People affected by exclusion, discrimination and inequality are able to meaningfully use and shape the internet and digital technologies to meet their specific needs.
The pandemic has exposed the deep inequalities that exist between those online and those who do not have meaningful and affordable access to the internet. With many government services, education and work moving online during lockdowns, the unconnected experienced significant social and economic exclusions. These showed how critical advocating for broad-based internet access was to enable the socioeconomic rights of most people.
In many countries across the global South, government-led connectivity plans for underserved communities and schools have stalled or failed, and although there has been increased coverage by mobile networks and satellite operators, this is not translating into a significant increase in users or to closing the digital divide. Regulatory limitations in many countries also prevent independent actors from providing internet connectivity to the underserved. Despite the pandemic showing how stark the implications of being offline could be for already marginalised communities, many countries still need to be encouraged to recognise community networks as a viable solution to the digital divide. Local access initiatives meanwhile face the hurdles of long-term sustainability and meeting their ongoing capacity needs.
The year 2022 showed that renewed efforts were necessary to rapidly expand internet coverage to marginalised communities, to revive dormant broad-based connectivity projects in schools and poorer urban and rural regions, and to reinvigorate mechanisms for universal access, such as universal service funds.
We strengthened grassroots communities across the global South by helping them to move online for the first time in meaningful ways.
While internet coverage for underserved areas is necessary, simply being connected is not enough. Meaningful access entails communities having a sense of ownership and understanding of the infrastructure they use; that this infrastructure is accessible, affordable and can be maintained; the knowledge and skills to navigate the online world productively and safely; and to be able to use the internet in ways relevant to their communities, contexts and lives.
In 2022, we strengthened grassroots communities by fostering a strong community networks ecosystem in the global South. Our approach was to directly tackle factors that limit the expansion of connectivity and infrastructure for communities that are most at risk of exclusion and discrimination.
We helped develop and consolidate community networks in Brazil, Indonesia, Kenya, Nigeria and South Africa. Around 35 communities were engaged in our National Schools of Community Networks, which saw five community networks established in those countries. We also supported 14 community network peers in India, Brazil, Kenya, Uganda, South Africa and Mexico through our Community Network Travel and Events Fund.
Alongside this, we helped create the framework for environmental grants in Asia through the Information Society Innovation Fund, and went on to support some of their grantees with bamboo tower design and solar panel installation. We also hosted an ongoing Bamboo Community of Practice to exchange knowledge and develop funding proposals for testing bamboo towers in India. We supported the building of two bamboo towers in communities in India and Indonesia, fostering community participation and a sense of ownership of their infrastructure.
Our work resulted in tangible policy changes for community networks in the global South.
The year 2022 marked a milestone for APC's advocacy across different forums and policy spaces, focusing on creating an enabling policy and regulatory environment for local access from a gender and human rights perspective. We successfully encouraged stakeholders in global processes to prioritise community networks, and helped shape the language used to refer to local access initiatives.
Our advocacy resulted in broad recognition of community networks at the International Telecommunication Union (ITU), where we highlighted the importance of commitment to policy, regulation and financial mechanisms that enable community-led initiatives at the ITU’s multistakeholder alliance, Partner2Connect. We also raised the role of community networks in bridging the digital divide at the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) Ministerial Meeting in Spain, and in background papers for the OECD Committee on Digital Economy Policy.
We also made progress in our engagement at the regional and national levels in Africa, Latin America and Asia. We finalised our policy strategy for Asia, while in Africa the topic of community networks dominated the corridors of conversation on affordable access during the regional IGF.
We influenced the design of the national spectrum policy in South Africa and supported the growth of a community network committee in Brazil that drew interest from diverse social movement representatives.
In 2022, Arid Lands Information Network (ALIN) with support from APC implemented their “Bringing the power of online learning to offline environments” project. The project piloted the Remote Area Community Hotspot for Education and Learning (RACHEL) in five schools at Ng'arua Maarifa Centre, ALIN's ICT hub. RACHEL is a portable plug-and-play server with a five-hour battery life. A free offline digital library, RACHEL stores educational websites and makes content available over any local (offline) wireless connection.
