140 lines
12 KiB
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140 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 3402
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Title: HPR3402: Reading a manifesto: Declaration of Digital Autonomy
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3402/hpr3402.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-24 22:46:23
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 340242z, the 17th of August 2021.
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Tid's show is entitled, Reading a Manifesto, Declaration of Digital Autonomy.
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It is hosted by Klack and is about 15 minutes long and carries an explicit flag.
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The summary is, Reading and Brief Commentary, and background on Mollie de Blanks and
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Karen Sandler's Teshaw Autonomy.org.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by archive.org.
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Support universal access to all knowledge by heading over to archive.org forward slash donate.
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Hi, I'm Klackke. Back in April 2021 in HPR episode 3317, I was reading
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the Cooperative Technology Manifesto. In the community news the same month, Ken was asking,
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so why is this document coming out now? Is this because of the RMS stuff?
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The answer is usual, yes and no. The manifesto explicitly says that yes, it was written
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as a response to those events, but at the same time there's kind of nothing new in there.
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I mean, the formulation of it all and putting it all in one place is new and there's been
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some polish added to it, but it is a document that reflects three and a half decades of
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free software thoughts from the moment that the GNU project and the free software foundation
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were announced. In the show notes, I put together free software timeline and I would be very
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happy if someone could provide some prominent documents from between 98 and 2011 that show
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the site guides during those times because I haven't come up with any off the cuff or even
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doing a little bit of research. But definitely in the last 10 years there's been a couple of
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recurring points that have been brought up about how free software and open source have been
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too much oriented toward the original hacker communities that created them and how we should work
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on bringing user freedom to everyone to make user freedom really meaningful.
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So the cooperative technology manifesto was the latest of these documents and I'm going to go
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back and read a couple of the documents that happened earlier that also formed part of this
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prior work that led up to the cooperative technology manifesto. So one that was
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released on two conferences in 2020. So it's kind of between when RMS left the FSF board
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and when he came back, it's kind of in the middle of that. And it was presented by Moly the
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Blonde and Karen Sandler. So Moly the Blonde is a person who has been working in the FSF,
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the OSI in the GNOME Foundation and in Debian in various leading positions. And Karen Sandler has
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been working in the Software Freedom Law Center, also the GNOME Foundation and the Software Freedom
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Conservancy. So both are prominent well-known figures that have been working full time with
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community management over several years. So let's see what they have to say about these issues.
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It's available on the website techautonomy.org. The declaration of digital autonomy
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draft 0.1. We demand a world in which technology is created to protect and empower the people who
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use it. Our technology must respect the rights and freedoms of those users. We need to take control
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for the purpose of collectively building a better world in which technology works in service to
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the good of humankind, protecting our rights and digital autonomy as individuals.
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We have become more reliant than ever on technology that we intertwine into every aspect over
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lives. That technology is currently made not for us, those using it. Rather, it is for the
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companies who intend to monetize its use and whoever owns the associated copyrights and patents.
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Services are run via network software on computers we never directly interact with.
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Our devices are designed to only function while broadcasting our intimate information,
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regardless of whether the transmission of that information is necessary functionality.
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We generate data that we do not have access to. That is bought, sold and traded between
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corporations and governments. Technologies were increasingly being forced to use, reinforce
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and amplify social inequalities. As schools and jobs go online, high-speed computing,
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centralized services and internet become inescapably necessary.
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Technology is designed and implemented to impress, often with sexist, classist and racist
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implications. Rather than being served by these tools, we are instead in service to them.
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These gatekeepers of our technology are not individual people or public organizations who think
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about the well-being of others. But instead, our corporations, governments and others with
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the genders that do not include our best interests. Our technology has become the basic
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infrastructure on which our society functions. And yet, the individuals who use it have no say
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or control or its function. It's time to change our digital destiny.
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We believe it is necessary for technology to provide opportunity for informed consent of use,
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transparent development and operation, privacy and security from bad actors,
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interaction without fear of surveillance, technology to work primarily on the terms of the
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people using it, functionality inside and outside of connected networks, use with other services
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and other software, repair and connection and not alienation from the technology itself and
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that which is created from it. We therefore call for the adoption of the following principles
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for ethical technology. In service of the people who use it, from conception through to public
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availability, technology must be in the service of the people and communities who use it. This
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includes a freedom from surveillance, data gathering, data sales and vendor and file format
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locking. When it becomes apparent that the technology, as it is delivered, does not
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meet the needs of a given person. That person is able to change and repair their technology.
