How can we become citizens (not consumers) on the Internet?
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The Internet today mostly treats us as consumers, not as citizens. To make things worse, we are often represented as users conforming to the same standards. As citizens we have rights to clean water, clean air, and healthy food. As digital citizens, we should have the right to represent ourselves accurately, and to know where and how our information is being used. However, we are often without agency, funneled into revenue-maximizing streams. But we are not the same, we come from different cultures, our languages are unique, and our needs are different. So how do we change the internet in such a way that we enable digital societies to flourish? How do we make it local and adaptive to our diverse needs?
In this episode of Townmaking, host Servaz van Berkum will talk with Indranil Bhattacharya and Tessa Cramer. Indranil is one of the initiators of Townmaking Institute. Tessa is a futurist and lector on designing the future at the Fontys Academy for the Creative Economy in Tilburg, the Netherlands.
This podcast was produced and curated by Indranil Bhattacharya, Omar Zuberi, Fernanda Hunken Herrera, and Servaz van Berkum (host). Music by Mickey Smid.
See https://digitalsociety.townmaking.com/ for more about Digital Culture.
See https://www.townmaking.com/ for more information on Townmaking Institute and this podcast series.
This podcast is published by the Townmaking Institute under the Next Commons principles (https://nextcommons.townmaking.com/).
See https://www.townmaking.com/ for more information.
22 episódios