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191 lines
16 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 1283
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Title: HPR1283: Ken gets to talk with Ambjorn about politics
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1283/hpr1283.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-17 22:55:01
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---
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Hello everybody, my name is Ken Fallon and today's show is another on camp 11. Yes, I know a year and a half ago
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with Amber elder
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about his thesis on politics
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Hello my name is Ken Fallon and we're at a camp is more or less over and I'm here for my lap was probably my last interview
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Sorry, you didn't catch your name. My name is Ambeer and elder. So how are you doing? What prompted you to come to al camp today?
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Well, I wanted to come for a couple of reasons. One was to participate in this fantastic community
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and the other was because I wanted to take my research that I've been doing at the American University of Paris
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and tested in front of an audience and then take the opportunity when I had a bunch of
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let's say self-identified geeks in one place to ask them some questions and
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see who they were and how plugged in they were to the community and to politics in general. So what's your thesis?
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My thesis is trying to examine the attempt of
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the free and open source software community to influence
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public policy on technology issues at the international level. This involves also the national level and the local level as well.
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And my thesis is my hypothesis is that the
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the floss community is failing to influence the debate to influence the effects of policy,
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to influence the content of policy and that we can do better,
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that there are practical steps we can take that are based on
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the experience of previous advocacy attempts.
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I'm talking about the sharp end where laws are made. So I'm specifically focusing on
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actor, the anti-counterfeiting trade agreement, which was recently passed,
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was recently the negotiations were recently concluded and is I still believe in the process of
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being ratified by states around the world. And I was, and I'm trying to examine
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why organizations like the Electronic Frontier Foundation didn't have more of an effect when we have
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strong ideas when we have a worldwide community and when the best interests of all of the parties,
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including the state parties and the industries that help to write the actor treaty,
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as well as us, the free and open source software community, all of our best interests are in a different treaty.
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Can you just tell, I know what actor is, but can you just tell the listeners a little bit,
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quick tube in the summary of what actor is? Boy, I'll try. Actor is a trade agreement
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between multiple parties, including most importantly the United States,
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and Europe, and Japan, Canada, Mexico. I'm not going to make mistakes on it, so I'll stop there.
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The a trade agreement, that seems innocent enough, doesn't it?
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There are many trade agreements, many of them are productive and good and in fact international
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trade has been very good to our community. In this case, the name doesn't reflect the content
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of the treaty. What actor actually does is coordinate enforcement of intellectual property laws
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across these different nations. What that means is, well, it does something quite radical, I believe,
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subject to correction by the legal scholars, which I'm not. I'm a political scholar.
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I believe it introduces a form of international law that is serving, supposed and incorrect interests
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of industry. That's a criminal international law. The kind of international, criminal international
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law has, until this point, been a matter of genocide, and crimes against humanity, mass murder,
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mass rape, and this is criminal internet, because this has been international law, an intellectual
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property for a long time. This is criminal international law, an intellectual property, and this
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is a real new and strange development. But surely, it seems only right and proper that counterfeiting
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of Gucci products, that sort of thing, should be stopped at the border. I don't see any problem with
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this treaty. It says, yeah, prompting some discussion. Well, there are parts of the treaty
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that I think are easier to defend than others. The part of the treaty that was most controversial
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was the part of the treaty dealing with, certainly, most controversial in the Floss community,
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was the part dealing with the enforcement in the digital environment. I have to think back a
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little bit about ticking through the articles of the treaty in my mind. Part of it is that it
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it institutes extra-digital processes. Putting aside the digital environment for a moment,
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it institutes processes that are outside of the normal course of law. And outside of the normal
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course of law, and therefore, it institutes a sort of a parallel legal system that only applies
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to intellectual property. And I think, okay, coming down to this is about movies, this is about
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record industry, this is about. Yes. I'm not an international law expert. Yes. The word used in the
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treaty is phonograms. And if you go and look at the sources of the treaty, it applies. It's very
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strange. Different sections of the treaty have different scopes and applied to different kinds of
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things. In general, it references a very broad category of intellectual or serious categories of
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internet intellectual property, including trademarks and copyrights and patents and circuit designs
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and indications of origin. Sorry, can you repeat the question again? So I'm actually sure that I'm
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just wondering, what does the cover actually, from our point of view, is it just music?
