# talk - presentation - panel Book panel “Disconnecting sovereignty: How Data Fragmentation Reshapes the Law” by Mariavittoria Catanzariti, Humanities Labs, UvA, Amsterdam December 2024
The event will start with a presentation by the Author, followed by comments by Dr. Kristina Irion (Institute for Information Law, UvA) and Dr. Andrea Leiter (Amsterdam Center for International Law, UvA) and by a Q&A with the audience, moderated by Dr. Niels ten Oever (Department of European Studies and critical infrastructure lab, UvA).
The event is a joint initiative from the ARTES transversal clusters ‘Power and governance’ and ‘Digital networks, communications, and technologies’.
About the book:
This book explores the dynamic legal semantics of territory as applied to data. It offers a theoretical assessment of the legal challenges that data flows pose for the principle of territoriality and for state sovereignty more generally. The concept of sovereignty has traditionally developed in close connection with the exercise of powers over a territory, and ideas of jurisdiction have always been based on the principle of territoriality. Digitalization questions however the very idea of physical frontiers. Interconnected networks make data in effect borderless. Data can in fact be created, stored, processed, and accessed anytime and from anywhere.
The idea of the book is upbeat: the law can keep pace with the ability of data to fragment reality. The condition for this is that sovereignty disconnects from territory. Disconnection is not getting rid of the territory once and for all, it only means that for data alternatives to the territorial connection exist.
About the Author:
Mariavittoria Catanzariti is a Research Fellow at the Robert Shuman Centre and Assistant Professor of Legal Philosophy at University of Padua. She joined the European University Institute as Jean Monnet Fellow in 2017. Barrister in law since 2010, she obtained a PhD in Law with a special focus on Legal Philosophy and European Law from Roma Tre University in 2011 and the Italian Scientific Qualification as Associate Professor in Legal Sociology in 2018. Her main research interest revolves around the interaction of digital transformation and information society with the law. Her publications cover different legal areas such as privacy and data protection, law and technologies, human rights, and legal sociology.
Time and Date: 17:00-18:30, 18 December 2024
Location: Humanities Labs, Bushuis F0.01, Kloveniersburgwal 48 (main entrance), 1012 CX Amsterdam
# event ARTES Research Seminar: Democracy, War and the Digital, UvA Library, Singel 425 November 2024
The wars in Ukraine and Palestine raise new questions about digital self-determination, digital sovereignty, the use of digital tools in warfare, resistance, and democracies. On November 15, the Digital Networks, Communications, and Technologies Cluster of ARTES is organizing a research seminar to exchange ideas about the social, cultural, and political impacts of war. This research seminar brings together different perspectives to understand the role of technologies in military warfare, digital infrastructures under fire, the role of culture in times of occupation, and the everyday lives of people affected by war.
Please check the website of the event for more information.
Supply Chain Security in Software Infrastructures: Pagers exploded in Lebanon on September 2024, thrusting supply chain attacks into the spotlight of global media attention. As a breakdown of logistical media, this attack harks back to a longer history of engagement with supply chain security issues in the world of computing. I examine such background through dissecting empirical examples based on archival material pertaining to software infrastructures that developers rely on for ensuring the authenticity of their products. Ultimately, exploding pagers can serve as an edge case for the theoretical framework of infrastructural ideologies that is being developed under the aegis of the critical infrastructure lab.
Location: Belle van Zuylenzaal at the University Library, Singel 425.
Time: 09:00-12:00
# workshop Rethinking Data Centers in the Age of Scarcity, Humanities Labs, Amsterdam November 2024
Interested in joining the workshop – email fieke@criticalinfralab.net
Data centres are a visible and at times contested infrastructure in the Netherlands. Local protests, such as in Zeewolde, have spotlighted the tension between the growing demand for data centres, negative public sentiment, and the broader concern that society is running up against planetary boundaries. In the sustainable and just infrastructure research project we explored this tension by asking the data centre ecosystem to identify the environmental harms associated with this infrastructure, current sustainability efforts, and things that need to be included in a policy if we rethink data centre governance in the age of scarcity.
In the workshop, we will bring together different experts to discuss, explore, hack, and deepen the ideas and solutions that emerged during our research. For example. prioritisation rather than facilitating the mushrooming of digital infrastructures. This raises questions about on ‘What grounds do we prioritise?’, ‘How much infrastructure do we need?’, ‘What are the consequences of prioritisation?’. Or demands for an industrial policy that invests in, supports, and promotes a just and sustainable future internet. This raises questions on ‘What is sustainable and just?’, ‘Who decides?’, ‘Do we continue to invest in traditional silicon computing or is it the role of the state to dream big and differently?’ and ‘What are the opportunities and consequences of dreaming big?’.
Interested in joining the workshop – email fieke@criticalinfralab.net
Date & time: November 14th, 2024, 13:00 -18:00
Location Bushuis/Oost-Indisch Huis
# talk - presentation - panel AI, Digital Sovereignty and Media Infrastructures in India and elsewhere November 2024
Open Cities research platform November Research-in-Progress Seminar:
Technological Sovereignty in Media Infrastructures: Indigenous 5G Networks in India
Technological sovereignty is increasingly sounded by policy makers world wide as the common objective of three megatrends: digitalisation, decarbonisation and deglobalisation. Within such a framework, Maxigas examines how “indigenous 5G networks” are articulated in India. The empirical material is drawn from recent infrastructural ethnography in Delhi and Bangalore, which focused on making new media in the context of the government’s “Make in India” campaign. The story takes place on contested territory defined by the geopolitical ambitions, telecommunications standards, and technology vendors of the USA, EU and China. The findings are made relevant to the burning questions of the day by contrasting them with current policy developments closer to home. In particular, the ongoing debate on industrial policy for the new European Council, the publication of the Draghi report, and the conference on European Digital Independence.
Prof. dr. Payal Arora will be the main discussant.
7 November 2024, 15:00-18:00 at the Grote Zaal, Muntstraat 2A in Utrecht and online through a videocall
# event Sustainable and Equitable Internet Infrastructure panels 5-7 Nov November 2024
On November 5-7 we will host three conversations on Tech-poetics and the Cosmos of Resistance, Regenerative infrastructures, and Playing with Solarpunk Computing and Tiny Infrastructures. Speakers include Thiane Neves, Miguel de Barros, Madeline R. Young-Touré, Jen Liu, Joana Varon, Sunjoo Lee, Luã Cruz, Spencer 張正 Chan, and Esther Mwema. See more info on each panel below.
To discuss the ecological burdens of computation, challenge the notion of scale, uplift communal and regenerative computing practices, and dream together about alternative socio-technical pathways that center people and planet over profit and capital.