Through this project, ALIN built the capacity of 86 teachers and facilitators to incorporate RACHEL technology and content into their classrooms. They were able to create, access, reuse, repurpose, adapt and redistribute digital content to learners. A total of 1,521 students learned how to access educational content via RACHEL.
RACHEL enables the schools to share quality education materials widely, challenges teachers to incorporate digital technology into their classes and helps learners access quality content autonomously.
As an open educational resource (OER), RACHEL has a central role to play in Education 2030 in the framework of Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 4, which calls for the international community to “Ensure inclusive and equitable quality education and promote lifelong learning opportunities for all” with its key pillars of access, equity and inclusion.
Image: ALIN Director Mr James Nguo handing over the
RACHEL equipment to the teachers.
Image source:ALIN.
Through its Youth and Digital Inclusion Project with APC, Jokkolabs has launched initiatives to help empower Gambian youth. Through its Digital Human Rights Workshops, Jokkolabs was able to provide resources and guidance to youth on how to use technology safely, identify and protect their digital rights, and develop basic digital literacy skills. The organisation also established a safe space for youth to discuss digital rights issues, fostering collaboration among different youth groups.
Jokkolabs also trained over 600 young people from vulnerable and marginalised communities in digital literacy skills, such as using computers and the internet, digital marketing, and simple data analysis. Jokkolabs organised students to build a database of public goods and services, using information collected by recent high school graduates and tertiary institution students. The database will help students understand the use of public services, develop policies, address disparities in access, and inform education initiatives to build trust and increase public participation in policy-making processes. These initiatives have fostered digital skills and human rights knowledge, supported digital inclusion for vulnerable individuals, and encouraged governance of the internet as a global public good, aiming to help create a just society where all young people can access essential digital tools and knowledge.
Image: Young men and women in a Jokkolabs digital
literacy workshop in the Lower River region of
Gambia.
Image source: Jokkolabs Banjul.
Digital access, digital accessibility and women's rights are at the core of KICTANet’s work. The passion for improving access to information is evident in the village of Mtondia, Kilifi County, home to the Dunia Moja Community Network, which was bootstrapped by KICTANet. As a 2021 local access network grantee, Dunia Moja connected 15 schools in Kilifi with an average of 1,000 students each. One interesting beneficiary is the Kibarani School for the Deaf. In a silent world, the students perceive and conceptualise things better visually. Internet access provides them an equal opportunity to experience the world.
In 2022, through the ICT Access and Equality for Persons with Disability Programme, an initiative was born to address the digital divide between non-disabled and persons with disabilities in Kenya. Two fellows were onboarded to create content around accessibility issues for persons with disabilities. During the 2022 global IGF, the fellows highlighted various ICT issues around disability and digital access. The programme has fostered networking and potential partnerships with disability rights organisations and provided a national and international platform for people with disabilities to actively engage and contribute to ICT policies and conversations affecting them directly.
Under the Our Voices, Our Futures programme, a Feminist Tech Exchange on digital storytelling brought together women who had been candidates in the 2022 general elections in Kenya. They were trained on how to blog and record podcasts by seasoned content creators. Today they are active on digital platforms telling their stories on community development.
Image: A classroom at the Kibarani School for the
Deaf, run by the Dunia Moja Community Network.
Image source: KICTANet.
Beyond certified degrees, true engineering lies in real-time problem-solving skills with a good understanding of the underlying technology. Digital Empowerment Foundation (DEF) has been training women to connect the unconnected and Nisha Kumari is one of DEF’s Wireless Women Engineers. Nisha is an unexpected sight in rural India. Nisha is a member of an agricultural household in the village of Bartoli, in Jharkhand in central India. Keen to learn how to use a computer, she joined DEF’s wireless training programme to learn how wireless connectivity works and how it can help the community. Once she attended the training, she started using a wireless network. She has since been enthusiastic about learning more wireless technology and introduced it in her village so that her community members could stay connected. She has also been encouraging everyone in her village to get trained as well. Nisha is now set upon establishing her own wireless centre and providing better network and other digital services to members of her community.
Image: Nisha Kumari, trained by DEF in wireless
networks, introduces the concept to women in a
village in central India.
Image source: Digital Empowerment Foundation.
