Skip to the main content

Berkman Buzz: October 18, 2013

The Berkman Buzz is selected weekly from the posts of Berkman Center people and projects.
To subscribe, click here.

Axel Arnbak explores US citizenship in the context of surveillance

Quotation mark

The main takeaway of two recent disclosures around N.S.A. surveillance practices, is that Americans must re-think ‘U.S. citizenship’ as the guiding legal principle to protect against untargeted surveillance of their communications. Currently, U.S. citizens may get some comfort through the usual political discourse that ‘ordinary Americans’ are protected, and this is all about foreigners. In this post, I’ll argue that this is not the case, that the legal backdoor of U.S. Citizenship is real and that relying on U.S. citizenship for protection is not in America’s interests.

 

From Axel Arnbak's post for Freedom to Tinker, "U.S. Citizenship and N.S.A. Surveillance – Legal Safeguard or Practical Backdoor?"
About Axel | @axelarnbak

 

Quotation mark

What is this 5th estate anyway? An explainer: http://t.co/egSeigtp8m @TakePart @globalvoices
Ivan Sigal (@ivonotes)

 

Bruce Schneier discusses security backdoors

Quotation mark

We already know the NSA wants to eavesdrop on the internet. It has secret agreements with telcos to get direct access to bulk internet traffic. It has massive systems like TUMULT, TURMOIL, and TURBULENCE to sift through it all. And it can identify ciphertext—encrypted information—and figure out which programs could have created it.

But what the NSA wants is to be able to read that encrypted information in as close to real-time as possible. It wants backdoors, just like the cybercriminals and less benevolent governments do.

And we have to figure out how to make it harder for them, or anyone else, to insert those backdoors.

 

From Bruce Schneier's post for Wired, "How to Design — And Defend Against — The Perfect Security Backdoor"
About Bruce | @schneierblog

Ethan Zuckerman reflects on Zeynep Tufekci's research on Gezi

Quotation mark

MIT’s Comparative Media Studies hosts a weekly colloquium, and this week’s featured speaker is sociologist and movement theorist, Zeynep Tufekci. Zeynep describes herself as a scholar of social movements and of surveillance, which means this has been an interesting and challenging year. The revelations about the NSA hit the same week as the Gezi protests in Turkey. She explains that it’s hard to do conceptual work in this space because events are changing every few months, making it very hard to extrapolate from years of experience.

Not until protests reached Gezi, Zeynep tells us, did she feel comfortable putting a name on the phenomenon she’s been seeing in her research in the Arab Spring, through Occupy and in the Indignados movement.

 

From Ethan Zuckerman's blog post, "Zeynep Tufekci on protest movements and capacity problems"
About Ethan | @ethanz
About Zeynep | @techsoc

Quotation mark

Curious what we do at @globalvoices, how and why? Read our surprisingly pretty, not the usual boring annual report: http://t.co/hhUndD5JL1
Ethan Zuckerman (@ethanz)

 

Willow Brugh explains value-based design

Quotation mark

When you are designing a project for social justice, where do you start?

In this workshop, we practice value-based design, a method that helps us to design for large scale social impact and to relate this directly to how we plan and implement projects. We envision the impacts we’d like to contribute to in the world and the values we bring with us into our work as the first steps in this design process. As individuals, this method helps us to express our connection to our projects on a personal level and to prevent burnout as we are able to identify work that resonates with our values and to set aside work that doesn’t. As a team, this method helps us to identify shared values and to make design decisions based on our shared vision instead of personal preferences.

 

From Willow Brugh's blog post, "Value-Based Design"
About Willow | @willowbl00

 

Quotation mark

Hey, internet studies grad students! The AoIR Grad Students Only mailing list is alive + it is great! Sign up here: http://bit.ly/16ebciT
Molly Sauter (@oddletters)

 

Can This Be Home? Borderlessness & The Internet Citizen

Quotation mark

I once interviewed a Cuban blogger who described the Internet as a place where Cubans (the few who were online) could experience a form of citizenship—an active, participatory democratic experience—that they couldn't have in real life. As she put it, “we are learning to be citizens in cyberspace.” Although her focus was on the particular limitations on public expression and debate in Cuba, I took her point broadly, thinking of my Internet activist colleagues who often describe themselves as being citizens or residents “of the Internet.”

 

From Ellery Biddle's blog post for Global Voices, "Can This Be Home? Borderlessness & The Internet Citizen"
About Global Voices Online | @globalvoices

This Buzz was compiled by Rebekah Heacock.

To manage your subscription preferences, please click here.