Panel 1: Playing with Solarpunk Computing and Tiny Infrastructures
November 5, 12h-1.30pm (UT-3), 10am – 11.30am EST, and 4.00-5.30 PM (UTC +1)
Zoom Link to Register:
https://mozilla.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJMkfu6rrD4tG9TuQENae6V2NSbadwjc3Ckz
Panel 2: Tech-poetics and the Cosmos of Resistance
November 6, 12h-1.30pm (UT-3), 10am – 11.30am EST, and 4.00-5.30 PM (UTC +1)
Zoom Link to Register:
https://mozilla.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJMldeyhpzIqHNUbB-TRa-FufW8qMrkwbnJY
Panel 3: Regenerative infrastructures
November 7, 12h-1.30pm (UT-3), 10am – 11.30am EST, and 4.00-5.30 PM (UTC +1)
Zoom Link to Register:
https://mozilla.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJ0vcu2hrT4sGNX5CFg7ya2Sz4Qaq2XCM17V
The panels
Panel 1: Playing with Solarpunk Computing and Tiny Infrastructures
November 5, 12h-1.30pm (UT-3), 10am – 11.30am EST, and 4.00-5.30 PM (UTC +1)
Speakers: Luã Cruz, Spencer 張正 Chan, and Esther Mwema
Moderator: Michelle Thorne
We already know what Big Tech built for profit looks like. But what if we reimagine digital infrastructures with community service, joy, and just the right amount of technology to meet collective needs? This panel explores these possibilities through solarpunk computing, tiny infrastructures, and other alternative models that foster sustainable, justice-oriented digital futures. We’ll learn from communities managing their own internet connectivity, gaining insights into resilience and meeting local needs through grassroots efforts. We’ll also hear from community-led renewable energy projects and how they inform sustainable, rights-based governance of technology. The panel invites us to rethink digital infrastructures — envisioning ways to reduce resource use while designing technologies that truly support collective well-being.
Panel 2: Tech-poetics and the Cosmos of Resistance
November 6th, 12h-1.30pm (UT-3), 10am – 11.30am EST, and 4.00-5.30 PM (UTC +1)
Speakers: Thiane Neves, Miguel de Barros, and Madeline R. Young-Touré
Moderator: Lori Regattieri
This panel explores the intersection of technology, infrastructure, and socio-environmental impacts within the framework of racial capitalism and colonial power structures. Inspired by the critical writings of Sylvia Wynter and Denise Ferreira da Silva, it challenges prevailing biocentric and anthropocentric ideologies to redefine what it means to be human in a world deeply shaped by industrial and digital technologies. Through a blend of research, art, film, and documentary, the panelists critique extractive practices and their devastating effects on both human and ecological systems. By engaging with themes of infrastructure, environmental degradation, and colonial legacies, this dialogue envisions a future where technology systems are designed with a deep recognition of all life forms, fostering resistance, solidarity, and policies that honor interconnectedness and belonging in a cosmos of shared existence.
Panel 3 Regenerative infrastructures
November 7th, 12h-1.30pm (UT-3), 10am – 11.30am EST, and 4.00-5.30 PM (UTC +1
Speakers: Jen Liu, Joana Varon, Sunjoo Lee
Moderator: Fieke Jansen
Internet infrastructures are a central but often invisible part of our lives. Recent protest and resistance against data centers have made certain challenges surrounding our infrastructures visible but fails to address the underlying values of growth, extractive, and abundance. Local win end up displaying the challenges to other territories. To flip the script and move beyond what is to what could be this round table centers on the idea of regenerative infrastructures, a term we use to describe restorative ecological and social approaches to infrastructures. We asked our speakers to offer different perspectives on regenerative infrastructures, focussing on community, environment, self-reliance, and autonomy, and alternative ways of thinking about infrastructures, from exploring low-tech and post-silicon computing. For example, washed-away concrete bridges in the rainy season deposit solid waste in rivers and lands and require external expertise to rebuild, whereas bamboo bridges decompose and can be rebuilt by the community.
This panel series is supported by the Mozilla Alumni Connection Grants
# talk - presentation - panel “Planning designs for ecosocial transitions” – Decidim Fest 2024: Ecology, Technology and Democracy, Barcelona October 2024
About the roundtable: it will focus on designs for an ecosocial transition, in three key areas. It will address the planned transformations of spatiality (urbanism and architecture), technologies, and our relations to animals required for desirable ecosocial transitions.
More information can be found here
Date and place:
24 October, 2024
Room Margarita Salas,
Carrer de Concepción Arenal 165,
El Congrés i els Indians, Barcelona,
Barcelona, Catalunya, Espanya
# talk - presentation - panel “The Tech We Want is Sustainable for People and the Planet” – The Tech We Want Online Summit, online October 2024
About the panel:
Eco, green, or simply sustainable technologies have several implicit meanings: long life, affordable maintenance, skilled people, resource-friendly, economical to use, renewable, regenerative, etc. In this panel, thinkers, practitioners and promoters of different aspects of software sustainability will discuss if and how it is possible to achieve a development model for people and the planet. Is there a way out of the disaster versus greenwashing narratives?
Panelists:
– Christoph Becker, Associate Professor at University of Toronto, author of “Insolvent: How to Reorient Computing for Just Sustainability”
– Shweata Hegde, Developer at semanticClimate
– Fieke Jansen, Co-principal Investigator at Critical Infrastructure Lab
– Paz Peña, Independent consultant and activist, author of “Technologies for a burning planet”
– Maxwell Beganim, Co-lead of the Open Goes COP coalition, Director of Open Knowledge Ghana
Moderator: Lucas Pretti, OKFN
More information can be found here
# event “Global Digital Cultures Soirée: Shifting Infrastructure Power – Critical Approaches”, Brakke Grond Cafe, Amsterdam October 2024
Please RSVP here
We would like to cordially invite you to our Global Digital Cultures Soirée, which will take place on Wednesday, 16 October, 2024, between 18:00 and 22:00, the Brakke Grond Cafe.
The speakers this time are Fernanda R Rosa (Virginia Tech, USA) and Niels ten Oever (UvA) and Fieke Jansen (UvA) of the Critical Infrastructure Lab. Fernanda’s research, ‘Following code with code ethnography’, asks: is it possible to decolonize infrastructural interdependencies between the global North and the global South? Meanwhile, Niels and Fieke will present early findings from an experiment in co-developing alternative infrastructural futures that center people and planet over profit and capital.
After brief presentations from these scholars, the floor will be open for questions and comments from participants.
As always, our soirées involve food and drinks; the evening will start with drinks, and dinner will be served around 20:00. Attendance is free of charge.
We look forward to seeing you there!
