Difference between revisions of "Main Page/Crash Courses/Systems and Policies/Week one"

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=== Week 1: Introduction ===
 
=== Week 1: Introduction ===
* Real time lecture: May 20th, 9:30 - 11:30 Pacific/12:30 - 2:30 Eastern on Zoom: https://zoom.us/j/9129428892
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* Recording from this week: https://vimeo.com/manage/videos/683440034
  
* Welcome everyone! We’re so thrilled to be starting the first LFP Crash Course on Systems and Policies. This week, we’ll be getting acquainted with the course, including curriculum, technology, goals, and each other.   
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* Real time lecture: March 1st, 8:30 - 10:30 Pacific/11:30 - 1:30 Eastern on Zoom: https://zoom.us/j/9129428892
TBD on
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* Welcome everyone! We’re so thrilled to be starting the first LFP Crash Course on Systems and Policies. This week, we’ll be getting acquainted with the course, including curriculum, technology, goals, and each other.  
 +
   
 
==== Course overview ====
 
==== Course overview ====
===== Course themes =====
 
* WE ARE STILL IN A PANDEMIC (plus other kinds of social and economic collapse)
 
* Systems and policies = vendors, library policies, library computer environments, figuring out the data we're collecting, how to collect less of it, how to secure it, who it gets shared with, and who is impacted if we don't safeguard privacy.
 
* Surveillance capitalism: politics, ideology, and money behind technologies
 
* Privacy and intellectual freedom with a justice-based approach, not just a rights-based approach
 
* Privacy strategies and tools with a harm reduction lens
 
* Individual vs collective action
 
 
===== LFP background =====
 
* Alison intro
 
* Howard intro
 
* Brief LFP history
 
* How the Crash Courses came to be
 
 
 
===== Syllabus and weekly layout =====
 
===== Syllabus and weekly layout =====
* Eight weeks, roughly five hours a week
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* Ten weeks, roughly five hours a week
 
* Weekly commitments: lecture, discussion, readings, tasks.
 
* Weekly commitments: lecture, discussion, readings, tasks.
* [Schedule overview: https://libraryfreedom.wiki/html/public_html/index.php/Main_Page/Crash_Courses/Systems_and_Policies#Schedule_overview]
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* [https://libraryfreedom.wiki/html/public_html/index.php/Main_Page/Crash_Courses/Systems_and_Policies#Schedule_overview Schedule overview]
* Weekly meetings are one hour of lecture, one hour of discussion, so please be ready to participate each week!
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* Weekly meetings are typically one hour of lecture, one hour of discussion, so please be ready to participate each week! Sometimes the discussion will be in small breakout groups, and sometimes it'll be with the whole group. The first hour (lecture) will be recorded each week, but the second hour will not.
* Tasks are things for you to complete every week. If you have to miss some, that is fine! They're meant to help you engage more deeply in this course.  
+
* Tasks are things for you to complete every week. Usually they'll be discussion board prompts, diving deeper into weekly topics that we've covered in readings and conversations. If you have to miss some, that is fine! They're meant to help you engage more deeply in this course, so you'll get back what you put in.  
 
* Let Alison know if you need to be absent from one of the real-time lectures, or if you need to miss a whole week for any reason.  
 
* Let Alison know if you need to be absent from one of the real-time lectures, or if you need to miss a whole week for any reason.  
* Review [https://libraryfreedom.wiki/html/public_html/index.php/LFI_Course_Materials/Code_of_Conduct code of conduct].
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* Review and abide by the [https://libraryfreedom.wiki/html/public_html/index.php/LFI_Course_Materials/Code_of_Conduct code of conduct].
  
 
===== Class technology =====
 
===== Class technology =====
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Some examples of these projects can be found on the [https://libraryfreedom.org/resources/ LFP website].
 
Some examples of these projects can be found on the [https://libraryfreedom.org/resources/ LFP website].
  
==== This week only! ====
 
 
===== Readings =====  
 
===== Readings =====  
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There will be readings most weeks; please come to the weekly conversation ready to discuss them!
  
