Resources – Yetu Infotech Collective https://yetu.coop Growing the Internet from Below Mon, 27 Jan 2025 08:29:17 +0000 en-ZA hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://yetu.coop/wp-content/uploads/2021/08/Yetu-ICON-logo-black-on-white-PNG-1-150x150.png Resources – Yetu Infotech Collective https://yetu.coop 32 32 Mobile Phone Security For Activists and Agitators https://yetu.coop/mobile-phone-security-for-activists-and-agitators/ Mon, 27 Jan 2025 08:29:17 +0000 https://yetu.coop/?p=2073 This zine published by Riot Medicine goes into detail about mobile phone surveillance and the most common and effective countermeasures against it. Popular misconceptions and urban legends are addressed to help ensure that our threat models and OpSec are based on reality. This zine is suitable for everyone involved in social movements.]]>

This zine published by Riot Medicine goes into detail about mobile phone surveillance and the most common and effective countermeasures against it. Popular misconceptions and urban legends are addressed to help ensure that our threat models and OpSec are based on reality. This zine is suitable for everyone involved in social movements.

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The AI craze https://yetu.coop/the-ai-craze/ Sun, 19 Jan 2025 07:58:09 +0000 https://yetu.coop/?p=2068 Date Published : usp_custom_field : 19 Jan 2025  From the Reports from the Economic Front blog by Marty Hart-Landsberg     Are you one of those loudly demanding that companies create AI-powered systems to amuse you on Facebook, be your online sexual partner, offer therapy 24-7, provide answers to your search questions, write the news, or enhance management surveillance of worker activity? I would guess not. […]]]>

Date Published : usp_custom_field : 19 Jan 2025

 

From the Reports from the Economic Front blog by Marty Hart-Landsberg

 

 

Are you one of those loudly demanding that companies create AI-powered systems to amuse you on Facebook, be your online sexual partner, offer therapy 24-7, provide answers to your search questions, write the news, or enhance management surveillance of worker activity? I would guess not. And yet, everywhere you look, AI is being promoted as the ticket to a more productive and fulfilling life.

The fact of the matter is that the AI craze is being driven by tech companies, not our needs. And these companies are working nonstop to sell us on how much we need AI in our lives. There is a lot at stake for them; if they succeed, they stand to make a fortune. Of course, they couldn’t care less about the social consequences of their effort. It’s all a quest for what appears a big pot of gold.

However, the AI craze has gone on long enough for us to start drawing some plausible conclusions about where it is leading. Most importantly, there are good reasons to believe that big tech will never deliver the transformative AI it is promising. One big reason is that AI’s ongoing development is seriously constrained by data limitations and unexplained hallucinations [see below] which make its output unreliable. Another is that the financial costs involved in developing and operating ever more sophisticated systems is staggering and likely to prove prohibitive.

But we cannot afford to stand on the sidelines and let the AI craze continue unchecked, even if we are confident of its eventual passing. The reason is that it comes at great public cost. It is being subsidized by governments at all levels, robbing our cities and states of needed tax revenue. Even more importantly, it is driving us ever faster to a future of climate chaos.

False Promises

First things first – when people talk about AI, they normally have in mind generative artificial intelligence (or machine learning AI). OpenAI started the AI craze with its November 2022 release of ChatGPT, where the GPT stands for Generative Pre-Trained Transformer. This chatbot, and later versions, including by competitor companies, requires both large amounts of data, mostly taken from the web, and an algorithm called a transformer that enables it to draw on that data to determine, based on probability, a response to prompts. As the tech writer Megan Crouse explains,

“The model doesn’t ‘know’ what it’s saying, but it does know what symbols (words) are likely to come after one another based on the data set it was trained on. The current generation of artificial intelligence chatbots, such as ChatGPT, its Google rival Bard and others, don’t really make intelligently informed decisions; instead, they’re the internet’s parrots, repeating words that are likely to be found next to one another in the course of natural speech. The underlying math is all about probability.”