In 2022, Nupef implemented 18 new community networks within Indigenous lands and traditional communities in Brazil. As one of Nupef’s leading projects, community networks are part of a strategy to 1) reaffirm that everyone has the right and should have the means to access the internet, information and services, as well as to communicate; 2) contribute to the protection and preservation of the land, territories and environment by Indigenous people, quilombolas and babassu coconut breakers; and 3) help develop local knowledge around the use of ICTs. Establishing 18 community networks was a record, the highest number implemented by Nupef in one year.
In 2020 and 2021, Nupef’s capacity to implement infrastructure in these territories was seriously affected due to the pandemic. Even so, they managed to implement a few when restrictions were less severe. They also continued mapping the needs and planning future actions in the territories with their partners Movimento Interestadual das Quebradeiras de Coco Babaçu, Instituto Sociedade, População e Natureza and Coordenação Nacional de Articulação de Quilombos. The isolation imposed by COVID-19 triggered and sped up the development of online public services and made the inequalities and digital gaps clearer than ever. Meaningful access, with minimum quality and price standards, is what is needed for equal access to services and education.
Image: Nupef Community Networks team runs an
introductory session on community networks in
Quilombo Matões dos Moreira (Maranhão).
Image source: Nupef.
Anthillhacks.in is an annual event in Karnataka’s Community-Owned Wireless Mesh (COWMesh) region organised by Servelots in a rural village near Bangalore. It is an annual hackathon where experiences and skills are shared and networks built and tested. In 2022, it brought together many people who aspire to a decentralised internet and independent community networks with meaningful access and many local services. This also initiated the LokaLR project: loka is world, lokaL for local, LR for LibreRouter, and R for router, so it is loka LR, alias lokal R.
The LokaLR project aims to foster collaboration between technical teams supporting community networks around the world by building on the closely related ongoing technical work of APC members and partners. Engineers from Servelots, Coolab, Wakoma, IIT, Freifunk and SLS working in the design and implementation of “minimum-viability” offline off-grid wireless networks and information servers took advantage of the two-week-long Anthillhacks event. The prototype off-grid network will build on the work Servelots has been executing with support from ISIF to develop a do-it-yourself kit, which aims to allow someone with no internet access to set up a wireless access point with their own COWMesh local access information and communications server.
Image: Community members setting up a bamboo tower
for a COWMesh node.
Image source:
COWMesh Anthillhacks.
In southern Kaduna, sectarian killings have persisted for years and women continue to bear the brunt of the savagery. There has been no let-up and the situation often seems beyond the capabilities of the security agencies. In the thick of murders and sexual violence, women survivors have been left with severe trauma which they have to bear as they pick up what is left of their lives. The survivors have had to nurse the wounded, look after older members of the community, as well as attempt to restart their small-scale businesses and smallholder farms.
Fantsuam Foundation hosts the offices of the Southern Kaduna Women Peace Network (SKWPN) that ensures that women’s voices are heard above the din of war in our communities. Amidst the violence, Fantsuam was able to organise ICT entrepreneurship training for some women survivors with the hope that digital literacy skills will eventually help with their emotional and economic recovery. These training sessions are not merely for skills and knowledge. They also serve to reassure the women that their resilience is recognised and saluted.
Image: A group of women and men at an ICT
entrepreneurship training session organised by
Fantsuam Foundation.
Image source: Fantsuam Foundation.
Women political leaders should be equipped with digital skills to handle the increasing demands of the internet as they are a highly targeted group due to their role in society. Moreover, they are at high risk of experiencing gender-based violence online, which can hinder their political and leadership progress. Pollicy’s Amplified Abuse report demonstrates this, as they found that women political leaders experience online abuse at a rate of 27% compared to their male counterparts who experience abuse at 18%. They also found similar findings on the extent of online gender-based violence through their cross-sectional study in Kenya, Nigeria, South Africa and Uganda. The study interviewed 3,306 women, with about 23% of the interviewees acknowledging they had experienced some form of online abuse as they interact with the internet.