Date: 16 October, 18:00 – 22:00
Please RSVP here
Location: Brakke Grond Cafe
# event “Empowering Sustainability, Transparency, and Regional Impact in the IT Cloud & Infrastructure Market”, Humanities Lab, University of Amsterdam October 2024
Sustainable Digital Infrastructure Alliance recently conducted two surveys targeting both IT providers and IT purchasers to examine the current landscape and the role of sustainability and regionality in IT procurement decisions. The event aims to kick-start a broader conversation about the core values that should shape the IT cloud and infrastructure market towards greater sustainability. As global companies continue to dominate the market, it’s becoming increasingly difficult—yet more critical—to find ways to level the playing field. This event will focus on discussing the survey findings and exploring how we can shift the market towards enhanced sustainability and transparency.
Date: 15 October 17:00 – 20:00
Location: Humanities Lab, University of Amsterdam, Bushuis F0.01,
# event “Internet in Beeld: Verleden, Heden & Toekomst”, Felix Meritis, Amsterdam (in Dutch) October 2024
Corinne Cath en Fieke Jansen spreken in een breakout sessie bij Internet in Beeld: Verleden, Heden & Toekomst.
Op donderdag 10 oktober vindt het event ‘Internet in beeld: Verleden, Heden & Toekomst’ plaats bij Felix Meritis in Amsterdam. Internet Society Nederland (ISOC NL), het Platform Internetstandaarden (Internet.nl), het Nederlands Internet Governance Forum (NL IGF), het ministerie van Economische Zaken, SIDN en ECP I Platform voor de InformatieSamenleving nodigen u hiervoor van harte uit. Er is deze dag een inspirerend programma voor u samengesteld met aansluitend een bruisende borrel ‘Bits, Bites & Bubbels’ ter ere van het 25-jarige bestaan van ISOC NL en de uitreiking van de Lifetime Achievement Awards!
Meer informatie en aanmelden vind je hier.
# event “Documentation in Times of Crisis”, Finissage: Really? Art and Knowledge in Time of Crisis, Framer Framed, Amsterdam September 2024
Please join us at the Documentation in Times of Crisis: conversation between Hiba Omari (RIWAQ), UKRAiNATV, Fieke Jansen (critical infrastructure lab), Nermin Elsherif (Utrecht University) and Alexandra Barancova & Eric Kluitenberg on the 29 of September at Framer Framed, Amsterdam.
The conversation is part of the full-day symposium “Really? Art and Knowledge in Time of Crisis”.
Numerous commentators and critics have observed a profound crisis in what it means to know and not know – an epistemological crisis, a crisis of knowledge. While this issue is old, there has been an intense debate for over four decades about what constitutes ‘valid’ knowledge and what does not. However, this problem has been greatly exacerbated by the spread of massive misinformation tactics. These tactics, employed by a new breed of malign state and corporate actors, are designed to create strategic doubt using sophisticated internet-based media forms.
Date & time: September 29th, 14:30
Location: Framer Framed, Amsterdam
More info & sign up here
# talk - presentation - panel Panel “Imagining spaces of governing AI infrastructures”, ECREA 2024, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia September 2024
At the 10th European Communication Conference ECREA 2024, Communication & social (dis)order, Fieke Jansen will talk about imagining spaces of governing AI infrastructures.
About the panel:
The hype around generative AI, like ChatGPT, is gaining increasing attention in media and communication research with a focus on transformations in communication and human-machine-interaction. This panel reorients these discussions towards an interrogation of the infrastructures, practices, and more-than-human relations that sustain the operations of technologies that go under the label of “AI”.
Questions that regard the socio-ecological relations and their far reaching implications to justice, environments, and infrastructures that emerge from practices of use and development of “AI” remain insufficiently discussed in media and communication studies, despite landmark work in critical data studies and Machine Learning that reveals the exploitation of resources, nature and humans caused by the production, training, and maintenance of especially so-called large language models (LLMs) (Crawford 2021; Bender et al., 2021). This work makes imperative to bring the analysis of relations between AI infrastructures, questions of sustainability and emerging forms of disorder to the core of concerns for research of digital cultures and communication.
This panel discusses AI infrastructures in relation to questions of sustainability. It explores approaches, empiric objects and the multi-valent implications of AI developments in different contexts, contributing to research on infrastructures in media and communication studies and interdisciplinary research on the socio-ecological implications of AI technologies, aspects of sustainability and global injustices.
The individual papers propose approaches to deconstruct norms embedded within AI development and application with relevance for socio-ecological justice through the application of sociological practice theory (paper 1); to analyse emergent frictions and inequalities at the intersection between transforming digital and energy infrastructures (paper 2). They also critically assess the expanding terrains of “green extractivism” of the digital industries that claim to solve sustainability issues through the application of data-intensive technologies exemplified by the case of aquaculture (paper 3) and explore spaces of governance as imagined by civil society actors that counterpose narratives of AI and efficiency (paper 4). All panel contributions demonstrate how investigating the multiple human and more-than human materialities, infrastructures, and practices that sustain AI are productive for deconstructing narratives of AI technologies, especially in relation to matters of socio-ecological justice, while also addressing questions of power, agency, inequalities, and multiple forms of disorders. The panel equally addresses media and communication research’s responsibility to conduct transformative research on AI infrastructures (paper 5), when being confronted with the need for a great socio-ecological transformation.
Please take a look at the schedule here.
More information about the conference can be found on the ECREA 2024 website.
# event Summer school “Utopia or Dystopia: Perspectives & Choices in ICT”, SICT 2024, A doctoral school on sustainable ICT, Brussels, Belgium September 2024
In 2023, six out of nine planetary boundaries have been breached. We are facing multiple ecological and environmental crises while we continuously ignore planetary boundaries. Digitalisation and the use of Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs) are proposed as ways to face these crises. But is this techno-solutionism, i.e. the hope that more technology can solve the problems of earlier technology, not just an utopia? ICT can provide some benefits, such as reducing the need for travel or improving energy management. However, their ubiquitous deployment and use, and their constant renewal cause severe socio-environmental damage and fall short of equity throughout their life cycle. We question the relevance of continuously introducing new digital systems, and the relevance of propositions solely focused on improving efficiency without addressing the socio-environmental damage these systems cause. As is, these systems and their optimizations are “band-aid” solutions that fall short of developing broader perspectives and focusing on systemic change – revising our current models and considering alternative systems.
The aim of SICT 2024 is to provide participants with a comprehensive insight into the multifaceted landscape of socio-economic harms along the supply chain and life-cycle of products, as well as the efforts being made to promote sustainability issues, and to foster a systemic understanding of the collective action required to shape a more sustainable future in the ICT sector. Throughout the week, voices from academia, politics, artists, activists and organisations will come together to discuss and analyse the sustainability challenges facing the ICT sector. The summer school will aim to move away from neo-colonialist and extractivist debates on how much pollution is acceptable for progress, to an approach that is making room for the most impacted to be heard.