Generative AI is just the beginning according to tech companies, who see a future of rapid improvements, with more data and more computing power enabling them to develop systems coming ever closer to human performance. Interactive artificial intelligence (IAI) capable of deciding on and taking a number of different actions to complete assigned tasks without step-by-step prompts comes next. And then, in the not-too-distant future, we can expect artificial general intelligence or AGI systems with the ability to think, learn, and solve problems on their own. According to the cheerleaders, these systems will enable us to develop new vaccines, lower greenhouse gas emissions, boost productivity and income, eliminate uninteresting and low paid work, and the list goes on.

But despite substantial spending on AI development, which has led to ever faster and more capable generative AI systems, AI companies are finding the returns disappointing. As the tech writer Edward Zitron comments,

“Bloomberg reported that OpenAI, Google, and Anthropic are struggling to build more advanced AI, and that OpenAI’s ‘Orion’ model – otherwise known as GPT-5 – ‘did not hit the company’s desired performance,’ and that ‘Orion is so far not considered to be as big a step up’ as it was from GPT-3.5 to GPT-4, its current model. You’ll be shocked to hear the reason is that because ‘it’s become increasingly difficult to find new, untapped sources of high-quality, human-made training data that can be used to build more advanced AI systems’.”

AI companies have encouraged investors to view their industry through the prism of the semiconductor industry, where new investments have produced a steady record of breakthroughs yielding ever smaller and more powerful chips. But this has not been the AI experience despite significant outlays for ever bigger data centers with more powerful machines. And data limitations, as Zitron pointed out, are one of the big reasons.

Said simply, AI companies have largely picked the Internet clean of human-generated data and without new large data sets their systems cannot develop new capabilities. Their response: prompt their current systems with questions and requests for information to generate new data. But there are serious problems with this strategy. One is that the existing data, largely scraped from the web, includes all sorts of racist, sexist, and ill-informed posts and articles. Those are part of the database that the system draws on when generating new material for its training. As a result, these harmful notions and misinformation get more deeply embedded.

But there is an even more serious problem. Feeding the system with its own responses creates a feedback loop that yields an ever-narrowing range of responses. While human generated output varies considerably, AI models are structured to provide responses based on likely probabilities. This means that their responses will, if their training data is largely self-generated, soon converge on the model’s determined “conventional wisdom.” And this limits the reliability and usefulness of the system.

AI Hallucinations

The New York Times, in an article titled “When AI’s Output Is a Threat to AI Itself,” highlights the problem:

“Imagine a medical-advice chatbot that lists fewer diseases that match your symptoms, because it was trained on a narrower spectrum of medical knowledge generated by previous chatbots…

“Just as a copy of a copy can drift away from the original, when generative AI is trained on its own content, its output can also drift away from reality, growing further apart from the original data that it was intended to imitate.

“In a paper published last month in the journal Nature, a group of researchers in Britain and Canada showed how this process results in a narrower range of AI output over time – an early stage of what they called ‘model collapse’.

“This problem isn’t just confined to text. Another team of researchers at Rice University studied what would happen when the kinds of AI that generate images are repeatedly trained on their own output – a problem that could already be occurring as AI-generated images flood the web.

“They found that glitches and image artifacts started to build up in the AI’s output, eventually producing distorted images with wrinkled patterns and mangled fingers.”

Then, there is the potentially more serious problem of hallucinations, which refers to AI output that has no basis in reality – dates, times, places, events can be entirely made up. As Zitron notes, “The hallucination problem is one that is nowhere closer to being solved – and, at least with the current technology – may never go away, and it makes it a non-starter for a great many business tasks, where you need a high level of reliability.”

Financial Consequences

These technological challenges have their financial consequences. To this point, AI companies are shelling out a lot of money to advance their AI systems without much to show for it in terms of financial rewards. Microsoft’s experience is representative:

“Microsoft has spent a staggering amount of money on AI – and serious profits likely remain many years out, if they’re ever realized.

“The tech giant revealed that during the quarter ending in June [2024], it spent an astonishing $19-billion in cash capital expenditures and equipment, the Wall Street Journal reports – the equivalent of what it used to spend in a whole year a mere five years ago.

“Unsurprisingly, most of those $19-billion were related to AI, and roughly half was used for building out and leasing data centers.”