We'll begin by getting into some background about what's going on and how we got here. Our focus this week will be on a range of readings...a little bit of the history and politics of Big Data and government surveillance, as well as some of the historical ideas about what a more just internet could look like. We don't have anywhere near the time to go through all of the history here, so we'll just be focusing on some of the bigger issues. Please have the reading completed before our Monday lecture, because we'll spend that lecture talking about what we learned. Later, we'll continue the discussion on libraryfreedom.chat. You'll also review the Data Detox Kit and complete one day of it for your weekly tasks.
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This week, I'm sharing just a few foundational pieces on the early internet which give some background into the problems we face today. We will probably only be discussing them on the message board (libraryfreedom.chat) during week 2. In future weeks, we'll be discussing the readings during our real time discussion.
 
 
 
 
We won't be discussing these readings until week 2! But there are a lot, so you have two weeks to read them.
 
 
 
[https://www.uio.no/studier/emner/matnat/ifi/INF3700/v17/bakgrunnsnotat/the_surveillant_assemblage.pdf The Surveillant Assemblage, Kevin D. Haggerty and Richard V. Ericson]
 
 
 
[https://www.eff.org/cyberspace-independence A Declaration of Independence of Cyberspace by John Perry Barlow] (read before reading The Californian Ideology)
 
 
 
[https://www.metamute.org/editorial/articles/californian-ideology The Californian Ideology by Richard Barbrook and Andy Cameron] (read after reading A Declaration of Independence of Cyberspace)
 
 
 
[https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2014/02/history-surveillance-and-black-community The History of Surveillance and the Black Community]
 
  
===== Guest lecturer =====
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* [https://www.uio.no/studier/emner/matnat/ifi/INF3700/v17/bakgrunnsnotat/the_surveillant_assemblage.pdf The Surveillant Assemblage, Kevin D. Haggerty and Richard V. Ericson]: this is a foundational piece in the realm of "surveillance studies" that can help ground our understanding of the problem.
No guest this week; Alison will lead the lecture
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* [https://www.eff.org/cyberspace-independence A Declaration of the Independence of Cyberspace] A text written in 1996 by John Perry Barlow, which has been enormously influential in the cyber-libertarian ideology that has dominated the development of the internet, which critics say has led to many of the problems with Big Data that we face today.
 +
* [https://www.metamute.org/editorial/articles/californian-ideology The Californian Ideology] A critique of the cyber-libertarian ethos, written in 1995.
 +
* [https://gist.github.com/kolber/2131643 Pandora's Vox] Another view of the early internet (1994), and a warning about what it was to become, from Carmen Hermosillo aka humdog.
 +
* Read through and familiarize yourself with libraryfreedom.wiki
 +
* Read through libraryfreedom.org
  
===== Discussion =====
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===== Discussion board prompt =====
* What brings you to LFP? What are your personal goals for this course?
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* What brings you to LFP? What are your personal goals for this course? https://libraryfreedom.chat/t/cc-3-intro-week/932
  
 
===== Tasks =====  
 
===== Tasks =====  
* Lecture, readings and discussion forum
 
 
* Create a libraryfreedom.chat account
 
* Create a libraryfreedom.chat account
* Read through materials on libraryfreedom.wiki
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* Post your discussion board response to libraryfreedom.chat
* Start readings for next week
 

Latest revision as of 18:41, 1 March 2022

Week 1: Introduction[edit]

  • Real time lecture: March 1st, 8:30 - 10:30 Pacific/11:30 - 1:30 Eastern on Zoom: https://zoom.us/j/9129428892
  • Welcome everyone! We’re so thrilled to be starting the first LFP Crash Course on Systems and Policies. This week, we’ll be getting acquainted with the course, including curriculum, technology, goals, and each other.

