Bauwens: "Cloud Computing as Enclosure" (con link)
Cloud Computing as Enclosure <http://blog.p2pfoundation.net/cloud-computing-as-enclosure/2013/01/15> Michel Bauwens 15th January 2013 Republished <http://bollier.org/blog/cloud-computing-enclosure>from*David Bollier*: "As more and more computing moves off our PCs and into "the Cloud," Internet users are gaining access to a wealth of new software-based services that can exploit vast computing capacity and memory storage. That's wonderful. But what about our freedom to create and share things as we wish, free from corporate or government surveillance or over-reaching copyright enforcement? The real danger of the Cloud is its potential to limit how we may create and share what we want, on our terms. There are already signs that large corporations like Google, Facebook, Twitter and all the rest will quietly warp the design architecture of the Internet to serve their business interests first.*A terrific overview of the troubling issues raised by the Cloud can be found in the essay, "The Cloud: Boundless Digital Potential or Enclosure 3.0 <http://www.vjolt.net/vol17/issue3/v17i3_190_Lametti.pdf>," by/David Lametti/, a law professor at McGill University, and published by the Virginia Journal of Law & Technology.*An earlier version is available at the SSRN website. Lametti states his thesis simply: "I argue that the Cloud, unless monitored and possibly directed, has the potential to go beyond undermining copyright and the public domain -- Enclosure 2.0 -- and to go beyond weakening privacy. This round, which I call "Enclosure 3.0", has the potential to disempower Internet users and conversely empower a very small group of gatekeepers. Put bluntly, it has the potential to relegate Internet users to the status of digital sheep." [...] Continua qui: http://blog.p2pfoundation.net/cloud-computing-as-enclosure/2013/01/15
A me pare un lavoro fondamentale; dobbiamo creare unoccasione per discuterne insieme m. Da: nexa-bounces@server-nexa.polito.it [mailto:nexa-bounces@server-nexa.polito.it] Per conto di J.C. DE MARTIN Inviato: martedì 15 gennaio 2013 15.14 A: NEXA List Oggetto: [nexa] Bauwens: "Cloud Computing as Enclosure" (con link) <http://blog.p2pfoundation.net/cloud-computing-as-enclosure/2013/01/15> Cloud Computing as Enclosure Michel Bauwens 15th January 2013 <http://bollier.org/blog/cloud-computing-enclosure> Republished from David Bollier: As more and more computing moves off our PCs and into the Cloud, Internet users are gaining access to a wealth of new software-based services that can exploit vast computing capacity and memory storage. Thats wonderful. But what about our freedom to create and share things as we wish, free from corporate or government surveillance or over-reaching copyright enforcement? The real danger of the Cloud is its potential to limit how we may create and share what we want, on our terms. There are already signs that large corporations like Google, Facebook, Twitter and all the rest will quietly warp the design architecture of the Internet to serve their business interests first. A terrific overview of the troubling issues raised by the Cloud can be found in the essay, <http://www.vjolt.net/vol17/issue3/v17i3_190_Lametti.pdf> The Cloud: Boundless Digital Potential or Enclosure 3.0, by David Lametti, a law professor at McGill University, and published by the Virginia Journal of Law & Technology. An earlier version is available at the SSRN website. Lametti states his thesis simply: I argue that the Cloud, unless monitored and possibly directed, has the potential to go beyond undermining copyright and the public domain Enclosure 2.0 and to go beyond weakening privacy. This round, which I call Enclosure 3.0, has the potential to disempower Internet users and conversely empower a very small group of gatekeepers. Put bluntly, it has the potential to relegate Internet users to the status of digital sheep. [...] Continua qui: http://blog.p2pfoundation.net/cloud-computing-as-enclosure/2013/01/15
On Fri, Mar 22, 2013 14:21:35 PM +0100, Marco Ricolfi wrote:
A me pare un lavoro fondamentale; dobbiamo creare un’occasione per discuterne insieme m.
Grazie per l'occasione di ricordare la mia proposta di come risolvere questo problema, menzionata pure quella su p2pfoundations.net pochi giorni fa: http://blog.p2pfoundation.net/who-cares-of-google-reader-lets-use-the-p2p-al... sempre a disposizione per discuterne! Marco
Da: nexa-bounces@server-nexa.polito.it [mailto:nexa-bounces@server-nexa.polito.it] Per conto di J.C. DE MARTIN Inviato: martedì 15 gennaio 2013 15.14 A: NEXA List Oggetto: [nexa] Bauwens: "Cloud Computing as Enclosure" (con link)
Cloud Computing as Enclosure
Michel Bauwens
15th January 2013
Republished from David Bollier:
“As more and more computing moves off our PCs and into “the Cloud,” Internet users are gaining access to a wealth of new software-based services that can exploit vast computing capacity and memory storage. That’s wonderful. But what about our freedom to create and share things as we wish, free from corporate or government surveillance or over-reaching copyright enforcement? The real danger of the Cloud is its potential to limit how we may create and share what we want, on our terms.