Not surprisingly, this record has led some investment analysts to raise warnings about the future of the AI industry. As the New York Times reports, Mr. Covello, the head of stock research at Goldman Sachs,

“jolted markets with a research paper that challenged whether businesses would see a sufficient return on what by some estimates could be $1-trillion in AI spending in the coming years. He said generative artificial intelligence, which can summarize text and write software code, made so many mistakes that it was questionable whether it would ever reliably solve complex problems.

“Mr. Covello challenged the notion that the costs of AI would decline, noting that costs have risen for some sophisticated technologies like the machines that make semiconductors. He also criticized AI’s capabilities.

“‘Overbuilding things the world doesn’t have use for, or is not ready for, typically ends badly,’ he said.”

At Great Public Cost

It is tempting to stand on the sidelines and let big tech pursue its dreams. If they come to fruition, great, and if they don’t, they are the ones to lose. But that is not the way things work. We are all paying a high cost for their efforts.

One example: states and cities have been competing to attract data centers with enormous tax breaks. According to an investigation by the Oregonian newspaper, “Oregon has one of the nation’s largest and fastest-growing data center industries.” And a major reason is that the big tech companies – like Amazon, Apple, Google, and Meta – receive “some of the most generous tax breaks anywhere in the world. Data centers don’t employ many people, but the wealthy tech companies that run them enjoy Oregon tax giveaways worth more than $225-million annually.”

These tax breaks mean less money for things we do need – like schools, libraries, and parks. And the data centers themselves occupy land that could be used for more productive purposes.

An ever-greater concern is that these data centers place huge demands on our energy sector – demands that pose critical challenges for our communities. As the Oregonian explains:

“Data center demand is soaring because of artificial intelligence, which uses massive amounts of electricity for advanced computation. These powerful machines already consume more than 10% of all of Oregon’s power and forecasters say data center power use will be at least double that by 2030 – and perhaps some multiple higher…

“Data centers’ power needs are triggering expensive upgrades to the Northwest’s power lines and prompting construction of new power plants. There is growing concern among ratepayer advocates, regulators and politicians that households will end up bearing much of the cost of data center growth through higher residential power bills.”

Oregon is no outlier. According to the New York Times, “There are already more than 5,000 data centers in the US, and the industry is expected to grow nearly 10 percent annually. Goldman Sachs estimates that AI will drive a 160 percent increase in data center power demand by 2030.”

This exploding demand for electricity translates directly into a dramatic growth in fossil fuel use, including coal, and thus, US greenhouse emissions, increasing the likelihood of climate catastrophes. However, as the New York Times lets us know, our tech leaders don’t seem to care:

“Microsoft said its emissions had soared 30 percent since 2020 because of its expansion of data centers. Google’s emissions are up nearly 50 percent over the past five years because of AI.

“Eric Schmidt, the former chief executive of Google, recently said that the artificial intelligence boom was too powerful, and had too much potential, to let concerns about climate change get in the way.

“Schmidt, somewhat fatalistically, said that ‘we’re not going to hit the climate goals anyway’, and argued that rather than focus on reducing emissions, ’I’d rather bet on AI solving the problem’.”

President Biden, in his farewell address to the nation, warned about the “potential rise of a tech industrial complex that can pose real dangers for our country.” And yet, as the executive editor of The American Prospect, David Dayen, points out,

“the same week that he issued this warning, Biden signed an executive order that gives that tech-industrial complex an enormous gift, by making the creation of data centers for artificial intelligence a national-security imperative. The order aims to accelerate the production of data centers (in ways not afforded to, say, the production of housing for human beings), and requires the leasing of federal land owned by the Pentagon and the Department of Energy to build data centers.”

What we have here is a prime example of capitalism’s destructive logic. •

This article first published on the Reports From the Economic Front website.

Martin Hart-Landsberg is Professor Emeritus of Economics at Lewis and Clark College, Portland, Oregon; and Adjunct Researcher at the Institute for Social Sciences, Gyeongsang National University, South Korea. His areas of teaching and research include political economy, economic development, international economics, and the political economy of East Asia. He maintains a blog Reports from the Economic Front.