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Or does it extend beyond that? Or is it a wide brush that covers lots of things?
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That's a very complicated question to answer. In some cases, it covers a broad brush. In some cases,
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it doesn't. The way it's going to be, and there are many at least clauses where they say,
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countries will at least institute a certain level of protection, but they may promote a higher level
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of protection. And all the way in which it'll be realized will depend a little bit on the action
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of the Acta Committee, which will continue to promote the principles and discuss the principles of
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Acta between members and perhaps in the following trade agreements with other states. I'm sorry.
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The effect on the free and international, the free and open source software community is I think
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one more, it's its relationship that it establishes between government and ISPs, for example,
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this is the digital copyright section, where ISPs are assuming, and you see this in other
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national laws that are being passed on, they're assuming the responsibility for the enforcement
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of other industries and intellectual property, just as the government is assuming
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responsibility for enforcement of intellectual property, who's the responsibility for which
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perhaps should really lie in the industry themselves that can bring complaints about it.
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So this relationship has a, you worry about having a suppressant effect on free speech,
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because intellectual property that the subjects of intellectual property are mostly
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artifacts of speech, they are. Movies as you say, music as you say,
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would you extend to software at all?
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It's a software, because we don't have software patents in Europe, but
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we'll give it a de facto software patent then.
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It won't apply to software patents differently than it applies to any other patent,
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and I can't tell you, I'm sorry, I can't tell you exactly, I don't remember exactly where
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patents are specified in the treaty and not, as I say, it goes in and out. The point of my research
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is that when people tried to influence the act of treaty, when the Electronic Frontier Foundation
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tried, when other groups, I can't remember who else they worked with, but when in general,
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the groups of our community tried to influence, they found the decisions had already been made,
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that act was, of course, negotiated in secret, and by the time civil society came to the table,
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that we couldn't get any information about it, and we had a really hard time,
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making sure that some more dangerous provisions didn't get included.
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So, what I'm focusing on is using all this previous experience, for example,
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of the environmental movement, because over many years, they have successfully
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campaigned for things, and they found ways of addressing themselves to the sharp end of politics,
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where decisions are made, which is often not in the front line in decision-makers,
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but in the people who back them up and who support them, who feed them ideas and opinions.
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They got them re-elected. Absolutely. They're also our ways of exerting pressure,
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international, trans-nationally, so that when a movement has allies abroad, for example,
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recently, this is not, aside from the act, but recently there was the send-law that was passed
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in Spain, and the local... I believe the send-law is a version of one of these three strikes laws.
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Yes, okay, great, great.
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And it was originally the subject of a great, enormous number of campaigns,
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sorry, excuse me, originally, it was a subject of campaigns within Spain, and the organizations,
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the advocacy organizations reached out. They used information that they got from Wikipedia
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to change the conversation, so that instead of being an issue, actually, the content of the law,
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the issue was that the law actually had been written by the U.S. trade authority, and therefore
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it became an issue of independence of the Spanish government that reached out to the EFF, so
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this is one of the patterns that can be used by the free and open-source software community
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to try and get what we want, to try and put pressure on people who are passing laws that
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changed the nature of the internet, which is so important to all of us.
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Unfortunately, the send-law, although it was originally the first attempt to pass send-law
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was a failure, the Spanish parliament took recess when they came back,
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the law passed without any problems.
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And unfortunately, we see here in the U.K. as well, a law similar to that, just got cleared
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in the clean-up.
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It's happening all over the place.
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So, your premise, I guess, is that you feel we're not doing well enough.
