I'm a little intrigued by this, though won't be traveling all the way
to London (I won't travel (or do much else) for art. full stop. ).

Hopefully the "doing, by learning how to hack, pirate and redistribute
knowledge whilst building alternatives" will include setting up a
website for such knowledge? So in which way would it be better than (for
example) Wikipedia? And, if knowledge is to be free, it should not be
bounded by physical locations either.

Or am I getting it all wrong and they're going to protest and/or
gatecrash universities and/or steal books from university libraries?

Are any Netbehaviourists planning to attend who could maybe post here
about it?

James.


On 14/10/2009, "Olga" <[email protected]> wrote:

>The London Free University
>
>We believe there can be no right to annex thought and learning, to
>erect concrete buildings in which to lock up knowledge.
>
>Their universities create obedience, uniformity of thought and
>docility. Beyond their gates is our intellectual freedom - within
>them are the resources we need. Until these gates are opened for
>all we shall remain alienated from each other and from our futures.
>We want to question access to knowledge, the uniformity of success
>and production, and to experiment with alternatives and the
>redistribution of knowledge. We invite you to cross these borders
>and see where we can go with the freedoms we create for ourselves.
>
>We're starting by doing, by learning how to hack, pirate and
>redistribute knowledge whilst building alternatives. Join us in
>this exciting new project and come to a planning meeting at LARC,
>21st October, 6pm.
>
>If education is not a commodity then can it be stolen?
>
>[email protected]
>
>--
>Olga P Massanet
>--------------------------
>www.ungravitational.net
>virtualfirefly.wordpress.com
>www.vimeo.com/ungravitational
>_______________________________________________
>NetBehaviour mailing list
>[email protected]
>http://www.netbehaviour.org/mailman/listinfo/netbehaviour
>
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