Dear digital rights and free knowledge supporters,

A major event in the month of June is RightsCon...and Wikimedia is showing up 
big! 

Wikipedians will be hosting and/or participating in a total of ten sessions at 
RightsCon this week. Members of our movement will be championing Wikimedia 
approaches on emerging challenges to a free and open internet, including 
privacy and surveillance, internet access, inclusion, and internet shutdowns 
and disruptions. 

You can find details and brief descriptions for all of the sessions below. You 
can also learn more about how we're showing up at and supporting RightsCon'22 
in this blog post: 
https://diff.wikimedia.org/2022/06/02/meet-the-wikimedians-promoting-free-knowledge-and-human-rights-at-rightscon-22-this-june/

We hope to see you there!

Best,

Ziski & the Global Advocacy team
_____

1) How lawmakers in Southeast Asia can safeguard human rights while addressing 
online disinformation during elections

Date: Wednesday, June 8 at 12:30 AM EDT
Format: Panel
Presenters: Rachel Arinii Judhistari (Wikimedia Foundation), Kristina Gadaingan 
(ASEAN Parliamentarians for Human Rights), Members of Parliament from the 
Philippines and Thailand

Details: This interactive panel seeks to broaden the discussion about human 
rights safeguards within internet regulation regimes in Southeast Asia, 
especially the nuances surrounding online campaigning and the rising threat of 
disinformation, how they influence political conversations, and also 
potentially undermine electoral processes. The panel will pose these questions 
to the members of parliaments, civil society, and platform hosts. It will allow 
participants to contribute to the free-flowing discussion, and to provide 
perspectives from their own experiences and contexts as well.


2) Fighting disinformation in Persian Wikipedia: The good, the bad, the AI

Date: Thursday, June 9 at 4:30 AM EDT
Format: Tech Demo
Presenter: Amir Sarabadani (Wikimedian)

Details: This tech demo covers two tools that members of Persian Wikipedia 
developed to combat government disinformation campaigns. These tools have made 
it possible to share and update information on Persian Wikipedia without the 
fear of persecution. As such, they have become crucial to foster the resilience 
of Persian Wikipedia and may inspire other groups to bring similar initiatives 
back to their communities.


3) #WikiforHumanRights: Creating and editing human rights content on Wikipedia

Date: Thursday, June 9 at 12:15 PM EDT
Format: Workshop
Presenters: Faisal Da Supremo (Wikimedia Ghana),  Kolawole Oyewole (Wiki Fan 
Club, and Lagos State University), Iván Martínez (Wikimedia México), Luisina 
Ferrante (Wikimedia Argentina), Alex Stinson (Wikimedia Foundation)

Details: This workshop will introduce participants to the basic skills needed 
to create and edit human rights content on Wikipedia. Experienced Wikipedians 
will teach basic editing skills, share best practices around citing reputable 
sources, and answer participants’ questions during this interactive session. 
Participants are encouraged to identify articles on human rights concepts or 
content that are lacking or need to be bolstered in their linguistic 
communities before the session. The session will provide open editing time for 
participants to create or edit content on their selected topics with the 
assistance of experienced Wikipedians. It will conclude with a review of best 
practices, an update on the #WikiForHumanRights campaign, and a question and 
answer period.


4) Using Wikipedia to advance human rights and democracy, using constructive 
conflict to create quality articles 

Date: Thursday, June 9 at 2:45 PM EDT
Format: Workshop
Presenters: Luisinia Ferrante (Wikimedia Argentina), Spencer Graves 
(Wikimedian), Franziska Putz (Wikimedia Foundation)

Details: This workshop will demonstrate how controversy can be a productive 
force behind “the wisdom of crowds” that makes it possible for websites like 
Wikipedia to share freely accessible information online. Case studies on 
Spanish, Chinese, French, and English Wikipedia articles will demonstrate how 
their development was informed by social, economic, and political debates in 
each of the contexts they describe as well as by the different perspectives and 
approaches between volunteer editors. This session will expose participants to 
the experience of co-creating knowledge about human rights online.