We invite people from diverse communities, academic fields, the industry and arts to come together for a five-day summer school in early September 2024, in Brussels, Belgium. The event will be held in English. Places are available to master/PhD students, researchers, senior academics and people working in the industry and arts. We may have a limited number of scholarships available, details on this will be announced in the coming months.
Dates: September 9-13 2024
If you’d like to register, please follow this link.
# infrastructure walk “Data Walk as Method” at the Data Power Conference in Graz/Bangalore September 2024
Talk in the panel BP3: Reimagining Data (in Bangalore location), Friday 09:00 CEST, 12:30 IST, room B-RM R305.
The proposed panel brings together scholars and artists for methodological reflections on data walk as an empirical method and social practice. Data walk as a method emerged recently as a creative method employed by academics and artists for a variety of purposes from public engagement and project-based education to artistic research, or as a means of data collection for straightforward empirical studies. Loitering in urban public spaces of data infrastructures as a way to check our assumptions about more abstract notions of data power is the sensitivity that may connect these approaches. Nonetheless, the sensitivities go back historically and philosophically to the works of Walter Benjamin on the flaneur, the Situationist International on psychogeography, and to hacker practices such as wardriving.
After the fervent period of experimentation that describes the last few years, does it make sense now to discuss classical methodological issues such as canonisation, normative criteria, or the affordances and limitations of the interpretative power of the data walk methodology? In other words, what is a programmatic data walk? What is a successfully performed data walk? What data walks are suitable to address what epistemological questions? Which uses are there for data walks in academic life and artistic research?
A symposium on the topic is to be held Sprint 2025 at the University of Utrecht, bringing the results of the discussion at the data power conference to dedicated practitioners.
# call for papers Open Panel “Making 5G Matter: Transformations in Network Infrastructure and Research” at EASST-4S Conference, Amsterdam July 2024
It is clear that 5G makes a difference, but for a variety of factors it is far from settled what difference that difference makes. This combined format open panel seeks to convene new conversations about the transformations accompanying 5G, both to the information environment and network topology.
At the intersection of geopolitical struggle between global superpowers, domestic panics about viral conspiracy theories, and rapidly changing network infrastructures, 5G technology has emerged as a unique object of concern and contestation. This combined format open panel invites participants to present new research and engage in roundtable discussion on the transformations affected by the rollout of 5G devices and telecommunication networks. Such changes are broadly distributed and uniquely suited to the modalities offered by STS. They encompass global trade tensions, novel design choices by standard setters, and sustainable development goals, as well as renewed campaigns to define the place of wireless technology in contemporary society. To adequately address these transformations and the challenges they bring with them, critical scholarship on 5G must navigate between the quicksand of conspiratorial disinformation and the mirage of heavily financialized technosolutionism. This panel seeks to gather together a variety of researchers working in diverse locales on different aspects of 5G, in order to identify common obstacles, share collective insights, and advance the vocabulary of critical 5G research. Of special concern are the material contexts in which 5G technologies are situated, the workings of power in telecommunication networks, and their potentials for democratic engagement. What can the socio-technical differences 5G makes tell us about moments of transition? With this panel, we hope to make 5G matter as more than a marketing fad or lurid conspiracy theory and transform the terrain of 5G research in STS and related fields. We welcome proposals for paper presentations, workshops, and dialogue sessions.
# call for papers Open Panel “Exploring, doing, and making infrastructural ideologies that center limits, reduction, and redistribution” at EASST-4S conference, Amsterdam July 2024
The world is burning, but in and from the ashes a new world will be built. A new world needs new ideologies to inform subjectivity, organization, and materiality. In this panel we will interrogate experimental approaches to infrastructural ideologies that center limits, redistribution, and reduction.
The climate crisis, planetary scarcity, human limitations, and (geo)political conflicts force us to rethink transnational communication infrastructures to overcome their extractive, colonial, and imperialist tendencies. As policymakers, researchers, citizens, artists, users, and industry, it becomes increasingly hard to know and act in and through increasingly complex, layered, and entangled networks. To ensure that new infrastructures serve the public interest and contribute to social, economic, and environmental stability, we see an urgent need to develop alternative propositions for sustainable and equitable internet and digital technologies. Specifically, in this combined open panel we are responding to the need to articulate new ideologies, set a positive agenda, to inform subjectivity, organization, and materiality. In this combined format open panel we will interrogate theoretical, empirical, and speculative approaches to infrastructural ideologies that center limits, redistribution, and reduction over extraction, profit, and capital.
Since the internet has become the scaffolding of everyday life, there is a clear need to think and build beyond the principles of openness, interconnections, and networks. Now is the time to develop and prototype narratives about internet infrastructures that center people and the planet over profit and capital. Because an ideology cannot consist of text alone, this combined open panel will combine academic presentations, with a workshop and an interactive immersive experience.
This panel builds on the open panel ‘Overcoming Sociotechnical Imaginaries: infrastructural ideologies and materialities?’ organized at 4S 2023 in Honolulu and is in conversation with a growing body of work across – but not limited to – STS, media studies, infrastructure studies, and critical internet studies.
We encourage a diversity of submissions to help think through the complexity of today and develop new ideologies. These submissions can include but are not limited to, academic papers, essays, speculative fiction, solar punk, technology, code, and artistic interventions and installations.
# talk - presentation - panel Online panel discussion “Digitale soevereiniteit: zin of onzin?” July 2024
Clingendael en Internet Society nodigen je uit voor een online paneldiscussie op maandag 8 juli over huidige stand van zaken rond digitale soevereiniteit. Panelleden zullen met elkaar én met deelnemers in gesprek gaan over de vraag: “Digitale soevereiniteit: zin of onzin?” Ofwel: wat is het nut en de noodzaak van digitale soevereiniteit? Wat zijn de belangrijksteuitdagingen om het in de praktijk te brengen?
Programma
Het panel bestaat uit
- Bert Hubert, Onafhankelijk technologie-expert
- Corinne Cath, Technische Universiteit Delft
- Martijn Lucassen, Ministerie van Economische Zaken en Klimaat
- Paul Brand, Stratix
- Diana Krieger, Soverin (ntb)
De sessie wordt ingeleid door Ruben Brave (Internet Society, internetpionier) en gemodereerd door Maaike Okano-Heijmans (Senior Research Fellow Clingendael, programmaleider Geopolitics of Technology and Digitalisation)
Date: 08 July 2024 14:00 – 14:45
For more information about the event, please check Clingendael website.