 

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An Ounce of Hope is Worth a Ton of Despair https://yetu.coop/an-ounce-of-hope-is-worth-a-ton-of-despair/ Wed, 27 Mar 2024 14:19:09 +0000 https://yetu.coop/?p=2045 Date Published : usp_custom_field : 16th June 2014 From 16th June 2014here on    We cannot reach people by terrifying them; there has to be a positive agenda. By George Monbiot, published in the Guardian 17th June 2014 If we had set out to alienate and antagonise the people we’ve been trying to reach, we […]]]>

Date Published : usp_custom_field : 16th June 2014

From 16th June 2014here on 

 

We cannot reach people by terrifying them; there has to be a positive agenda.


By George Monbiot, published in the Guardian 17th June 2014

If we had set out to alienate and antagonise the people we’ve been trying to reach, we could scarcely have done it better. This is how I feel, looking back on the past few decades of environmental campaigning, including my own.

This thought is prompted by responses to the column I wrote last week. It examined the psychological illiteracy that’s driving left-wing politics into oblivion(1). It argued that the failure by Labour and Democratic strategists to listen to psychologists and cognitive linguists has resulted in a terrible mistake: the belief that they can best secure their survival by narrowing the distance between themselves and their conservative opponents.

Twenty years of research, comprehensively ignored by these parties, reveals that shifts such as privatisation and cutting essential public services strongly promote people’s extrinsic values (an attraction to power, prestige, image and status) while suppressing intrinsic values (intimacy, kindness, self-acceptance, independent thought and action). As extrinsic values are powerfully linked to conservative politics, pursuing policies that reinforce them is blatantly self-destructive.

One of the drivers of extrinsic values is a sense of threat. Experimental work suggests that when fears are whipped up, they trigger an instinctive survival response(2). You suppress your concern for other people and focus on your own interests. Conservative strategists seem to know this, which is why they emphasise crime, terrorism, deficits and immigration.

“Isn’t this what you’ve spent your life doing?”, several people asked. “Emphasising threats?” It took me a while. If threats promote extrinsic values and if (as the research strongly suggests) extrinsic values are linked to a lack of interest in the state of the living planet(3), I’ve been engaged in contradiction and futility. For about 30 years.

The threats, of course, are of a different nature: climate breakdown, mass extinction, pollution and the rest. And they are real. But there’s no obvious reason why the results should be different. Terrify the living daylights out of people and they will protect themselves at the expense of others and of the living world.

It’s an issue taken up in a report by several green groups called Common Cause for Nature(4). “Provoking feelings of threat, fear or loss may successfully raise the profile of an issue,” but “these feelings may leave people feeling helpless and increasingly demotivated, or even inclined to actively avoid the issue.” People respond to feelings of insecurity “by attempting to exert control elsewhere, or retreating into materialistic comforts”.

Where we have not used threat and terror, we have tried money: an even graver mistake. Nothing could better reinforce extrinsic values than putting a price on nature, or making similar appeals to financial self-interest(5). And it doesn’t work, even on its own terms. A study published in Nature Climate Change, for example, tested two notices placed in a filling station(6). One asked, “Want to protect the environment? Check your car’s tyre pressure”. The other tried, “Want to save money? Check your car’s tyre pressure”. The first was quite effective, the second entirely useless.

We’ve tended to assume that people are more selfish than they really are. Surveys across 60 countries show that most people consistently hold concern for others, tolerance, kindness and thinking for themselves to be more important than wealth, image and power(7). But those whose voices are loudest belong to a small minority with the opposite set of values. And often, idiotically, we have sought to appease them.

This is a form of lying – to ourselves and other people. I don’t know anyone who became an environmentalist because she or he was worried about ecological impacts on their bank balance. Almost everyone I know in this field is motivated by something completely different: the love and wonder and enchantment that nature inspires. Yet, perhaps because we fear we will not be taken seriously, we scarcely mention them. We hide our passions behind columns of figures, and if sometimes we come across as insincere there’s a reason for it. Sure, we need the numbers and the rigour and the science, but we should stop pretending that these came first.

Without being fully conscious of the failure and frustration that’s been driving it, I’ve been trying, like others, to promote a positive environmentalism, based on promise, not threat. This is what rewilding, the mass restoration of ecosystems, is all about, and why I wrote my book Feral, which is a manifesto for rewilding – and for wonder and enchantment and love of the natural world(8). But I’m beginning to see that this is not just another method: expounding a positive vision should be at the centre of attempts to protect the things we love(9). An ounce of hope is worth a ton of despair.