There are already signs that large corporations like Google, Facebook, Twitter and all the rest will quietly warp the design architecture of the Internet to serve their business interests first. A terrific overview of the troubling issues raised by the Cloud can be found in the essay, “The Cloud: Boundless Digital Potential or Enclosure 3.0,” by David Lametti, a law professor at McGill University, and published by the Virginia Journal of Law & Technology. An earlier version is available at the SSRN website.
Lametti states his thesis simply: “I argue that the Cloud, unless monitored and possibly directed, has the potential to go beyond undermining copyright and the public domain – Enclosure 2.0 – and to go beyond weakening privacy. This round, which I call “Enclosure 3.0”, has the potential to disempower Internet users and conversely empower a very small group of gatekeepers. Put bluntly, it has the potential to relegate Internet users to the status of digital sheep.”
[...]
Continua qui: http://blog.p2pfoundation.net/cloud-computing-as-enclosure/2013/ 01/15
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-- Your own civil rights and the quality of your life heavily depend on how software is used *around* you: http://digifreedom.net/node/84
concordo, il cloud ripropone il problema dell'architettura della rete e del controllo. Tra l'altro è una riflessione che è utile anche sul fronte G-cloud. A. On Fri, 22 Mar 2013 14:21:35 +0100 "Marco Ricolfi" <marco.ricolfi@studiotosetto.it> wrote:
A me pare un lavoro fondamentale; dobbiamo creare unoccasione per discuterne insieme m.
Da: nexa-bounces@server-nexa.polito.it [mailto:nexa-bounces@server-nexa.polito.it] Per conto di J.C. DE MARTIN Inviato: martedì 15 gennaio 2013 15.14 A: NEXA List Oggetto: [nexa] Bauwens: "Cloud Computing as Enclosure" (con link)
<http://blog.p2pfoundation.net/cloud-computing-as-enclosure/2013/01/15> Cloud Computing as Enclosure
Michel Bauwens
15th January 2013
<http://bollier.org/blog/cloud-computing-enclosure> Republished from David Bollier:
As more and more computing moves off our PCs and into the Cloud, Internet users are gaining access to a wealth of new software-based services that can exploit vast computing capacity and memory storage. Thats wonderful. But what about our freedom to create and share things as we wish, free from corporate or government surveillance or over-reaching copyright enforcement? The real danger of the Cloud is its potential to limit how we may create and share what we want, on our terms.
There are already signs that large corporations like Google, Facebook, Twitter and all the rest will quietly warp the design architecture of the Internet to serve their business interests first. A terrific overview of the troubling issues raised by the Cloud can be found in the essay, <http://www.vjolt.net/vol17/issue3/v17i3_190_Lametti.pdf> The Cloud: Boundless Digital Potential or Enclosure 3.0, by David Lametti, a law professor at McGill University, and published by the Virginia Journal of Law & Technology. An earlier version is available at the SSRN website.
Lametti states his thesis simply: I argue that the Cloud, unless monitored and possibly directed, has the potential to go beyond undermining copyright and the public domain Enclosure 2.0 and to go beyond weakening privacy. This round, which I call Enclosure 3.0, has the potential to disempower Internet users and conversely empower a very small group of gatekeepers. Put bluntly, it has the potential to relegate Internet users to the status of digital sheep.
[...]
Continua qui: http://blog.p2pfoundation.net/cloud-computing-as-enclosure/2013/01/15
-- Avv. Alessandro Mantelero, PhD Faculty Fellow, Nexa Center for Internet and Society Visiting Fellow, Oxford Internet Institute http://staff.polito.it/alessandro.mantelero http://it.linkedin.com/pub/alessandro-mantelero/29/723/a48 https://twitter.com/mantelero Department of Management and Production Engineering Politecnico di Torino Corso Duca degli Abruzzi, 24 10129 Torino - Italy in libertate fortitudo
participants (4)
-
Alessandro Mantelero -
J.C. DE MARTIN -
M. Fioretti -
Marco Ricolfi