All these findings influenced Pollicy to design the VOTE: Women programme, which is a leadership springboard for women political leaders to build their digital resilience while aspiring to political careers online and offline. The implementation of the programme employed a mixed approach of co-creation, gauging interests, establishing advisory boards, expert consultations, and interviews with women political leaders themselves on their uptake of digital resilience. They were able to design an open-source curriculum that equipped 40 women political leaders from the council levels in Uganda and Tanzania with key digital skills, including digital safety, creative writing, engaging with different audiences and digital advocacy. The VOTE: Women programme is now expanding its implementation to Senegal, where Pollicy hopes to learn more experiences of women political leaders in West Africa. For the next two years, the VOTE: Women programme will also focus on advocating for strengthened regulatory frameworks across Africa that promote a safe internet for women political leaders.
Image: Women political leaders at Pollicy’s VOTE:
Women inception meeting.
Image source: Pollicy.
Colnodo created initiatives to enable women living in rural Colombia to participate in the design, construction, management and sustainability of community networks. The appropriation and use of ICTs is contributing to the empowerment of women and the reduction of the gender digital divide in the country. Red Weiniun Walapuin, Red Poliniza, Red Ovejas Verdes, Red Verbenal Renace, Red San Isidro del Oasis, Red Consejo Comunitario de Zacarías and Red Páramo del Almorzadero are community networks in rural areas of Colombia that are being managed in collaboration with Colnodo. In these networks, women of all ages strengthen their capacities for community leadership. These initiatives are giving women and girls the opportunity to creatively and productively use ICTs to generate content from their voices and experiences, document situations of discrimination and violence, as well as find educational and social opportunities. ICTs are making it possible for women entrepreneurs to market their products on fair and equitable terms. Colnodo continues to promote the active participation of women in the design, creation and governance of technology for social development.
Image: Collage of pictures depicting local women
performing different activities.
Image source: Redes Comunitarias Colnodo.
As part of its Enhancing Digital Rights in Nigeria Project, on 10 and 11 October, 2022, the Centre for Information Technology and Development (CITAD) organised a two-day capacity building workshop for women journalists and leaders of civil society organisations in northern Nigeria. The workshop in Damaturu, Yobe State, drew 31 participants (27 women and 4 men) from eight states.
Ten presentations were made, including on privacy as special digital rights, the African Declaration on Internet Rights and Freedoms, Feminist Principles of the Internet, state derogation of digital rights, gender violence as digital rights abuse, policies and laws that have implications on digital rights in Nigeria, and the legal perspective on digital rights. The workshop trained participants in issues related to digital rights and produced Digital Rights Champions to join the campaign for digital rights in the country. These champions also passed on this training to 449 other individuals in their states.
Image: Women journalists and civil society leaders
at CITAD’s digital rights workshop.
Image source: CITAD.
Since the beginning of the Russian invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, eQualitie launched a series of rapid efforts focusing on digital security capacity building of Ukrainian citizens, media agencies, human rights organisations and civil society organisations. eQualitie launched Ukraine’s first national digital security helpline Nadiyno.org in partnership with Internews Ukraine in November. Nadiyno responds with immediate and easy solutions to questions about cybersecurity and communication safety. As of December 2022, more than 1,100 users were running their own Mastodon instances (communities) on this platform to communicate with each other and millions of other users from hundreds of federated Mastodon instances worldwide.
eQualitie has also run digital security webinars that have so far reached 1,027 participants. In partnership with the Ministry of Digital Transformation of Ukraine, DEP, and the Association of Right Owners and Providers of Content, eQualitie supplied 29 Ukrainian ISPs with 172 SBL 135-12HR batteries to power the providers’ fibre optic network during power outages. eQualitie also protects the websites of over a hundred Ukrainian media and human rights organisations (including of the 2022 Nobel prize laureate, the Center for Civil Liberties) from daily DDoS attacks. Since the beginning of the conflict, an additional 60 Ukrainian websites have been onboarded, bringing a daily audience of over half a million people in Ukraine. Through eQualitie's Censorship.no (Ceno) project, users in temporarily occupied territories are able to circumvent internet censorship where website blocking and traffic surveillance are rife. Using the Ceno browser, more than 20,000 Ukrainian users can circumvent local network filtering and share contents of retrieved web pages with each other.
Image: At the launch of eQualitie’s digital
security helpline Nadiyno.org, with partner
Internews and the Ministry of Digital Transformation
in November 2022.
Image source: eQualitie.
