digitalization – P2P Foundation https://blog.p2pfoundation.net Researching, documenting and promoting peer to peer practices Sun, 30 Dec 2018 13:45:54 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.5.15 62076519 Book of the Day: Knowledge, Spirit, Law // Book 1: Radical Scholarship https://blog.p2pfoundation.net/book-of-the-day-knowledge-spirit-law-book-1-radical-scholarship/2019/01/07 https://blog.p2pfoundation.net/book-of-the-day-knowledge-spirit-law-book-1-radical-scholarship/2019/01/07#respond Mon, 07 Jan 2019 09:00:00 +0000 https://blog.p2pfoundation.net/?p=73926 Knowledge, Spirit, Law // Book 1: Radical Scholarship by Gavin Keeney, published by Punctum Books. Knowledge, Spirit, Law is a de facto phenomenology of scholarship in the age of neoliberal capitalism. The eleven essays (plus Appendices) in Book 1: Radical Scholarship cover topics and circle themes related to the problems and crises specific to neoliberal academia,... Continue reading

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Knowledge, Spirit, Law // Book 1: Radical Scholarship by Gavin Keeney, published by Punctum Books.

Knowledge, Spirit, Law is a de facto phenomenology of scholarship in the age of neoliberal capitalism. The eleven essays (plus Appendices) in Book 1: Radical Scholarship cover topics and circle themes related to the problems and crises specific to neoliberal academia, while proposing creative paths around the various obstructions. The obstructions include metrics-obsessed academia, circular and incestuous peer review, digitalization of research as stalking horse for text- and data-mining, and violation by global corporate fiat of Intellectual Property and the Moral Rights of Authors. These issues, while addressed obliquely in the main text, definitively inform the various proscriptive aspects of the essays and, via the Introduction and Appendices, underscore the necessity of developing new-old means to no obvious end in the production of knowledge — that is to say, a return to forms of non-instrumentalized intellectual inquiry. To be developed in two concurrent volumes, Knowledge, Spirit, Law will serve as a “moving and/or shifting anthology” of new forms of expression in humanistic studies. Book 2: The Anti-Capitalist Sublime will be published in Autumn 2017.

About the author

Gavin Keeney is an editor, writer, and critic. His most recent books include Dossier Chris Marker: The Suffering Image (2012) and Not-I/Thou: The Other Subject of Art and Architecture (2014), both produced as part of PhD studies conducted in Australia and Europe from 2011 to 2014. He is the Creative Director of Agence ‘X’, an editorial and artists’ and architects’ re-representation bureau founded in New York, New York, in October 2007.

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A Few Points About Author Rights https://blog.p2pfoundation.net/a-few-points-about-author-rights/2018/02/06 https://blog.p2pfoundation.net/a-few-points-about-author-rights/2018/02/06#respond Tue, 06 Feb 2018 08:00:00 +0000 https://blog.p2pfoundation.net/?p=69466 The following nine points regarding the moral rights of authors in the age of cognitive capitalism were written in response to Ines Duhanic’s article, “Julia Reda-Led Panel Discussion Reveals – Publishers’ Right Faces High Resistance From Academic Circles”, IP Watch: Inside Views (January 21, 2018) 1/ The current legislation under review by the European Commission’s... Continue reading

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The following nine points regarding the moral rights of authors in the age of cognitive capitalism were written in response to Ines Duhanic’s article, “Julia Reda-Led Panel Discussion Reveals – Publishers’ Right Faces High Resistance From Academic Circles”, IP Watch: Inside Views (January 21, 2018)

1/ The current legislation under review by the European Commission’s Digital Single Market Strategy regarding “neighboring rights”, to be voted on by the European Parliament in late March 2018, has little if anything to do with author rights

2/ All arguments about protecting revenue streams for publishers indicate that the true purpose is to fortify the rights of publishers (who have arrogated to themselves the rights of authors)

3/ The arguments from the public domain side against this legislation are equally problematic and suspect for the same reason that author rights are not part of the rationale for propping up the knowledge commons against the disputed proprietary rights of publishers

4/ The central issue, which is also hidden in plain sight, is – after all – the moral rights of authors (“Lockean natural rights”) as established in the Enlightenment and as enshrined in the Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic Works (1886)

5/ Both the EC and the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) have shown no interest in addressing this set of rights, given the inherent abstract nature of such rights and given that both are operating on behalf of industry in a global IP campaign that resembles the “weaponizing” of IP rights

6/ Given that economic data (or any empirical proof) confirming that free copying of works or appropriation by platform cultures benefits the author is impossible to produce, whether justified through the murky term “transformative use” or “discoverability”, all such arguments, as used on both sides of the debate (by publishers to e-license copyrighted works and by advocates of Open Access to justify authors giving their works away for nothing) devolve to mere speculation based on the bias of the beneficiaries

