.
     20
     21Each group also has the ability to endorse any Right that seems worthy. When a Right is edited, existing endorsements are cleared; each group needs to decide if they want to endorse the new version. Rights with more endorsers float to the top of the projected list, while the rights with fewer endorsers sink to the bottom.
     22
     23To keep the Bill of Rights to a manageable, concise size, only 10 rights can exist at a given time. If 10 rights already exist, the only way to add a new idea to the Bill is to edit an existing right, which requires engaging other groups in a dialog to ensure an adequate number of re-endorsements.
     24
     25== Goals ==
     26
     27The goal of the session is to examine, through interactive collaboration:
     28 * democratic collaboration and decision-making;
     29 * what the Internet really means for us and our movements;
     30 * how it models the society we are struggling for;
     31 * how the way we've developed it serves as a model for how to develop that just society;
     32 * and finally how we as progressive activists can work inside the Internet to broaden its positive impact and protect the gains we and it have made.
     33
     34== Software ==
     35
     36The software the runs the workshop is [browser:trunk/ir available for free].
     37
     38== People and equipment ==
     39
     40The workshop requires:
     41
     42 * one laptop per break out group
     43 * a wireless router
     44 * a computer and a projector
     45
     46Internet access is not required.
     47
     48== Past workshops ==
     49
     50 * [https://www.ussf2007.org/en/node/17107 US Social Forum, June 2007, Atlanta, GA]
     51 * [http://current.workingdirectory.net//posts/2008/gmc-internet-rights/index.html Grassroots Media Conference, March 2008, New York, NY]
     52 * Allied Media Conference, June 2008, Detroit, MI