Course overview[edit]

Syllabus and weekly layout[edit]
  • Ten weeks, roughly five hours a week
  • Weekly commitments: lecture, discussion, readings, tasks.
  • Schedule overview
  • Weekly meetings are typically one hour of lecture, one hour of discussion, so please be ready to participate each week! Sometimes the discussion will be in small breakout groups, and sometimes it'll be with the whole group. The first hour (lecture) will be recorded each week, but the second hour will not.
  • Tasks are things for you to complete every week. Usually they'll be discussion board prompts, diving deeper into weekly topics that we've covered in readings and conversations. If you have to miss some, that is fine! They're meant to help you engage more deeply in this course, so you'll get back what you put in.
  • Let Alison know if you need to be absent from one of the real-time lectures, or if you need to miss a whole week for any reason.
  • Review and abide by the code of conduct.
Class technology[edit]
  • Discourse messageboard: libraryfreedom.chat (register an account)
  • Zoom video/audio chat/recordings (Zoom meeting ID 912-942-8892)
  • Riseup mailing list: [need to add Crash Course mailing list here]
  • Wiki: libraryfreedom.wiki (register an account)
  • Vimeo archive of lectures: https://vimeo.com/libraryfreedominstitute

Please note that all class technology is publicly accessible! That means that the mailing list archives, messageboard, and wiki can all be viewed by anyone. I’ve set it up this way so that the materials we create can easily be shared, but also, I understand that sometimes we might want to talk amongst ourselves, so I’ve created a “private” category on the Discourse messageboard that’s only viewable to our group. You can use this category whenever you want to talk about something that you don’t want the whole world to see. Likewise, we are not recording the second hour of our weekly conversations, so that this can also be a more private space for discussion.

Outcomes for this cohort[edit]
  • Gain a more holistic understanding of the data environment in libraries.
  • Learn how to use threat modeling to determine how the loss of privacy impacts our communities, and to determine priorities when implementing better privacy practices.
  • Learn the language of privacy, and use it to talk to talk to library stakeholders and craft effective, comprehensive policy.
  • Understand some of the endemic vendor privacy issues and discuss opportunities for resistance and harm reduction.
  • Understand privacy issues and best practices affecting public computer environments.
Optional final projects[edit]

Lots of LFP folks have found it valuable to work on a final project as part of their work in these cohorts. Sometimes folks have worked alone, sometimes in groups. These final projects are optional, but if you choose to work on one, Alison will be ready to work with you as much as you need in bringing it to life. Our graphic designer, Mike Finch, may also be able to help with the aesthetics of your project.

Some final projects that people have worked on in the past:

  • A library privacy policy and/or example vendor agreement
  • An analysis of vendor privacy issues
  • A privacy class
  • A privacy program that isn't a class
  • A display about privacy
  • A flyer or poster about a privacy concept
  • A staff training
  • Something focused on privacy work outside of the library walls, like a letter to a legislator
  • A privacy audit plan for a library
  • A comprehensive privacy plan for a library

Some examples of these projects can be found on the LFP website.

Readings[edit]

There will be readings most weeks; please come to the weekly conversation ready to discuss them!

This week, I'm sharing just a few foundational pieces on the early internet which give some background into the problems we face today. We will probably only be discussing them on the message board (libraryfreedom.chat) during week 2. In future weeks, we'll be discussing the readings during our real time discussion.

  • The Surveillant Assemblage, Kevin D. Haggerty and Richard V. Ericson: this is a foundational piece in the realm of "surveillance studies" that can help ground our understanding of the problem.
  • A Declaration of the Independence of Cyberspace A text written in 1996 by John Perry Barlow, which has been enormously influential in the cyber-libertarian ideology that has dominated the development of the internet, which critics say has led to many of the problems with Big Data that we face today.
  • The Californian Ideology A critique of the cyber-libertarian ethos, written in 1995.
  • Pandora's Vox Another view of the early internet (1994), and a warning about what it was to become, from Carmen Hermosillo aka humdog.
  • Read through and familiarize yourself with libraryfreedom.wiki
  • Read through libraryfreedom.org
Discussion board prompt[edit]
Tasks[edit]
  • Create a libraryfreedom.chat account
  • Post your discussion board response to libraryfreedom.chat