You can sign up here (in Dutch)
# event 2024 Multistakeholder Meeting on Digital Sovereignty at Clingendael, The Hague (in Dutch) July 2024
On July 8, 2024, an important multistakeholder meeting took place at Huys Clingendael, organized by the Clingendael Institute in collaboration with Internet Society Netherlands (ISOC NL). During this event, titled “Digital Sovereignty: Sense or Nonsense?”, around 150 stakeholders and experts gathered to discuss the current state of digital sovereignty and to identify concrete steps to ensure digital autonomy. Ruben Brave, chairman of ISOC NL, opened the meeting with an inspiring speech, followed by Maaike Okano-Heijmans, Senior Research Fellow and Head of the Geopolitics of Technology and Digitization Program at the Clingendael Institute, who moderated the sessions.
Theme I – Data Sovereignty: What Do We Want to Protect?
- Availability and Access: The panelists emphasized the risk of losing access to essential data and the need to reduce dependence on non-European cloud providers.
- Protection of Information: There was a debate about which information should remain within Europe and be actively protected, especially in sectors like defense, public administration, energy, and healthcare.
- Solutions: A balanced approach combining both protection and efficient data processing was seen as necessary to ensure both security and innovation.
Theme II – European Beehive Cloud Megascaler
- Scope and Definition: Developing an all-in-one package with essential services such as S3 object storage, Kubernetes, and IAM, meeting the highest safety and interoperability standards.
- Role of the Government: The government was encouraged to act as both a customer and investor, and to stimulate prototyping and the creation of a Beehive Cloud Megascaler.
The critical infrastructure lab fellow, Corinne Cath, contributed to the gathering as a member of the expert panel, together with Diana Krieger, Bert Hubert, Martijn Lucassen and Paul Brand.
Please find more information, including key takeaways and a preview of an upcoming follow-up event in October 2024 (in Dutch) here.
# event Digital methods summer school, University of Amsterdam July 2024
The Digital Methods Initiative (DMI), Amsterdam, is holding its annual Summer School on ‘Visual methods: From platform aesthetics and data visualisation to AI hermeneutics’. The format is that of a (social media and web) data sprint, with tutorials as well as hands-on work for telling stories with data. There is also a programme of keynote speakers. It is intended for advanced Master’s students, PhD candidates and motivated scholars who would like to work on (and complete) a digital methods project in an intensive workshop setting. For a preview of what the event is like, you can view short video clips from previous editions of the School.
Dates: 1-12 July 2024
More information here:
https://wiki.digitalmethods.net/Dmi/SummerSchool2024
# broadcast TV programme “What is holding us back?”, episode “Sustainable data” (in Dutch) June 2024
Fieke Jansen and Corinne Cath contributed to the production of the episode “Sustainable data”, which will be aired on Dutch television NPO2.
Time: 19 June 2024, 21:00
We stream, email, and chat away. One hour of video streaming is equivalent to a week’s use of a refrigerator in terms of energy consumption, yet our data usage seems to be a blind spot in discussions about sustainability. With the rise of AI, this is going to increase significantly. How can we reduce the footprint of our data usage?
You can watch back the programme here (in Dutch)
# event 5G generatie. Tech denkers, Adyen – Rokin, Amsterdam June 2024
5G, de vijfde generatie draadloze technologie, staat aan de vooravond van een revolutionaire verschuiving in de manier waarop we communiceren, werken en leven. Deze geavanceerde technologie belooft niet alleen ultrasnelle mobiele connectiviteit, maar biedt ook een breed scala aan toepassingen die onze samenleving zullen transformeren. Maar is dit wel iets wat we moeten willen? En wat heeft 5G de consument te bieden?
Sprekers:
Aina Seerden
Imme Raurus
Niels ten Oever
# event Politicologenetmaal (or: Annual Political Science Workshops of the Low Countries), Maastricht University June 2024
Join us on Friday, June, 14th when Niels ten Oever will be speaking about his recent paper ‘Internet Sanctions on Russian Media: Actions and Effects‘ at Workshop session 3.
The 2024 Politicologenetmaal (or: Annual Political Science Workshops of the Low Countries) will be held in Maastricht, bringing together political scientists from over 40 universities for two days of inspiring workshops, thought-provoking discussions, and valuable networking opportunities.
Please check the event website for more information and the programme.
# talk - presentation - panel Multistakeholderism and Digital Sovereignty: Infrastructural Sanctions, the War in Ukraine, and EU Digital Sovereignty, GIG-ARTS 2024, Leiden University, Campus The Hague June 2024
The GIG-ARTS (Global Internet Governance Actors, Regulations, Transactions and Strategies) conference is a European annual multidisciplinary academic venue to present and discuss developments in Global Internet Governance (GIG) and their implications in and beyond this field of research. It is one of the outcomes of the GIG-ARTS project.
Paper Panel Session 3: Multistakeholderism and Digital Sovereignty
Infrastructural Sanctions, the War in Ukraine, and EU Digital Sovereignty
Niels ten Oever, University of Amsterdam; Clément Perarnaud, Brussels School of Governance; John Kristoff, University of Illinois Chicago; Max Resing, University of Twente; Moritz Müller, University of Twente; Arturo Filastò, Open Observatory of Network Interference (OONI); Cris Kanich, University of Illinois Chicago
Date: 3-4 June 2024
Please find more information and abstracts of presentations on the GIG-ARTS webiste
# talk - presentation - panel workshop “Re-imagining Data Infrastructures: Labour, Environment, and Solidarity” at CPDP.ai 2024 conference, Brussels May 2024
Organised by ULD (DE), Plattform Privatheit (DE), critical infrastructure lab (NL)
Facilitator Felix Bieker, ULD (DE) & Sarah Vorndran, critical infrastructure lab (NL)
CPDP.ai 2024 conference workshop
Facing interconnected crises of racial capitalism, climate injustice and eroding solidarity, we want to reimagine our current data infrastructures in an open forum for researchers and practitioners in the various fields of critical data studies. We want to consider the conditions of data workers and
the environmental impacts of the factories needed to train AI models. We want to look at practices of solidarity with the resistance and refusal of those workers and the local communities affected. From this, we hope to find avenues that can help us address the interconnected crises from a critical perspective and find a better way forward. How can ongoing workers’ resistance connect with, and centre racialised migrant workers that prop up the data and tech economy? Who and how do we build with and across different interconnected struggles such as labour and the environment?
# event Seminar “EU’s Digital Future Seminar #2: Assessing the Material Shaping of EU Digital Sovereignty in Response to the War in Ukraine” May 2024
Description:
The war in Ukraine is known to have informed and inspired the acceleration of EU legislations aimed at strengthening the EU’s capacity to protect its “cyberspace” against the spread of disinformation and foreign interference, which the European Commission now equates to “ European digital sovereignty”.
While many have claimed the predominant discursive nature of digital sovereignty policies in the EU, recent sanctions banning the online broadcasting of Russian media outlets on EU territory could be interpreted as one of the first techno-material digital sovereignty measures. In this seminar, Prof. Niels ten Oever will present his latest research on this topical issue by exploring the implications of these recent sanctions for the European approach to Internet infrastructures and digital sovereignty.
