."the future security measures that people are not allowed to be without
a mobile phone, especially when they move around in public"...
see McLuhan about the law of reversal:
“during the stages of their development all things appear under forms
opposite to those that they finally present.”
the
On 18/Mar/20 06:56, Hoofd, I.M. (Ingrid) wrote:
Teachers online doing their care work for their students everywhere in the
world now: respect.
Totally concur, Ingrid, as a learning facilitator, yes, I understand the
alienation connected with highly-mediated human connection very well. But w
Probably the more conservative the ideas of learning and teaching are,
The more negative the reactions are to media and network based environments
Maybe file these posts under technophobic or so, I believe in communication
In many different ways and saying that âonline teaching does not workâ
Individual health and public health are deeply monitored by Google,
Facebook and other big-brother companies since decennies, with
thousand algorithms spying our life in real time. They store huge
files about our intimate life, not only with what we say/search online
about the subject, with wher
folks,
maybe a stupid question, but do we know which data exactly are being
handed over to authorities here? are they, for instance, GPS data
collected by and harvested from the devices, or login data from
transmission units?
and another point: what is actually being tracked here is of course
no
Dear Felix,
I wonder if *focusing* on "mobile phone data to monitor public health
efforts" is not the best way to prepare, structure, what you call in your
email "the general state of emergency" - to technologically enable it to
last! Yes, "simply calling for the protection of personal privacy" is
Dear Andreas and all,
That's a bunch of bollocks.
Universities ARE exploiting us through our sense of care and duty for our
students, whether we teach online or not.
Education IS meaningful in the face of what humanity faces, just as is helping
the kids next door with the groceries for grandma
As now known from Crypto AG revelations spy
agencies track comprehensively but do not
disclose that information, no matter the horrors
observed, to protect means and methods of
deception. That callous mercilessness is not new,
the same concealment from the public has been an
ancient practi
Dear Andreas,
I loved your post. And would like to add to that:
I am irritated when policy makers in this situation say things like:
"now we see drawbacks for not having digitized schools/universites in
time". I am irritated as there are at least two misunderstandings:
(1) There is _one_ form
Felix Stalder writes:
> So, is there a possibility to use this data without it turning
> it into an authoritarian power grab? I think there is, under the
> following guidelines:
>
> - Data needs to be deleted after immediate purpose of the analysis
> has been achieved.
The thing is these data
On Wed, Mar 18, 2020 at 10:20:02AM +0100, Felix Stalder wrote:
> Is it likely that we manage to enact these? No. But simply calling for
> the protection of personal privacy, or accepting the general state of
> emergency, will be even worse.
???If the ends don't justify the means, what does --
This is an interesting discussion â¦
Iâd like to provide a link to a comment comparing the situation in Italy and
South Korea which alludes to the possibility that in fact meticulous tracking
of infected individuals from the very start of the outbreak *is* an effective
way to contain the s
On 2020-03-18 10:38, mp wrote:
> On 18/03/2020 09:20, Felix Stalder wrote:
>
>> Is it likely that we manage to enact these? No. But simply calling
>> for the protection of personal privacy, or accepting the general
>> state of emergency, will be even worse.
>
> Perhaps attempt to (re)generate tr
Rebecca Barrett-Fox offers thoughtful advice for lecturers and
professors considering to move their teaching online:
Please do a bad job of putting your courses online
I’m absolutely serious.
For my colleagues who are now being instructed to put some or all of
the remainder of their semester
On 18.03.20 11:01, Laura Chimera wrote:
>
> On Wed, 18 Mar 2020 at 10:25, Felix Stalder wrote:
>
>> A1, the largest mobile phone carrier, is providing data to public
>> authorities in an effort to monitor these restrictions (contact
>> tracing might come later).
>>
>
> What's your source on
On Wed, 18 Mar 2020 at 10:25, Felix Stalder wrote:
> A1, the largest mobile phone carrier, is providing data to public
> authorities in an effort to monitor these restrictions (contact
> tracing might come later).
>
What's your source on that? I'd love to read more about it
~ L
# distribute
On 18/03/2020 09:20, Felix Stalder wrote:
> Is it likely that we manage to enact these? No. But simply calling for
> the protection of personal privacy, or accepting the general state of
> emergency, will be even worse.
Perhaps attempt to (re)generate trust, collective intelligence and
solidar
On 16/Mar/20 08:25, Carsten Agger wrote:
biological and social levels: the damage to the body is mostly due to
the overreaction of the immune system, and the damage to the economy
This body-response that you speak of was true for the SARS event -- that's why
mortality rates for younger peopl
Here in Austria, and in many other places as well, restrictions on
personal mobility are quite severe. At the moment, we are told to
stay at home, with exceptions only for a) going to work (where remote
work is not possible), b) shopping for necessities (food, medicines,
cigarettes, mobile phones
19 matches
Mail list logo