5) No “right” approach, but many effective ones: Moderation approaches for 
online information about political processes

Date: Friday, June 10 at 8:00 AM EDT
Format: Workshop
Presenters: Patricia Díaz-Rubio (Wikimedia Chile), Kate Levan (Wikimedia 
Foundation), Nathan Forrester (Wikimedia Foundation)

Details: This immersive workshop brings together organizations with unique, 
community-led moderation approaches in order to present participants with case 
studies on disinformation around electoral processes. Panelists will engage 
participants in analyzing the issues at hand, discussing challenges to 
moderating specific content, and will then walk the audience through the 
moderation process employed in their context. The goal of the session is for 
the audience to experience how hard the job is, as well as the variety of 
effective approaches there are to content moderation, debunking the idea that 
there is a single, perfect process for moderating online spaces. 
In addition to these Wikimedia Foundation-organized events, Wikimedians will be 
hosting and participating in the following sessions, as well:

6) Empowering Community Content Moderation

Date: Tuesday, June 7 at 1:30 PM EDT
Format: Panel
Presenters: Jessica Ashooh (Reddit), Rose Coogan (Github), Allison Davenport 
(Wikimedia Foundation), Guillaume Rischard (OpenStreetMap Foundation)

Details: The panel will feature policy leadership from a variety of platforms 
with community content moderation, who will discuss best practices for 
fostering effective, scalable, and rights-based community content moderation 
online. Along with touching on the advantages of community moderation, the 
panel will also discuss challenges with the model, and how policies for digital 
communication can leave room for individuals to participate in effective 
self-regulation, collaboration, and good faith moderation of online content.


7) Building a digital rights initiative in the Caribbean 

Date: Tuesday, June 7 at 4:15 PM EDT
Format: Social Hour
Presenters: Wikimedians of the Caribbean User Group, JAAKLAC initiative, 
AfroCrowd, Access Now

Details: Social hours are an informal space where participants with common 
interests can connect and expand a network or coalition. There is no 
participation limit, so come along!


8) The danger of neglecting “non-lucrative” languages

Date: Wednesday, June 8 at 10:00 AM EDT
Format: Lightning Talk
Presenters: Anass Sedrati (Wikimedia Morocco)

Details: Having access to information in your mother tongue is a basic human 
right. Wikimedia projects may be doing well compared to other actors, but how 
can they be improved as well? Although languages in the digital world are not 
represented equally, Wikimedia projects have helped to represent more languages 
online, since the only prerequisites to have a Wikipedia in a particular 
language is an International Organization for Standardization (ISO) code and an 
active community. Yet even on Wikipedia projects this process is imperfect. 
This lightning talk explores the fraught manner in which languages are 
represented online, and puts forward the argument that more individuals need to 
be involved in enriching Wikimedia content, and in diversifying the languages 
that are represented on other platforms.


9) When you can’t see your city (online): Why you don’t want a country without 
Freedom of Panorama (FOP)

Date: Wednesday, June 8 at 10:30 PM EDT
Format: Lightning Talk
Presenters: Ramzy Muliawan (Wikimedia Indonesia)

Details: This lightning talk examines the freedom of panorama (FOP), and how 
the absence of this limitation on copyright threatens the implementation of 
Wikimedia’s 2030 strategy to “provide for safety and inclusion,” especially in 
countries where Wikimedia communities are emerging. The talk will review the 
existing freedom of panorama regulations (or lack thereof) in Indonesia, and 
propose to Wikimedia organizations and communities in Indonesia, as well as 
other emerging Wikimedia communities and like-minded partners, how to best 
navigate the muddy waters of the clash between the underdeveloped policy 
landscape and the ever-changing nature of online efforts to preserve and free 
knowledge.


10) Regulation for the few or many?

Date: Thursday, June 9 at 10:45 AM EDT
Format: Panel
Presenters: Caroline Greer (TikTok), Konstantinos Komaitis (The New York 
Times), Rebecca MacKinnon (Wikimedia Foundation), Jillian York (EFF), Eliška 
Pírková (AccessNow)

Details: This panel will discuss the risks associated with policymakers and 
legislators around the world crafting legislation with a small subset of large 
companies in mind. The panelists will discuss the theme using the latest policy 
development initiatives and practical examples. What is the impact on the 
broader tech ecosystem of one-size-fits-all laws? How can we ensure equitable 
policymaking that works for users as well? The session seeks to make 
recommendations on how the risks can be minimized, and how we can evolve to a 
more sophisticated model of tech policy- and lawmaking.
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