Selection of Independent Content Provider

The following selection does not claim to present an exhaustive listing, but rather picks some of the most interesting provider of independent content.

Independent Content Provider

URL

Classification of Content

Association for Progressive Communication (APC)

http://www.apc.org

Social issues, environment, economy, Africa, women

ZaMir.net

http://www.zamir.net

Anti-war, human rights (Yugoslavia)

Institute for Global Communications (IGC)

http://www.igc.org

Peace, economy, human rights, democracy, environment, women, anti-racism

FAIR (Fairness & Accuracy In Reporting)

http://www.fair.org

Media

ZNet

http://www.zmag.org

Selection: culture, community/race/religion/ethnicity, ecology, economics/class, gender/kinship/sexuality, government/polity, international relations

B2-92

http://www.freeb92.net

Politics

FREEnet (The Network for Research, Education and Engineering)

http://www.free.net

Research/academic/education

c2o (Community Communications Online)

http://www.c20.org

Environment, social issues, human rights

Antenna

http://antenna.apc.org

Development co-operation/emergency aid, environment, ecology, energy, media, art, culture

PERDCA (The Project for Economic Reform and Development in Central Asia)

http://www.silk.org

Telecommunications, education, medicine

Comlink

http://www.comlink.org

Peace, ecology, social issues, human rights

Adbusters

http://www.adbusters.org

Culture, art

RTMark

http://www.rtmark.com

Culture, art

Interdoc

http://www.oneworld.org/interdoc/

Labor, human rights, development, environment, peace

GreenNet

http://www.gn.apc.org

Environment, peace, human rights, development

UN (United Nations)

http://www.un.org

Peace, economy, social issues, development, justice, human rights, international law, humanitarian assistance and various specialized agencies

Flipside

http://www.flipside.org

Economic, political, social, environmental

Human Rights Watch

http://www.hrw.org

Human rights

nettime

http://www.nettime.org

Culture

FoeBud e.V. (Verein zur Förderung des öffentlichen bewegten und unbewegten Datenverkehrs e.V.)

http://www.foebud.org

Research, politics, culture, arts, future/technology

Corporate Watch

http://www.corpwatch.org

Social issues, politics, economy, environment

Overcoming Consumerism

http://www.hooked.net/users/verdant/index.htm

Social issues, economy, environment

NewsWatch

http://www.asc.upenn.edu/usr/jsexton/NewsWatch/

Media

IFEX (International Freedom of Expression Exchange)

http://www.ifex.org

Media, human rights

FAS (Federation of American Scientists)

http://www.fas.org

Science, technology, public policy

UNESCO (United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization)

http://www.unesco.org

Education, science, culture, communication

Umwelt

http://www.umwelt.org

Environment



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ZaMir.net

ZaMir.net started in 1992 trying to enable anti-war and human rights groups of former Yugoslavia to communicate with each other and co-ordinate their activities. Today there are an estimated 1,700 users in 5 different Bulletin Board Systems (Zagreb, Belgrade, Ljubljana, Sarajevo and Pristiana). Za-mir Transnational Network (ZTN) offers e-mail and conferences/newsgroups. The ZTN has its own conferences, which are exchanged between the 5 BBS, and additionally offers more than 150 international conferences. ZTN aim is to help set up systems in other cities in the post-Yugoslav countries that have difficulty connecting to the rest of the world.

History

With the war in Yugoslavia anti-war and human rights groups of former Yugoslavia found it very difficult to organize and met huge problems to co-ordinate their activities due to immense communication difficulties. So in 1992 foreign peace groups together with Institutions in Ljubljana, Zagreb and Belgrade launched the Communications Aid project. Modems were distributed to peace and anti-war groups in Ljubljana, Zagreb, Belgrade and Sarajevo and a BBS (Bulletin Board System) installed.