Speaker:
Prof. Niels ten Oever, University of Amsterdam
You can find out more about this online event here.
# vacancy PhD Position in Infrastructural Ideologies in the EU, Russia, and China May 2024
Are you looking for a challenging position in a dynamic setting? The Amsterdam School for Regional, Transnational and European Studies (ARTES) currently has a vacant PhD position as part of the critical infrastructure lab, led by main researcher Niels ten Oever, PhD. ARTES is one of the five Research Schools within the Amsterdam Institute for Humanities Research (AIHR).
What are you going to do?
You will write a PhD thesis under the supervision of Dr. Niels ten Oever. You will use advanced qualitative and quantitative research methods to interrogate the geopolitics that play out in the reordering of material communication infrastructures of China, Russia, and the European Union.
Transnational communication networks have existed since 1865, but at the beginning of inter-state conflicts submarine cables would be cut. Currently, internet cables circle the globe and China, Russia, and the European Union are interconnected through the internet. Neither the war in Ukraine nor tensions between the US and China have changed that. This research will examine how the EU, China, and Russia seek to inscribe their norms and values by shaping informational flows and controls in their respective communication networks while maintaining interconnectivity with other networks. The research analyses the target countries’ policy-industry-research-implementation pipeline, to understand how their information networks take shape.
The PhD researcher will engage in the qualitative and quantitative analysis of policy documents, technical documents, mailing lists, and network measurements and validate their findings through elite interviews.
Please find the full description of the vacancy here
We will accept applications until May 10th, 2024.
# vacancy Postdoc Infrastructural Ideologies in the EU, Russia, and China May 2024
The Amsterdam School for Regional, Transnational and European Studies (ARTES) currently has a vacant Postdoc researcher position as part of the critical infrastructure lab, led by main researcher Niels ten Oever, PhD. ARTES is one of the five Research Schools within the Amsterdam Institute for Humanities Research (AIHR).
What are you going to do?
In this two-year full-time postdoc you will be analysing the structuration of internet infrastructure with a particular emphasis on the research-policy-implementation pipeline of information controls. You will be combining the analysis of policy documents, research papers, and technical implementation of information controls to differentiate infrastructural ideologies in the European Union, China, and Russia.
Please find the full description of the vacancy here
Deadline: 1 May 2024
# event Sanctions, Standards, and Sovereignty: Examining Power in Communication Networks with Infrastructural Ideologies, Centre Internet et Société (CIS), Paris April 2024
Despite ever-increasing discourse about internet fragmentation and digital sovereignty, the world has never been more digitally connected. At the same time, information networks are continuously being reconfigured by states and corporations at different layers of the stack. Taking this into account, what methods and theoretical approaches can be levered to analyze power in communication networks today? In this talk we will analyze the implementation of EU sanctions against Russian media, and the development of 5G and internet standards to see how the developing framework of infrastructural ideologies can help us understand the shaping of global communication infrastructures while taking the political and the material into account.
Niels ten Oever – assistant professor at the European Studies department and co-principal investigator with the critical infrastructure lab at the University of Amsterdam
Valentin Goujon – Doctorant au médialab (Sciences Po)
Hugo Estecahandy – Doctorant chez Institut Français de Géopolitique
Date: Fri, Apr 26, 2024, 4:00 PM – 6:00 PM
More info here
# talk - presentation - panel Workshop Re-Figuration of Cyberspace – SFB 1265, Berlin April 2024
This workshop, organized by the project B02 „Control/Space“ at the Collaborative Research Center 1265 at TU Berlin, explores different spatial changes and dynamics of the Internet infrastructure using the notion of refiguration, which presents a concept of tensions between four key spatial figures and spatial logics: the place, the territory, the network, and the route. These tensions allow for the explanation of key conflicts in contemporary modernity. Conference book with full programme available.
Maxigas (critical infrastructure lab): Media ecologies, infrastructures and environments: Infrastructure walk as a methodological approach
Or, things we learned from infrastructure walks.
The critical infrastructure lab held a series of “infrastructure walks” in
Amsterdam and Berlin, exploring the visibility of digital infrastructures
deployed in public spaces. I situate the methodological approach in
relation to other practices addressing key conflicts in contemporary urban
life that immerse observers within the spatial figures and spatial logics
of urban radioscapes. Subsequently, I highlight the methodological
advantages of the infrastructural walk compared to similar approaches.
Then, I report on the empirical and theoretical results obtained from the
walks. In short, the infrastructure walk experience is a good basis for
rethinking the key concepts of media infrastructures, media environments
and media ecologies.
Industrial standards can be mobilised as an analytical grid to structure
the urban experience of radioscapes. The insights thus generated
correspond to counter-mapping the spatial control exercised over and
through the electromagnetic spectrum in urban spaces. Such work exposes
the reconfiguration of power relationships in the city through emerging
technologies and legacy protocols. Infrastructure walks address the
question of what media technologies may mean “after all”, that is in the
context of the life world, lived experiences and action possibilities of
end users as embodied citizens.
# event Talk “Geographical” at Expanded Publishing Fest #2 – Space-in / Space-out, OT301, Amsterdam April 2024
Our internet-connected devices hold an unprecedented power to multiply us into a manifold of realities. The conventional way to conceptualize this is segregational – we “space-out” and we’re in cyberspace. However, as Heidegger noticed, one of the essential spatial practices of living beings is coming-into-nearness: “spacing-in”. Adding Lefebvre, the space that we space-out and space-in is a social product: not simply an element or sphere within which the social operates, but rather the expression of it. It’s a multitude of connections, flows of communication and capital, conditioned by politics and economic relationships, defined by class struggles, represented by those in power, and lived by those who are subject to that power. The complex composite of ontologies that are unified within the internet are territories where cables and devices are juxtaposed with class struggle, virtual internet protocols, geopolitics, and human cognition. The escapist “spacing-out” is only one part of the picture. Let’s space-in.
More info on OT301 website here
# event ECP “Digital human rights”, Bleyenberg, The Hague April 2024
On Thursday, April 4th, ECP, in collaboration with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Dutch Internet Governance Forum (NL IGF), is organizing the ECP Special ‘Digital Human Rights’ at Bleyenberg in The Hague.
This meeting will highlight both the risks and opportunities of digitization for the safeguarding of human rights. Following an introduction by Human Rights Ambassador Wim Geerts, experts will discuss the importance of digital human rights across various layers: digital infrastructure, artificial intelligence, and digital platforms.