In 2021, Korean Progressive Network Jinbonet began its work against big tech monopolies and infringements of personal data, filing a lawsuit for damages over Facebook's privacy violations, the so-called Cambridge Analytica scandal. In 2022, Meta tried to force users to agree to the revision of its privacy policy and was met with a strong backlash. Meta was widely understood to be collecting vast amounts of users’ personal behavioural data without their knowledge for the purpose of targeted advertising. Civil society organisations, including Jinbonet, conducted a campaign against Meta, with a series of actions including a press conference in front of the Meta office. With the support of APC's research and campaign grant, Jinbonet conducted a campaign against Big Tech including a forum at South Korea’s National Assembly to criticise the illegal collection of personal data for targeted advertising, and other issues arising from Big Tech monopolies.
In September 2022, South Korea’s data privacy watchdog, the Personal Information Protection Commission, imposed a fine of approximately 100 billion won (USD 72 million) on Google and Meta for collecting and using third-party behavioural information without consent. It also issued a corrective order and formed a task force to establish guidelines for the processing of personal data for targeted advertising purposes.
Image: On 28 July 2022, Jinbonet and other civil
society activists held a press conference in front
of the Meta office to protest Meta's privacy
policy.
Image source: Jinbonet.
APC's relationship with Derechos Digitales represents a history of collaboration for human rights in digital environments. In 2022, Derechos Digitales worked with APC to identify the many ways in which internet access was restricted through shutdowns in regions of the global South, from which they systematised learnings and challenges that they presented at the 50th session of the United Nations Human Rights Council. Derechos Digitales also partnered with APC and other APC members to document the digital rights situation in Brazil and Ecuador in the framework of the United Nations Universal Periodic Review process. They ran a campaign to influence the recommendations issued to these nations with perspectives on digital rights. These coordinated efforts made it possible to position a responsible view of human rights, which encourages working with other representatives of civil society to advance as a region.
This intention also materialised in the deployment of an observation mission on the occasion of the imprisonment and subsequent acquittal of the Swedish system developer Ola Bini, arrested in 2019 and declared innocent three years and nine months later by the Ecuadorian justice system. This ruling was celebrated as an advance for the protection of people working in digital security in Ecuador that also set a precedent in the region, taking into account the growing and illegitimate persecution of digital security experts.
Image: Illustration for the article “Mujeres
haciendo tecnología” by Derechos Digitales.
Image source: Lucía Boiani for Derechos Digitales.
Since 2020, the Korean legislature has been trying to deliberate on a “network usage fee” bill that contradicts the international human rights standard of network neutrality. South Korea has already implemented the “sender pays” rule since 2016, which imposed data toll charges on content providers. As a result, content providers hosting popular content had to pay telecommunication providers in proportion to that popularity. Seoul’s internet access fee has become higher than other parts of the world. Many startups and content providers have since left Korea because of these raised fees. If the Korean legislature passes the new “network usage fee” bill, then content providers will be legally obliged to pay the data toll charges, taking them back to the days of charging toll on data like telephony and reversing the advances made through the internet.
In 2022, Open Net Korea successfully defended net neutrality and opposed the “network usage fee” bill. Open Net Korea campaigned against the bill and attended a public hearing hosted by the Korean legislature. Close to 300,000 people took part in Open Net’s petition drive. Today, the “network usage fee” bill is on hold.
Image: The poster for Open Net’s petition drive to
oppose the network usage fee bill.
Image source: Open Net Korea.
With the support of Global Partners Digital, PROTEGE-QV, alongside other consortium partners including ARTICLE 19, CIPESA and the Centre for Human Rights at the University of Pretoria, are currently conducting a project titled “Promoting Rights-Respecting Approaches to Tackling Disinformation”. The goal of the project is to bring about human rights-friendly laws online through the development of both a capacity building training plan and a national advocacy strategy. So far, the project has yielded a prominent outcome with the release of LEXOTA (Laws on Expression Online Tracker and Analysis), an interactive map that highlights the legal and regulatory responses that states in sub-Saharan Africa are deploying to combat the phenomenon of disinformation.
Online disinformation has become a major global concern, and so has the legislation designed to tackle it. Cameroon is no exception when it comes to laws that contain provisions restricting the enjoyment of online freedoms – whether directly aimed at the digital environment or not. Therefore, how can Cameroon craft responses to disinformation that respect the right to freedom of expression? PROTEGE QV explored ways to improve the situation, from respecting international commitments to taking into account international human rights standards when formulating laws on online freedom of expression.