Part of this means changing the language. The language we use to describe our relations with nature could scarcely be more alienating. “Reserve” is alienation itself, or at least detachment: think of what it means when you apply that word to people. “Site of special scientific interest”, “no take zone”, “ecosystem services”: these terms are a communications disaster. Even “environment” is a cold and distancing word, which creates no pictures. These days I tend to use natural world or living planet, which invoke vivid images. One of the many tasks for the rewilding campaign some of us will be launching in the next few months is to set up a working group to change the language. There’s a parallel here with the Landreader project by the photographer Dominick Tyler, which seeks to rescue beautiful words describing nature from obscurity(10).

None of this is to suggest that we should not discuss the threats or pretend that the crises faced by this magnificent planet are not happening. Or that we should cease to employ rigorous research and statistics. What it means is that we should embed both the awareness of these threats and their scientific description in a different framework; one that emphasises the joy and awe to be found in the marvels at risk; one that proposes a better world, rather than (if we work really hard for it), just a slightly-less-shitty-one-than-there-would-otherwise-have-been.

Above all, this means not abandoning ourselves to attempts to appease a minority who couldn’t give a cuss about the living world, but think only of their wealth and power. Be true to yourself, true to those around you, and you will find the necessary means of reaching others.

www.monbiot.com

References:

1. http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2014/jun/10/labour-britain-selfishness-market-inequality

2. Kennon M. Sheldon and Tim Kasser, 2008. Psychological threat and extrinsic goal striving. Motivation and Emotion, 32:37–45. Doi: 10.1007/s11031-008-9081-5 http://www.selfdeterminationtheory.org/SDT/documents/2008_SheldonKasser_MOEM.pdf

3. Tim Kasser, November 2011. Values and Human Wellbeing. The Bellagio Initiative. http://www.bellagioinitiative.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/Bellagio-Kasser.pdf

4. Elena Blackmore & Tim Holmes (Eds); Elena Blackmore, Ralph Underhill, Jamie McQuilkin and Rosie Leach (Authors), 2013. Common Cause for Nature: values and frames in conservation. http://valuesandframes.org/initiative/nature/

5. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ni1tX0bpTR8

6. J.W. Bolderdijk et al, April 2013. Comparing the effectiveness of monetary versus moral motives in environmental campaigning. Nature Climate Change, Vol 3, pp413-416. http://www.nature.com/nclimate/journal/v3/n4/full/nclimate1767.html

7. Elena Blackmore & Tim Holmes (Eds); Elena Blackmore, Ralph Underhill, Jamie McQuilkin and Rosie Leach (Authors), 2013. Common Cause for Nature: values and frames in conservation. http://valuesandframes.org/initiative/nature/

8. https://www.monbiot.com/2013/05/24/feral-searching-for-enchantment-on-the-frontiers-of-rewilding/

9. See also David M. Carter, 2011. Recognizing the Role of Positive Emotions in Fostering Environmentally Responsible Behaviors. Ecopsychology Vol. 3 No. 1, pp.65-69. doi: 10.1089/eco.2010.0071

10. http://www.theguardian.com/environment/shortcuts/2014/jun/15/cows-belly-quest-revive-lost-language-natural-world

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Community Media: Handbook for Revolution in Digital TV https://yetu.coop/community-media-handbook-for-revolution-in-digital-tv/ Sun, 10 Mar 2024 13:52:09 +0000 https://yetu.coop/?p=2016 Date Published : usp_custom_field : 10-3-2024]]>

Date Published : usp_custom_field : 10-3-2024

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Cape Town R Pi Jam ’23 https://yetu.coop/cape-town-r-pi-jam-23/ Mon, 09 Oct 2023 16:53:49 +0000 https://yetu.coop/?p=1740 Learn about the new R Pi 5 & more. All welcome! Saturday 2 Dec 2023, 10:00 to 14:00 CTV Training Centre, Lower Scott Rd industrial park (last entrance on right before the railway), Observatory First 25 people exhibiting any digital DIY project get a free R Pi Pico! (sponsored by PiShop.co.za) Read about the Pi 5. Bring […]]]>

Learn about the new R Pi 5 & more. All welcome!

