dear all,

It would be good to get some nettime views.

The Internet of Things (IoT) is an umbrella term used to describe a next step 
in the evolution of the Internet. While the first phase of the web can be 
thought of as a combination of an internet of hyper-text documents and an 
internet of applications (think blogs, online email, social sites, etc.), one 
of the next steps is an Internet of augmented ?smart? objects ? or ?things? ? 
being accessible to human beings and each other over network connections. This 
is the internet of Things.

Underpinning the development of the Internet of Things is the ever increasing 
proliferation of networked devices in everyday usage. Such devices include 
laptops, smart phones, fridges, smart meters, RFIDs, etc. The number of devices 
in common usage is set to increase worldwide from the current level of 4.5 
billion to 50 billion by 2050 and may even include human implants.

By dint of the above, life as we know it on the planet will undergo a multitude 
of minuscule but incredibly significant changes that will alter not only how we 
relate to each other and the world, but also how we conceive of ourselves as 
beings within it. This situation proposes a pressing question: do we want to 
simply leave market forces to shape our reality? Or is there a deeper need, 
given the significance of this technology, to consider its ramifications within 
a philosophical context? For as computational devices become ever more central 
to how we relate to and interface with each other, so too do they begin to 
create new systems of power relations between people. To create a system of 
power is to impose a social dynamic. The design and deployment of the Internet 
of Things is thus not simply a matter of software/hardware architecture but 
also of politics; ethics; belief; citizenship; and social and civic relations. 
It is to this end of examining these issues more deeply that we 
 are convening this conference.

Justin McKeown (York St John University), Rob Van Kranenburg and Joachim 
Walewski are proud to present the 1st conference on the Philosophy of the 
Internet of Things. This conference is organised in response to the growing 
debate surrounding the Internet of Things and its potential impact upon 
society. The conference seeks to open up dialogue regarding the impact of the 
Internet of Things upon everyday life and provides a space for thinkers and 
innovators to critically examine, theorise, and debate the social, political, 
ethical, epistemic, ontological and civic ramifications of these new 
technologies. 

Dates are 3rd - 5th July 2014
York St John University, Lord Mayors Walk, York, UK, YO31 7EX,

Greetings, Rob


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