Image: LEXOTA logo.
Image source: PROTEGE QV.
Pangea promotes ethical technologies and their socially and environmentally responsible use. In 2022, Pangea carried out a new chapter of these environmental advocacy actions by publishing four new guides and graphic materials specially focused on email services. With support from a 2022 APC research and campaign subgrant, they developed, published and disseminated four new educational and practical materials on critical decisions in the consumption and use of information and communications technologies. The materials are available in Spanish and Catalan and include two guides on email use, one on phishing and one on URLs shortener services. These guides expand the work started in previous projects (in collaboration with APC) to better explain and expand critical choices, practices and concepts related to internet services. Also in 2022, in collaboration with eXO (Expansió de la Xarxa Oberta), they offered their members a test of the BBB (Big Blue Button) service, an open source web conferencing solution for online learning, using Pangea's Nextcloud and eXO BBB server to evaluate interest in a possible new service.
Image: An icon from Pangea’s guide on
phishing.
Image source: Pangea.
During 2022, Nodo TAU had the joy of sharing several projects with members of the APC network. They joined the ANERA project with AlterMundi for the promotion of community networks in Argentina. They started a conversation with Colnodo in Colombia and Sulá Batsú in Costa Rica to work together on gender-related issues.
In 2022, Mireia Roura, a member of eReuse and Pangea, visited Nodo TAU’s Electronic Waste Management Plant. Nodo TAU started the plant in 2019 with three objectives: to provide a sustainable solution to e-waste, promote digital inclusion by recovering equipment for community use, and create a work space for young people. Roura visited the organisation to learn about the experience of the plant and to share knowledge with the work team. Together they reviewed the operating systems and registration tools at the plant and the traceability system that Nodo TAU uses, which was developed by eReuse. During her visit, Roura also offered training to the members of the plant team, who were developing a training process towards creating a work cooperative run by young people. With Roura, Nodo TAU also revisited experiences of the Digital Communities project, a programme that brings together the municipal government, tech companies and Nodo TAU to equip spaces for community access to technology. There, Roura was able to learn about the programme and also collected data for her research on measuring the environmental impact of reusing equipment.
Image: Mireia Roura from Pangea with Eduardo
Rodríguez from Nodo TAU during the visit.
Image source: Nodo TAU.
Amazônia Livre de Fakes is a project by Intervozes that aimed to combat misinformation and hate speech in the Amazon region, based on a survey of 200 web pages and profiles that propagate misleading content and through strategic campaigns to confront this digital environment. The project was run by a working group formed by Intervozes and eight other Amazonian organisations, including Indigenous people, quilombolas, young people, women, researchers and community members from the countryside, the rainforest and the city.
With further information, the group arrived at a list of 70 content producers operating in the states of Pará, Amapá, Amazonas Mato Grosso, Roraima, Tocantins and Acre. These were segmented into three large groups of producers and disseminators: right-wing social movements, channels/journalistic companies, and representative public figures (legislators or candidates in the 2022 elections). Since their initial strategy to combat disinformation was a campaign to demonetise pages that propagate disinformation, they decided to delve deeper into journalistic channels based on two criteria: visibility and self-designation of doing journalism. Therefore, they arrived at three pages: Portal Novo Norte, Vista Pátria and Terra Brasil Notícias, with millions in traffic and shares by other pages and profiles of Amazonian territories. As a result of their campaigns, they had a disinformation propagator withdraw from the candidacy for the senate, brought about a change in Google's attitude by providing more information about candidates, and fostered a debate in society about ways to finance disinformation.
Image: The logo of the Amazônia Livre de Fakes
campaign was created by an Amazonian
designer.
Image source: Gil Reis.
In April 2022, May First Movement Technology launched its first Engagement and Communications team, recruiting folks directly from its membership to help spread awareness of the critical role that autonomous technology plays in the movement for liberation. It got off to a fast start – organising several sessions at the World Social Forum in Mexico City in May. This was followed up with a webinar, Get the Tech Off My Body, highlighting the technology implications of the US court ruling overturning Roe v. Wade in the United States Supreme Court and the links between technology and reproductive justice.
