Open Technologies: Their Histories, Laws, and Gender | Workshop

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A workshop by Natalia-Rozalia Avlona: Open Technologies: Their History, Laws, and Gender

A University of Nicosia Research Foundation workshop for the project Phygital [https://phygitalproject.eu/]

PROGRAMME

14:30-14:45 | Introduction
14:45-16:15 | From Digital Commons to Platform Economy: A Presentation of their history, legal issues, politics, and culture
16:15-16:45 | Discussion
16:45-17:15 | Break
17:15-18:15 | Gender and Open Technologies: Feminist perspectives, challenges and potentialities
18:15-19:30 | Workshop “Queering your wiki”
19:30-20:00 | Open Discussion

Please bring your laptop with you.

*PhotoCollage and text: Natalia-Rozalia Avlona under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

During the last four decades, digital commons have shaped virtual terrains of free, participatory and distributed production of immaterial goods. The invention of World Wide Web, the Commons-Based Peer Production (CBPP), the FOSS and the Free Culture movements have formed new landscapes of governance and production as well as legal tools and virtual communities which were characterised by the “hacker ethos”. The values of sharing, openness, collaboration and decentralisation came to the front, as post-capitalist values challenging the notion of “ownership” as the subject matter and heart of the traditional copyright law. On the other hand, during the last decade, the rapid rise of the platform economy has been appropriating the values and structures of “sharing” and “decentralisation”, introduced by the digital commons, into an uneven value extraction by the platforms (netarchical capitalism).

The last years, the emergence of makerspaces as open, community-led spaces, where open source software and hardware are utilised collaboratively by individuals, (Kostakis, Niaros & Drechsler 2017) is re-territorialising these “digital commoning practices” with the means of additive and subtractive manufacturing technologies (3D Printing, CNC machining) in to the “phygital” realm, towards the production of tangible goods. However, whilst these practices are pioneering the democratisation of technology, dismantling the dominant legal and technical structures, it is not clear yet how inclusive are and can be. Hence, the feminist perspectives of open technologies are to be explored as a method and tool to expose their main challenges and potentialities.
This workshop will provide a systematic overview of this field, focusing on its first part on the historical and legal aspects of the open technologies and on the second part, on the feminist perspectives and challenges that come up by its confrontation with the gender.

Bio

Natalia-Rozalia Avlona is a lawyer and researcher working as a research assistant for the TARGET project at ELIAMEP (Hellenic Foundation for European & Foreign Policy) in Athens.
She studied law at the School of Law of the National and Kapodistrian University of Athens (2006), obtained her Master’s Degree in Law (LLM) from King’s College London (2007), and followed courses in the department of Cultural Geography at Royal Holloway, University of London and in the Department of Curating Contemporary Art at the Royal College of Art. Currently, she is a Phd Candidate at the National Technical University of Athens, and her thesis topic is “Open Technologies: Their Histories, Laws and Genders”. Her expertise is on Digital Commons and the ways that Technology, Law and Gender intersect in this area.

Avlona has an international experience working in several Organizations and European Research Programmes in UK, Belgium and Greece. Among those are the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, the Organisation of Industrial Property in Greece, the Royal College of Art in London, Abandon Normal Devices in Manchester, the Future Emerging Technologies Department (DG Connect, EU Commission) in Brussels, the General Secretariat for Gender Equality and the GUnet (Greek Universities Network) in Athens. She is member of the Management Committee of Cost Action CA16121-From Sharing to Caring: Examining Socio-Technical Aspects of the Collaborative Economy (2017-2021).

At the moment she is part of ELIAMEP’s Junior Research Fellows Team, working on TARGET (Taking a Reflexive Approach to Gender Equality for Gender Transformation), a research program that aims to contribute to the advancement of gender equality in Research and Innovation. Besides her academic career Avlona has a strong involvement as an activist in the field of digital commons and gender equality, whilst she has run a series of workshops on Wikipedia for the Galleries, Libraries, Archives and Museums (GLAM) sector, co-organised feminist workshops on FOSS at hackerspace.gr and (un)conferences on the commons. The last three years, she is member of the Social Solidarity Economy Zone.

For more information you can contact:
Evanthia Tselika
[email protected]
Tel. +35722842694

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