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I don't feel we're doing well enough, and most importantly, I think we can do better,
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and that there are clear methods for doing better. There is this boom-ring effect
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reaching outside of the country. There are, as I talked about targeting the policymakers,
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there are framing strategies that one can take to make sure that where you're fighting the
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battle is where you have the best rhetorical arguments, and that you're speaking the language
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that people will agree with and understand what you're doing. And I'm not absolutely condemning
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the efforts of fantastic organizations. I just feel that,
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out some, some quantum, some real research, some search for evidence of where the points of
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failure are will help us to identify where we can use these proven techniques to help us get
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what we want. And that's what I hope will come out of my research.
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Yeah, I think as a geek, the thing I have in common with everybody here is that we listen to
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podcasts somewhere, links, guys, and I don't really want to bring my religion, religious beliefs,
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my political beliefs into it. Do you think that that is any factor on people not getting behind
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organizations that are promoting that will be able to act on change?
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You're talking about other belief systems aside from...
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Well, just within the free and open source community, we're here because we're into the free
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and open source community and we don't want to push political agendas or religious agendas
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or whatever. And in this case, it's a political agenda.
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Yeah. Do you think maybe that's the reason why people don't get behind the free sulfur foundation
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or organizations that can combat these trade agreements like that?
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I think the real reason people don't get behind it is because they don't see how it applies to
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their lives. And this is the job of advocacy making very clear connections between what a government
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does and the harmances to the individual when that's the strongest argument to make or talking
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about the loss of a resource as the environmental movement has done. Or talking about
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real principled ideas that the women's movement appeals very directly to people's sense of
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right and wrong and justice, individual justice. And there are cases of all of these in our community.
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There's a great example from the end of the last century when the DCSS algorithm
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which was decrypting, was aimed at decrypting, oh no, I don't remember where I started the sentence.
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DVDs, I guess, it's not. Yes, but I don't remember where I was going with it.
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Oh, okay, anyway, I can't remember what it was an example of women's movements and then this is a good example
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of at the beginning of the century. In the women's movements, what did they do in the beginning?
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That there was a sense of right and wrong. Yes, right. So the example of the DCSS algorithm
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at the end of the last century in the late 1990s where an individual was arrested and prosecuted
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for having made an algorithm that seemed obviously an issue of free speech. And
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this specific instance of injustice mobilized a huge number of people and they were creative,
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brilliant responses which defended him and eventually, obviously, resulted in the spread of the
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DCSS algorithm and people on the next can watch DVDs. Okay, so you know we definitely have an example
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where we can definitely help. Yes, and we have helped and we've been successful in the past.
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I just want to see the spread and I want to see our choice of strategies based on evidence.
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So why are you here this weekend? I'm here this weekend to present these arguments to my
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fellow geeks for the first time and see how they play and try and get examples and get instances
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and I've made a survey that I've put online with lime survey and I'm trying to get the people
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here to fill it out and tell me a little bit about who they are, what their sense of politics is
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so that I can use this example to build the argument about where the point of failure is in our
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community. I have some theories but I want to get the evidence. And is this going to be limited
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to people here or can we extend it to people who listen to this podcast here? I think what I'd
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like to do is set up a second survey for the listeners of the podcast so that I'm really eager
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to make sure, I'm intent to make sure that I don't blur boundaries that I know who I'm talking to,
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I'm who I'm getting evidence from so the evidence can be as strong as possible so we get a good answer
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instead of a sloppy fast answer. I'd be very interested in the results of your surveys anyway.
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I'm going to publish them online in a blog that I have yet to set up but the title
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that I've selected is Netizen of the World I expect will be on WordPress and so yeah so the
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results when they're available will go there. I think it's a very very very important topic one
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that we've left a little bit on the back burner here in the open source community so I look forward
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to you. Is there anything else I missed here on the YouTube? I don't think so. I just wanted to
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mention that there are to emphasize again that there are people doing really good work that
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there are people who like Simon Fipps who talked at this conference who have a great knowledge
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of politics and then how decisions are made and I'm only looking to compliment and enhance their
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good work. Fantastic. Okay, thank you very much for the interview and as always you can tune in
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tomorrow for another episode of Hacker Public Radio.
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