As after spring 1992 no directs connections could be made they were done indirectly through Austria, Germany or Britain, which also enabled a connection with the worldwide networks of BBS's. Nationalist dictators therefore lost their power to prevent communication of their people. BBS were installed in Zagreb and Belgrade and connected to the APC Network and associated networks. Za-mir Transnational Network (ZTN) was born.

Strategies and Policies

With the help of ZaMir's e-mail network it have been possible to find and coordinate humanitarian aid for some of the many refugees of the war. It has become an important means of communication for humanitarian organizations working in the war region and sister organizations form other countries. It helps co-ordinate work of activists form different countries of former Yugoslavia, and it also helps to coordinate the search for volunteers to aid in war reconstruction. ZTN also helped facilitate exchange of information undistorted by government propaganda between Croatia, Serbia and Bosnia. Independent magazines like Arkzin (Croatia) and Vreme (Serbia) now publish electronic editions on ZTN.

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Pressures and Attacks against Independent Content Providers: Serbia

The independent Belgrade based FM radio-station B2-92, which from December 1996 on also broadcasts over the Internet, repeatedly has been the target of suppression and attacks by the Serbian government.

B2-92 offices have been raided on numerous occasions and members of staff have been repeatedly harassed or arrested. In March 1999 the transmitter of radio B2-92 was confiscated yet again by the Serbian authorities and editor-in-chief, Veran Matic, was taken and held in custody at a police station. Ten days after the confiscation of B2-92's transmitter, Serbian police entered and sealed their offices. All members of staff were sent home and a new General Manager was appointed by Serbian officials. Although by closing B2-92, the Serbian regime may have succeeded in softening the voice of the independent content provider, with the distributive nature of the Internet and the international help of media activists, the regime will have little chance of silencing the entire flood of independent content coming out of former Yugoslavia.

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1400 - 1500 A.D.

1455
Johannes Gutenberg publishes the Bible as the first book in Europe by means of a movable metal font.

Gutenberg's printing press was an innovative aggregation of inventions known for centuries before Gutenberg: the olive oil press, oil-based ink, block-print technology, and movable types allowed the mass production of the movable type used to reproduce a page of text and enormously increased the production rate. During the Middle Ages it took monks at least a year to make a handwritten copy of a book. Gutenberg could print about 300 sheets per day. Because parchment was too costly for mass production - for the production of one copy of a medieval book often a whole flock of sheep was used - it was substituted by cheap paper made from recycled clothing of the massive number of deads caused by the Great Plague.

Within forty-five years, in 1500, ten million copies were available for a few hundred thousand literate people. Because individuals could examine a range of opinions now, the printed Bible - especially after having been translated into German by Martin Luther - and increasing literacy added to the subversion of clerical authorities. The interest in books grew with the rise of vernacular, non-Latin literary texts, beginning with Dante's Divine Comedy, the first literary text written in Italian.

Among others the improvement of the distribution and production of books as well as increased literacy made the development of print mass media possible.

Michael Giesecke (Sinnenwandel Sprachwandel Kulturwandel. Studien zur Vorgeschichte der Informationsgesellschaft, Frankfurt am Main: Suhrkamp, 1992) has shown that due to a division of labor among authors, printers and typesetters Gutenberg's invention increasingly led to a standardization of - written and unwritten - language in form of orthography, grammar and signs. To communicate one's ideas became linked to the use of a code, and reading became a kind of rite of passage, an important step towards independency in a human's life.

With the growing linkage of knowledge to reading and learning, the history of knowledge becomes the history of reading, of reading dependent on chance and circumstance.

For further details see:
Martin Warnke, Text und Technik, http://www.uni-lueneburg.de/
Bruce Jones, Manuscripts, Books, and Maps: The Printing Press and a Changing World, http://communication.ucsd.edu/bjones/Books/booktext.html

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NSFNet

Developed under the auspices of the National Science Foundation (NSF), NSFnet served as the successor of the ARPAnet as the main network linking universities and research facilities until 1995, when it was replaced it with a commercial backbone network. Being research networks, ARPAnet and NSFnet served as testing grounds for future networks.

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