7/ Given the origin of copyright in the Venetian Renaissance, via the granting of privilegio to authors for books published in the Republic of Venice, and given the almost immediate arrogation of privilegio by printer-publishers in the Republic of Venice, the arguments associated with “neighboring rights” today merely revisit historic arguments waged then against the damage done to authors and presses through illegal copying

8/ What has not advanced, and what needs to be fully disclosed, is how mass digitalization from both sides of this battleground has forced the lion’s share of authors today into a class conveniently labeled the “precariat” by critics of capitalism for the benefit of a global “vectorial class”

9/ What is less obvious regarding this widening chasm between the precariat and the vectorial class is that almost all academic proponents of fortifying the knowledge commons through an enforced neoliberalized open-access regime for scholarly works are part of the global vectorial class by virtue of participation in the production of platform cultures that decimate author rights from the so-called non-profit side, while “Capital” takes care of the destruction of author rights on the for-profit side

 

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Shaping the new world of work: The impacts of digitalisation and robotisation. https://blog.p2pfoundation.net/shaping-new-world-work-impacts-digitalisation-robotisation/2016/04/25 https://blog.p2pfoundation.net/shaping-new-world-work-impacts-digitalisation-robotisation/2016/04/25#respond Mon, 25 Apr 2016 09:59:51 +0000 https://blog.p2pfoundation.net/?p=55783 If you’re in Brussels in late June don’t miss this conference on the social digitalisation of work which will feature, among many others, my colleague Michel Bauwens. The following is extracted from the conference’s website. The purpose of this ETUC/ETUI conference is to discuss how the world and nature of work and employment is being... Continue reading

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If you’re in Brussels in late June don’t miss this conference on the social digitalisation of work which will feature, among many others, my colleague Michel Bauwens. The following is extracted from the conference’s website.

The purpose of this ETUC/ETUI conference is to discuss how the world and nature of work and employment is being changed radically by the digital revolution.

Contrary to similar conferences, this event will not only focus on the quantity of work (‘will robots destroy our jobs?’) but also on the quality of work (working conditions, life-work balance, autonomy versus precarious jobs, impacts on social dialogue, health and safety at the workplace etc.) and the challenges of these trends for trade unions and workers.

It will try to answer the question how trade unions and civil society can help define a path to a ‘social digitalisation of work and the work place’ which will support and even strengthen the overall well-being of Europe’s workers.

Monday 27 June 2016

11.00 – 13.00

Plenary A: Inaugural keynote speeches (Room: Belgium)

14.00- 15.30

Panel 1: Collaborative economy and platform capitalism (IRES)
Panel 2: The future of industry in Europe
Panel 3: Digitalisation – more democracy in public services and public service workplaces? (EPSU)
Panel 4: Private services (UNI Europa)
Panel 5: Future of jobs in the digital network economy

15.30 – 16.00: Coffee break

16.00-16.20

Keynote speech EU Commissioner (Room: Belgium)

16.30-18.30

Plenary B: The big picture (setting the scene) (Room: Belgium)

Tuesday 28 June

9.00-11.00

Plenary C: Technology
Plenary D: Employment

11.00-11.30 Coffee break

11.30-13.00

Panel 6: Organising and representing workers in the digital economy
Panel 7: Inequalities and labour market polarisation
Panel 8: Psycho-social risks of future forms of work (EFFAT with EFBWW)
Panel 9: Circular Economy as a driver for jobs and industrial development (IndustriAll with EPSU)
Panel 10: Working time

13.00 -14.00 Lunch break

14.00 – 15.30

Panel 11: Work intensification
Panel 12: Workplace innovation in the second machine age
Panel 13: Data protection for employees (UNI Europa)
Panel 14: Amazon (UNI Europa and EPSU)

15.30 – 16.00: Coffee break

16.00 – 18.00h

Plenary E: Working conditions

Wednesday 29 June

09.00 – 10.30

Panel 15: Skills and training in the 4th Industrial Revolution: what do companies need? What can workers hope?
Panel 16: Basic income
Panel 17: Working conditions in the Share Economy – Platformworkers – How to organize the crowd?
Panel 18: New forms of work and labour market policies
Panel 19: Negotiating the new world of work – what role for collective bargaining?

10.30 – 11.00: Coffee break

11.00 – 12.30

Panel 20: How governments tackle the digitalisation challenge
Panel 21: Back to the future: is the sharing economy a threat or opportunity for trade unions?
Panel 22: Dealing with Change: New roles and capabilities for trade unions (CRIMT)
Panel 23: How to organise the process of digitalisation of the work places?
Panel 24: Workers’ participation and the introduction of new technology

12.30 – 13.30: Lunch break

13.30 – 15.30

Plenary F: How to re-think labour law? (Room: Belgium)

15.30-16.00 Coffee break

16.00-18.00

Plenary G: The way forward (Room: Belgium)

 

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