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Technology must have an option for use without an internet connection.
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Informed consent
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People must have the ability to study and understand the technology in order to decide whether
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using it as is is the right choice for them. People must be able to determine either directly or
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through third parties how the technology is operating and what information it is collecting,
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storing and selling. Additionally, there should be no punitive responses for declining consent.
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Practical alternatives must be offered, whether those are changes to the underlying technology
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or compatible updates from the original provider or from third parties.
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Empowering individual and collective digital action
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When people discover that their technology is not functioning in their interest or that the
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trade-offs to use it have become too burdensome. They must have the ability to change what they are
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using, including the ability to replace the software on a device that they have purchased.
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If it is not serving their interests and to use the technology while not being connected to
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a centralized network or choose a different network. Technology should not just be designed for
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the individuals using it but also the communities of users. These communities can be those
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intentionally built around a piece of technology, geographic in nature or united by another shared
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purpose. This includes having the ability and right to organize to repair the technology
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on and to migrate essential data to other solutions. Ownership of essential data must belong to
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the community relying on them. Protect people's privacy and other rights by design.
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Building technology must be done to respect the rights of people, including those of privacy
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open communication and the safety to develop ideas without fear of monitoring, risk or retribution.
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These cannot be tacked on as afterthoughts but instead must be considered during the entire design
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and distribution process. Services should plan to store the minimum amount of data necessary
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to deliver the service in question, not collect data that may lay the groundwork for a profitable
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business model down the road. Regular deletion of essential data should be planned from the outset.
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Devices need to have the ability to run and function while not transmitting data.
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All of these requirements are to be better insure privacy as every time a device wirelessly
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transmits or otherwise broadcasts data there is opportunity for interference or theft of that data.
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We as individuals, collectives, cultures and societies are making this call in the rapidly
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changing phase of technology and its deepening integration into our lives.
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Technology must support us as we forge our own digital destinies, as our connectivity to digital
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networks and one another changes in ways we anticipate and in ways we have yet to imagine.
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Technology makers and those who use this technology can form the partnerships necessary
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to build the equitable, hopeful future we dream of.
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And here ends the manifesto or declaration and then there's a footer. We'd love to hear what you
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think. Let us know by emailing thoughts at this domain and this domain means techautonomy.org.
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The Declaration of Digital Autonomy is corporate Moly de Blanc and Karen M. Sandler 2020 licensed
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under Creative Commons, Attribution, Share, Like, 4.0 International.
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Personally, I don't think this document reads so well as a manifesto or as some other kind of
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visionary documents that you can build a community around. There are certainly visionary
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elements of it and there's some bullet points of certain important issues but I don't think
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it's been so refined and I think the document goes back and forth between visionary portal
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statements and also deep into certain details and prescriptions but not others.
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So I read it more as a blog post with important input from people who have clearly been involved
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in a lot of these issues and know what the real challenges are that come up in free and open
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source software communities. So I think it's a document that can provide great inputs to something
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like the cooperative technology manifesto and I'm pretty sure it did the main author said he had
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actually read this one and probably did that before writing the manifesto.
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And this document was presented as I said in the beginning at two different conferences in 2020
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and I actually don't think those presentations are very good either they're also kind of all over
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the place but if you want to see something that is really good that Sandra and the blonde did
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as part of the background to this document you can look at the DebConf 18 talk or more like a panel
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that's a free software issue and everything is of course linked in the show notes
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because that one really shows where all of this is coming from and there's a good discussion about
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how free software touches our lives in in every aspect of what we do these days because everything
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is technology everything is software and I think that's all I'm going to say about this document
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for now and in later episodes I'm going to go back to some of the other documents shown in the
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free software timeline in the show notes of this episode. I'm claque you can find me on the free
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social web as claque at librenet.de and until next time this has been hacker public radio
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and I've been listening to hacker public radio at hacker public radio dot org we are a community
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podcast network that releases shows every weekday monday through friday today's show like all our
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revolution at binwrap.com if you have comments on today's show please email the host directly leave
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a comment on the website or record a follow-up episode yourself unless otherwise stated today's
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