Marjolijn Bonthuis – Programmadirecteur Digitale Veiligheid & Vertrouwen – ECP
Wim Geerts – Ambassadeur Mensenrechten – Ministerie van Buitenlandse Zaken
Niels ten Oever – Infrastructuuronderzoeker & Universitair Docent – Universiteit van Amsterdam
Ajuna Soerjadi – Directeur – Expertisecentrum Data-Ethiek
Naomi Appelman – Promovendus – Instituut voor Informatierecht (IViR) Universiteit van Amsterdam
4 April 2024, 9:30 – 13:30
More info in Dutch here
# call for contributions “Reassembling the Computer Networks of Eastern and Central Europe: From the Collapse of Soviet Bloc to the Russia-Ukraine War”, Internet Histories Journal April 2024
Topics can include but are not limited to:
- Socio-technical historical accounts of the computer networks and infrastructures in the Soviet Union and Eastern and Central Europe
- Cybernetic histories and legacies (Soviet and beyond)
- The collapse of the Soviet Union and the privatization or non-privatization of Internet infrastructures
- Telecom and Internet infrastructures in ECE and its dis/entanglement with Soviet legacy
- War-driven technological changes of the Internet infrastructure
- Local histories and precise case studies of the ECE Internet
- Methodological approaches to study ECE Internet and telecom infrastructures
more information here
abstract deadline: 02.04.2024
manuscript deadline: 10.02.2025
editors: Taras Nazaruk, Miglė Bareikytė, Svitlana Matviyenko
# talk - presentation - panel Green Clouds? Towards Sustainable Data Infrastructure, SPUI25 March 2024
In our rapidly digitizing world, the demand for data storage and processing has surged, leading to the proliferation of data centers and cloud computing infrastructure. However, this exponential growth comes with significant environmental costs, as data infrastructure consumes vast amounts of energy and contribute to carbon emissions. This roundtable addresses this pressing issue, delving into the critical intersection of technology and environmental sustainability from the civil society perspective.
About the speakers
Fieke Jansen is the co-founder of the Critical Infrastructure Lab and a post-doctoral Researcher at the University of Amsterdam. She also coordinates the Green Screen Climate Justice and Digital Rights Coalition.
Kristina Irion is Associate Professor at the Institute for Information Law (IViR) at the University of Amsterdam.
Becky Kazansky is a Postdoctoral Researcher at the Political Science department at the University of Amsterdam.
Stefania Milan is Professor of Critical Data Studies at the University of Amsterdam’s Department of Media Studies and a Research Associate with the Chair in AI & Democracy at the Florence School of Transnational Governance of the European University Institute.
Max Schulze is the Founder of the Sustainable Digital Infrastructure Alliance (SDIA).
Pepijn de Reus is a master student Artificial Intelligence (AI) at the University of Amsterdam.
Date: 20 March 2024, 20:00
More info here
# event AI & the Climate Crisis, online March 2024
Investigate AI’s contradictory role within climate change.
This event is part of the Goldsmiths AI UK Fringe public discussion series: AI Consciousness, Creativity and the Climate Crisis in collaboration with the The Alan Turing Institute.
Dr Dan McQuillan | Goldsmiths, University of London will lead the discussion and is joined by:
Boxi Wu – Oxford Internet Institute / Google DeepMind
Fieke Jansen – Critical Infrastructure Lab
Sebastián Lehuedé – King’s College London
Patrick Brodie – University College Dublin
19 March 2024, 19:30 – 21:00 CET
Learn more and secure your ticket via this link
# call for contributions “ECREA Book: AI Infrastructures and Sustainability”, Muenster University February 2024
for an Open Access publication with Palgrave as part of the ECREA Open Access Book Series
Proposal for an edited book on
AI Infrastructures and Sustainability
Deadline: 29.02.2024
Editors: Anne Mollen, Sigrid Kannengießer, Fieke Jansen, Julia Velkova
This call for contributions follows an invitation by the ECREA Open Access Book Series Committee to develop a proposal for a volume on “AI Infrastructures and Sustainability”. The Committee has invited overall three publications to develop full proposals – one of which will be selected as Open Access publication with Palgrave as part of the ECREA book series.
The proposed volume assembles research in media and communications on AI infrastructures in relation to questions of sustainability. We invite critical theoretical, historical, methodological, and empirical reflections on the “sustainability” of technologies that go under the label of “AI”. Contributions could include analyses of how sustainability, infrastructures or other related notions can be conceptualized in relation to technologies of automation – to deconstruct how AI-related narratives, imaginaries, norms, practices etc. with their ensuing implications manifest in infrastructures of automated communication. We also welcome authors to introduce new concepts that contribute to create more affective, transformative, theoretically nuanced narratives and understandings of how to make liveable relations with AI. Considering the necessity for a great socio-ecological transformation, the proposed volume also encourages reflections on transformative perspectives in media and communication research, addressing media and communication’s role in the shaping and transforming of societies increasingly becoming reliant on technologies of automation.
Submission details and expected time frame for publication
We are seeking abstracts (250-300 words, excluding references) to be submitted until February, 29 2024 to anne.mollen@uni-muenster.de addressing – but not limited to – one or more of the following topics:
- Critical theoretical, conceptual, empirical, and methodological work on “AI”, infrastructures and sustainability in media and communication research
- Critical discussions of sustainability, sustainability narratives and normative frameworks in relation to AI infrastructures
- Imaginaries of sustainability and AI (their construction as well as resistance to it)
- Human rights and digital justice implications of AI
- Extractivism and AI (labour, data, resources etc.), including AI-related protest and movements
- Intersectional perspectives on AI and sustainability
- Resource consumption and environmental impacts of AI
- Intersections of AI with local and energy politics
- Market concentration, political economy, geopolitical perspectives and global distributional (in)justices in relation to AI infrastructures
- Bias and discrimination in AI infrastructures, representation, and AI
- Transformative and transdisciplinary perspectives on AI and sustainability
Media and communication research can contribute with nuanced, critical, and normative analyses on the socio-technical relations that make and sustain AI infrastructures. This perspective is direly needed in the discussion of AI and sustainability, which needs to be acknowledged as more than a technical concern to which technical solutions can be found. A comprehensive media and communication perspective can instead assess the manifestations, contestations, and historical continuities in the emergence of AI infrastructures while reflecting on matters of sustainability. With the proposed volume we are calling on scholars to orient discussions on automation as well as human-machine-interaction emerging in relation to media and communications towards an interrogation of the infrastructures, practices, and more-than-human relations that constitute the operations of technologies that go under the label of “AI” through the lens of sustainability.
More information here
# talk - presentation - panel Eaten by the Internet – FUTURES Podcast Live February 2024
SPACE4, in collaboration with Housmans Bookshop and the FUTURES Podcast, have the pleasure of hosting Corinne Cath and Fieke Jansen, who will delve into the politics of internet infrastructure, the central theme of their latest book, “Eaten by the Internet.”