Over the summer, May First collaborated with its member La Coperacha (Mexico City) to present a session on community journalism at the Allied Media Conference. The organisation interviewed over a dozen members to write a paper on the reasons movement organisations value autonomous technology and how they understand its role in their strategies for change. In September, May First joined a coalition of US-based movement organisations called "Rising Majority" for a multi-day strategy session to build a shared agenda for liberation. In November they partnered with their member Media Justice to organise "Turning Up the Heat on Big Tech", where they pulled together activists organising Amazon warehouse workers, fighting local/police surveillance (e.g. Amazon Ring), and targeting big tech military contracts with the Israeli military.
Image: May First logo.
Image source: May First.
It was clear that in 2022, Venezuela urgently needed to set up technological infrastructure for remote education and to establish the foundations of a system adapted to the new educational realities. During the COVID-19 pandemic and after it as well, the country experienced a sharp need for access to innovative technological platforms that facilitate online learning, the management of open educational resources, collaborative work, intelligent interaction with students, and access to knowledge repositories, among many other resources.
Educational centres in Mérida, Venezuela have suffered a great lack of participation of teachers and students to comply with the training plans provided by the Ministry of Education and, in addition, there were great needs in the management of technological resources. As a response, EsLaRed implemented campaigns, programmes and training plans in digital technologies in Mérida. EsLaRed developed (with funds approved by APC) its project CATAE, which stands for Training in Open Technologies for Education. EsLaRed is currently training its first pilot group of 20 educators selected by the Centre for Teacher Research and Training (Educational Zone) in the Libertador Municipality of Mérida State, in Venezuela, which should become the first link in a continuous chain of training of trainers. In this way, teachers and students will have the knowledge that will allow them to carry out remote educational processes in an emergency in a more efficient way.
Image: Group of educators engaging in a training
from EsLaRed.
Image source: EsLaRed.
The pandemic has meant a radical and abrupt change in human lives: changes in daily life, in the ways we work and study, and above all, in the ways we socialise. In the face of the need for “social distancing”, everyone found themselves looking for other means of connection with others. This meant spending more time isolated and more time in digital spaces. Since excessive use of technology is related to an increase in behaviours and emotions related to anxiety, depression, stress and other psychosocial risks, it is important to have practices that contribute to an agile and reflective use of technology that contributes to our mental health. That is why TEDIC created the Mente en Línea website, the Mental Health on the Internet campaign where they share resources in the form of podcast episodes, illustrated fanzines that can be obtained both digitally or in print, and articles and research to delve deeper into the different factors that impact our behaviour and mental health when interacting with technologies.
In 2022, they developed a new fanzine focused on people who care for children and adolescents with the goal of accompanying and rethinking their use of technology at a key age for their development. "Our Life on Screens" touches on topics such as the suggested screen use time for children and adolescents and the differentiation between healthy and unhealthy habits in front of screens, among other things. They e-delivered more than a thousand copies of this fanzine to different institutions including the Ministry of Public Health, Enfoque Niñez NGO, UNICEF and Centro de Desarrollo para la Inteligencia.
Image: TEDIC distributes copies of their fanzine Our
Life on Screens.
Image source: TEDIC.
Through promoting open technology and cross-field collaboration, Open Culture Foundation continues to connect tech communities and public and private entities in Taiwan. By doing so, they promote open co-creation and protect digital human rights, thereby supporting a more transparent and inclusive digital civil society. In 2022, OCF launched “Open Source Star Village“, a board game designed for newbies who don’t know how to use or collaborate with open source technologies. The board game was designed in traditional Chinese and is Creative Commons licensed and free and open for everyone to download, print and remake in other languages.
2022 was also the year in which OCF collaborated with the US-based think tank New America Foundation on their international evaluation tool Ranking Digital Rights, designed to measure the extent to which corporations in various countries are protecting digital human rights during their operation and service provision to consumers. By collecting and releasing quantitative data on corporations' digital human rights practices, OCF hopes everyone can better understand the current status of digital rights protections by corporations and use this information to inform policy decisions and increase accountability across the digital landscape.
Image: Open Source Star Village, the board game
designed by Open Culture Foundation.
Image source: Open Culture Foundation.