  • Saturday 2 Dec 2023, 10:00 to 14:00
  • CTV Training Centre, Lower Scott Rd industrial park (last entrance on right before the railway), Observatory
  • First 25 people exhibiting any digital DIY project get a free R Pi Pico! (sponsored by PiShop.co.za)

Read about the Pi 5. Bring & show your projects.

Register now

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We need a full public service internet – state-owned infrastructure is just the start https://yetu.coop/we-need-a-full-public-service-internet-state-owned-infrastructure-is-just-the-start/ Thu, 21 Jul 2022 04:38:57 +0000 https://yetu.coop/?p=1455 by Christian Fuchs in the Conversation  on 2 December 2019.  The UK Labour Party’s 2019 election manifesto contains plans to bring BT’s internet infrastructure business into public ownership by creating British Broadband and to roll out and provide superfast broadband free to all households and businesses. This would be funded via a digital tax on the profits of internet giants such […]]]>

by Christian Fuchs in the Conversation  on 2 December 2019. 

The UK Labour Party’s 2019 election manifesto contains plans to bring BT’s internet infrastructure business into public ownership by creating British Broadband and to roll out and provide superfast broadband free to all households and businesses. This would be funded via a digital tax on the profits of internet giants such as Amazon, Google and Facebook.

I believe this will help improve Britain’s relatively poor rate of full-fibre internet connection. But we also need to address the wider problems faced by internet users. The consequences of the current model of digital capitalism have been surveillanceprivacy violationsdigital monopoliesfake newsfilter bubblespost-truth politicsdigital authoritarianismonline nationalismdigital tabloids and high-speed flows of superficial content. To change this, we need a full public service internet.

The current internet consists of the technological infrastructure, the platforms (websites and apps) that provide digital services, and the content generated by and stored on these platforms. A public service internet would comprise public organisations and co-operatives that provide all three of these elements on a not-for-profit basis.

Publicly-owned telecoms companies, as Labour is proposing, are one important way to provide the infrastructure aspect of a public service internet. But community-owned networks – such as B4rnFreifunkGuifi or Sarantaporo – have also started to emerge as another, complementary alternative. Community networks have a special role in rural and other areas where private corporations find it unprofitable to roll out communications infrastructure. Research has shown that partnering with public and municipal services, rather than competing with them, can work well for these organisations.

Public platforms

For public service internet platforms, existing public service media organisations such as the BBC can provide one important dimension. BBC iPlayer, for example, is already an important rival to the likes of Netflix, Apple TV and Amazon Prime. Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn has suggested the creation of British Digital Corporation to provide content from the BBC, public archives and even an alternative social network.

Another dimension is offered by platform cooperatives, democratically governed internet platforms owned by their users and workers. Examples are the collaboration platform Loomio, the photography co-op Stocksy, the online music co-op ResonateFairbnb and Taxiapp. By focusing on public benefit instead of profit, these platforms can protect users’ privacy instead of constantly watching them in order to sell their data.

A public service internet could raise the level of online discussions. Africa Studio/Shutterstock

A public service internet could also democratise the ownership and use of entertainment content, so much of which is currently dominated by transnational multimedia corporations that effectively control popular culture.

Imagine that public service broadcasters, museums, libraries and other public organisations could make all of their audio and visual archive material available on a public service YouTube under a Creative Commons licence. Groups of users in schools, community centres, local associations and so on could reuse that material for creating their own videos and podcasts. Public institutions could even feature selected user-generated content.

We could then watch, listen to, discuss and engage with audiences’ creative co-productions on the BBC, in the British Library, the British Museum, the Tate galleries. This would update public service media’s purposes to advance democracy, culture and education could be updated to also include the public values of digital participation and digital creativity.

Revitalised culture

In this way, a public service internet would not only offer a different model of ownership and governance but also a different culture and morality, regulated not by the market but by fairness, democracy and justice. These values could help revitalise online debate in the age of filter bubbles, post-truth and fake news.

Just as public service broadcasters like the BBC commit to advancing public values, public service internet organisations should commit to informing and educating users and fostering democratic communication and cooperation. This digital public sphere would also provide the time and space for discussions that could raise the level of online debate to address the culture of fake news and digital tabloids.

