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  Invisibly Seeing the Invisible
A Biometrical Paradigm , by Stefan Nowotny
[Read]
 
  Freedom of Expression and New Technologies
by Konrad Becker
On 7 October, 2002, Konrad Becker, Director of World-Information.Org, was invited to deliver the keynote speech at the preparatory event for the OSCE Mediterranean Seminar on media and new technologies: implications for governments, international organizations and civil society (4-5 November, 2002, Rhodes, Greece) in Vienna. [Read]
 
  Folks Out There Have a "Distaste of Western Civilization and Cultural Values"
by Edward S. Herman
Edward S. Herman, Professor Emeritus of Finance at the Wharton School (Pennsylvania, US), reflects on the terrorist attacks on New York and Washington. [Read]
 
  Digital Political Activism
An interview with Annie
Annie is part of Indymedia UK and spoke to World-Information.Org about the role of online media in the context of political activism. [Read]
 
  "Why leap the digital divide?"
An interview with Kunda Dixit
Kunda Dixit is director of Panos South Asia and co-publisher of Himal magazine. After his presentation at the World-Information Forum in Vienna he spoke to Wolfgang Sützl about the digital divide and its implications for the global political systems. [Read]
 
  Surveillance Technology: "Now people are seeing the dangers and that's important."
An interview with Steve Wright
Steve Wright is director of the OMEGA foundation, and author of the report on technologies of political control for the European Parliament. He spoke to Wolfgang Sützl about actual developments concerning surveillance technology and his optimism that global surveillance will soon become a political issue. [Read]
 
  "Propaganda is not simply a question of manipulation and disinformation."
An interview with Philip Hammond
Philip Hammond is a senior lecturer in media studies at London's South Bank University, and co-editor (with Ed Herman) of "Degraded Capability. The Media and the Kosovo Crisis" (Pluto Press 2000). He spoke to Wolfgang Sützl spoke after his presentation at the World-InfoCon in Brussels earlier this year. [Read]
 
  The Total Surveillance of Public Space
by Steve Wright
Our 21st Century is heralded as the information society, a digital age characterized by information superhighways. This technologically "wired world" is seen as a neutral indicator of our modernity. But is there a dark side? Because of advances of information and communication technologies (ICTs), all of us inadvertently provide access to a great deal of information about our likes and tastes. Everywhere we go, we leave information trails monitored by the credit card companies, who target us with products or can tell when our cards are not being used in normal transaction patterns. Arguably all of this is to our benefit, we are consumers of these products and can choose not to provide this information, or can we? [Read]
 
  The Threath to Privacy
An interview with Saskia Sassen
Saskia Sassen is Professor of Sociology at the University of Chicago. She is the author of several books on the political economy and the sociology of cyberspace and on globalization. Sassen is most widely know for her concept of the global city (The Global City, Princeton University Press 1992), her most recent book publication is "Globalization and its Discontents" (New Press, 1999). In her lecture at the WIO World InfoCon at Brussels, 13 - 15 July, 2000, she spoke about the "Topography of E-space - electronic networks and public space"

[Read]
 
  Philip Hammond, Edward S. Herman (eds.), Degraded Capability: The Media and the Kosovo Crisis.
by World-Information.Org
Bookreview: Degraded Capability: The Media and the Kosovo Crisis gives an insight into the hysteria and misinformation that permeated media coverage of the war, and analyses how the war was reported in different countries around the world.
[Read]
 
  Europe Is Awash with Eavesdrop Technologies
by Simon Davies
You might not have noticed it yet, but your boss probably has you under surveillance. Simon Davies reports from Britain on a disturbing trend.
[Read]
 INTRODUCTORY TEXT 
Im Übergang von der Industrie- in eine Informationsgesellschaft entstehen leistungsfähige Kommunikationstechnologien, die sich aus militärischen Zusammenhängen entwickelt haben. Diese Technologien bergen die Gefahr eines gegen das Interesse der Öffentlichkeit gerichteten Missbrauchs durch Regierungen oder Unternehmen. Gleichzeitig etablieren sie eine neue Machtstruktur, die all jene benachteiligt und von Entwicklungen und Wissen abschneidet, die keinen Zugriff auf neue Technologien oder keine Erfahrung im Umgang mit ihnen haben.

Die Machtstrukturen in der Informationsgesellschaft erfordern die Ergänzung der allgemeinen Menschenrechte durch Menschenrechte in der digitalen Domäne. Die digitalen Menschenrechte basieren auf dem Verständnis von Kommunikation als der Grundlage von Zivilisation, Identität und Gemeinschaftsbildung. Zu den grundlegendsten digitalen Menschenrechten zählen das Recht auf Zugang zu elektronischen Netzwerken, das Recht auf die Freiheit der Meinung und des Ausdrucks und nicht zuletzt das Recht auf eine auch im Cyberspace gewährleistete und geachtete Intimsphäre. [Read]









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