Third lecture Cyberspace Salvations

Yesterday evening I went to a Cyberspace Salvations lecture at the Waag Society for the second time. I was with my collegue Jeroen Timmermans, Yuwei Lin, a researcher from the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam and Mylene, my girlfriend. To my surpise, there was no Mark Pesce in the flesh, but only a projection of him on a piece of cardboard and his voice through the PA speakers. However ‘high-tech’, it wasn’t as good as the real thing, a bit hard to follow sometimes due to bad sound quality. Read full notes below

Lecture Cyberspace Salvations @ Waag Society

Wednesday evening, September 21, I was at the second Cyberspace Salvations lecture (missed the first one) at Waag Society, Amsterdam. Cyberspace Salvations is a cooperative project by several Universities in the Netherlands, together with Waag Society that researches the “re-enchantment” of the world under influence of new technologies. Talked to two members of the research team afterwards and made some sort of vague promise with Stef to work together on some fronts. Could be useful, as our projects look alike a lot. They also organise a couple of smaller meetings which I hope to attend. Below the full notes of […] Read More

Technology & ethics meeting in Delft

Monday, September 19, I was in Delft for a meeting with researchers from the Technical University Delft and two Australian researchers. Present were: Seumas Miller – Australian National University – Centre for Applied Philosophy and Public Ethics; privacy issues Cathy Flick – Charles Sturt University – ICT industry, codes of ethics, policies, trust, privacy Jeroen van den Hoven – TU Delft; prof. Ethics of Technology; privacy issues, moral identity Alper Cugun – MSc student TU Delft; social issues, online communities Noëmi Manders – PhD researcher TU Delft; ethical aspects of identity management Bibi van den Berg – PhD EUR; ambient […] Read More

City mapped by mobile phone users

BoingBoing posted an interesting article about an MIT project called Mobile Landscape that maps the way people move around in the city (in this case the city of Graz in Austria). The project raises questions around the changing ways people may experience (urban) space under influence of new (pervasive) technologies. BTW, it is certainly not true that ‘”For the first time ever we are able to visualize the full dynamics of a city in real time,” said project leader Carlo Ratti’: Waag Society has already done a project in 2002 called Amsterdam Realtime. Here’s the MIT project site.

Steven Clift in Amsterdam

Steven Clift, initiator of the political activation & internet project E-Democracy.org was in Amsterdam yesterday at the IPP (Institute for Public and Politics). About 15 people – amongst them researchers from Radbout University Nijmegen and the Amsterdam School of Social Research – were present to hear about the project and the way it has recently switched to an open source mail/web-politics system.