The 2018 Alternative Internet Survey, part of the EU-funded research project netCommons, found that internet users have a large interest in an alternative, not-for-profit internet, so there is the potential appetite to create one. To make it happen, the various components could be funded from a combination of digital taxes on internet giants and an expanded digital licence fee. This could be organised as a progressive charge based on annual income and not just be paid by households but also companies, especially large ones, that benefit from using a free public internet connection.

The Labour Party’s suggestion that the internet should be free to access allows us to think more broadly about how alternatives to the corporate internet should look. A public service internet has the potential to reinvigorate both public service media and community media in the digital age.

 

 

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Digital colonialism under the Western model of technology https://yetu.coop/digital-colonialism-under-the-western-model-of-technology/ Wed, 20 Jul 2022 15:50:44 +0000 https://yetu.coop/?p=1452 Big Tech is reinventing colonialism in the digital era says Michael Kwet in discussing centralized control of the Internet at the root of current problems like privacy and monopoly power and the associated rise of Big Tech. In this 2 part series, Michael Kwet of the Yale Privacy Lab presents an analysis of digital colonialism […]]]>

Big Tech is reinventing colonialism in the digital era says Michael Kwet in discussing centralized control of the Internet at the root of current problems like privacy and monopoly power and the associated rise of Big Tech. In this 2 part series, Michael Kwet of the Yale Privacy Lab presents an analysis of digital colonialism under the Western model of technology Originally published March 27, 2019

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The Survival Toolkit for Journalists: How to protect yourself against Digital Surveillance https://yetu.coop/the-survival-toolkit-for-journalists-how-to-protect-yourself-against-digital-surveillance/ Mon, 16 May 2022 08:36:13 +0000 https://yetu.coop/?p=1329 The Survival Toolkit for Journalists: How to protect yourself against Digital Surveillance guide was developed by ARISA  in response to the growing threat of digital surveillance and cyber security legislation, used by governments and others to track and monitor journalists in their efforts to harass and muzzle journalists from carrying out their work. The guide […]]]>

The Survival Toolkit for Journalists: How to protect yourself against Digital Surveillance guide was developed by ARISA  in response to the growing threat of digital surveillance and cyber security legislation, used by governments and others to track and monitor journalists in their efforts to harass and muzzle journalists from carrying out their work.
The guide provides journalists and media houses with a deeper understanding of the legal frameworks on cyber security laws in the SADC region, and offers critical knowledge and tools that can be implemented by journalists and media houses to protect their online spaces, digital footprint and data.

A Survival Toolkit for Journalists (4) (1)
A Survival Toolkit for Journalists ()1

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Readability Calculator https://yetu.coop/readability-calculator/ Fri, 15 Apr 2022 16:44:00 +0000 https://yetu.coop/?p=1312 This free online software tool calculates readability : The measure of readability used here is the indication of number of years of (American) education that a person needs to be able to understand the text easily on the first reading. In general, these tests penalize writers for polysyllabic words and long, complex sentences. Your writing […]]]>

This free online software tool calculates readability :

The measure of readability used here is the indication of number of years of (American) education that a person needs to be able to understand the text easily on the first reading.

In general, these tests penalize writers for polysyllabic words and long, complex sentences. Your writing will score better when you: use simpler diction, write short sentences. It also displays complicated sentences (with many words and syllables) with suggestions for what you might do to improve its readability.

This tool is made primarily for English texts.

https://www.online-utility.org/english/readability_test_and_improve.jsp

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No Reader, No Leader! https://yetu.coop/leaders-read/ https://yetu.coop/leaders-read/#comments Sat, 09 Apr 2022 08:26:29 +0000 https://yetu.coop/?p=1221 Find free books, online, PDF and ePub formats, including copyright material: 10+ million books, and 84+ million articles https://z-lib.org/ 78+ million free eBooks on this great site: http://www.pdfdrive.com/ Please contact us if the link stops working, or if you have others sites we should include – collective@yetu.coop Also check out Calibre. a powerful free/mahala open […]]]>

Find free books, online, PDF and ePub formats, including copyright material:

Please contact us if the link stops working, or if you have others sites we should include – collective@yetu.coop

Also check out Calibre. a powerful free/mahala open source and easy to use e-book manager. It takes things a step beyond normal e-book software.

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