29 Feb 2024
18:30 – 20:30h
SPACE4, Housmans Bookshop & the FUTURES Podcast
London
Eaten by the Internet makes internet infrastructure visible as a force of political power, transforming the social world from the bottom up. It is made up of fifteen chapters, contributed by a global set of researchers, activists, and techies.
Dr. Cath and Dr. Jansen will be in conversation with Luke Robert Mason who hosts the FUTURES Podcast – a show that explores the topics of artificial intelligence, human enhancement, space travel and virtual reality. Mason is a British-born futures theorist who is passionate about engaging the public with emerging scientific theories and technological developments.
# event Data is dead. Welcome to the new future of the tech industry, Spui25 February 2024
The future of the tech industry is in infrastructure, not data. This means that those companies that control key infrastructure, like chips and cloud computing, hold sway. Companies like ASML, Microsoft, and Amazon Web Services (AWS), rather than X or Meta, will become the most powerful players. Is it their choices that will influence what our collective futures look like? Do we need to adapt our understanding of power in the tech sector to this new reality?
23 Feb 2024, 17:00
Registration info on spui25 website
About the speakers
Michael Veale is an Associate Professor in digital rights and regulation at University College London’s Faculty of Laws. His research focuses on how to understand and address challenges of power and justice that digital technologies and their users create and exacerbate, in areas such as privacy-enhancing technologies and machine learning.
Corinne Cath is a post-doctoral researcher at the University of Delft, where they study the political economy of cloud computing. Cath is also a fellow at the UVA’s critical infralab and a research associate at the Minderoo Centre at the University of Cambridge. As an anthropologist, their interest lies in how power moves through infrastructures (in particular cloud computing).
# talk - presentation - panel Do We Really Care? Public Values and Digital Technology in the Netherlands, SPUI25 February 2024
What do the Dutch value in digital technologies? This roundtable presents the results of the first survey to explore the relation between public values, human rights, and technology design. We find that most people take measures to protect their online privacy, but also that half of the population has never heard of technical standards.
Stefania Milan is Professor of Critical Data Studies at the University of Amsterdam’s Department of Media Studies, a Faculty Associate at the Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society, Harvard University and a Research Associate with the Chair in AI & Democracy at the Florence School of Transnational Governance of the European University Institute.
Niels ten Oever is Assistant Professor at the European Studies department and co-principal investigator with the critical infrastructure lab at the University of Amsterdam. Next to that, he is a visiting professor with the Centro de Tecnologia e Sociedade at the Fundação Getúlio Vargas.
Douwe Schmidt is the Project Manager of Public Tech at the Municipality of Amsterdam.
Marjolein Lanzing is Assistant Professor Philosophy of Technology at the University of Amsterdam.
Bart Karstens is senior researcher Digital Society at the Rathenau Institute in The Hague.
Catherine Garcia is Senior Advisor on Institutional Relations at Internet Society.
Date: 21 feb 2024 at 17:00
More info here
# event Knowledge-Driven Power in a Digitized World, Spui25 February 2024
Who holds, controls, and creates power in contemporary societies? On the occasion of their new book, The New Knowledge: Information, Data and the Remaking of Global Power, Blayne Haggart and Natasha Tusikov will present their answer to this question. They will take us along from Google’s Internet-of-Things projects, new modes of property and knowing that arose during the Covid-19 pandemic, and the ideology through which power exercised.
08 Feb 2024, 20:00
Registration info on spui25 website
About the speakers
Blayne Haggart is an associate professor of political science at Brock University in St. Catharines, Canada. Dr. Haggart’s research focuses on the international political economy of knowledge, particularly intellectual property rights, data governance and internet governance.
Natasha Tusikov, assosciate professor at York University, researches at the intersection among law, crime, technology, and regulation. She is a senior fellow at the Balisillie School of International Affairs in Waterloo, Canada and a visiting fellow with the Justice and Technoscience Lab (JusTech Lab), School of Regulation and Global Governance (RegNet) at the Australian National University.
Joris van Hoboken is a Professor of Law in the Brussels School of Governance’s LLM programme. He is an Associate Professor at the Institute for Information Law (IViR) at the University of Amsterdam. He is also affiliated with the Interdisciplinary Research Group on Law Science Technology & Society (LSTS). Van Hoboken works on the intersection of fundamental rights protection (data privacy, freedom of expression, non-discrimination) and the governance of platforms and internet-based services.
Marta Morvillo is Assistant Professor in European Legal and Economic Governance at the Department of European Studies, University of Amsterdam. Her research lies at the interface of EU law, constitutional law, and expert governance. Before joining the UvA, she was Emile Noël fellow at the NYU Law School (2020-2021) and Adjunct professor in Constitutional adjudication at the University of Bologna (2021).
Niels ten Oever is Assistant Professor at the European Studies department and co-principal investigator with the critical infrastructure lab at the University of Amsterdam. Next to that, he is a visiting professor with the Centro de Tecnologia e Sociedade at the Fundação Getúlio Vargas. His research focuses on how norms, values, and ideologies get inscribed, resisted, and subverted in communication infrastructures through their transnational governance.
# open reading group infrastructure reading group (ending December 31st 2025) February 2024
bi- weekly tuesday session 16:00 – 17:00 cest/cet* (once every two weeks)
facilitated by niels@criticalinfralab.net
meet up here: https://uva-live.zoom.us/j/6365963924
take notes here: https://pad.criticalinfralab.net/unz6CPM9SpieqIlkXf-Oqg
sign up for the mailinglist here (don’t forget to click the link in the confirmation email):
https://lists.ghserv.net/mailman/listinfo/infrastructure-readinggroup
and a calendar event
July 8th – The Dawn of Everything and The Invisible Weapon – Introduction and Chapter 1
July 22nd – The Dawn of Everything and The Invisible Weapon – Chapter 2
August 5th – The Dawn of Everything and The Invisible Weapon – Chapter 3
August 19th – The Dawn of Everything and The Invisible Weapon – Chapter 4
September 2nd – The Dawn of Everything and The Invisible Weapon – Chapter 5
September 16th – The Dawn of Everything and The Invisible Weapon – Chapter 6
September 30th – The Dawn of Everything and The Invisible Weapon – Chapter 7
October 14th – The Dawn of Everything and The Invisible Weapon – Chapter 8
October 28th – The Dawn of Everything and The Invisible Weapon – Chapter 9
November 11th – The Dawn of Everything and The Invisible Weapon – Chapter 10
November 25th – The Dawn of Everything and The Invisible Weapon – Chapter 11
December 9th – The Dawn of Everything and The Invisible Weapon – Chapter 12
December 23rd – The Invisible Weapon – Chapters 13, 14, 15
books we still hope to read (someday):
- Becker, Adam – More everything forever
- Carp, Alexander C. – Technological Republic
- Carse, Ashley – Beyond the Big Ditch
- Chabra, Deb – How Infrastructure Works
- Dalrymple, William – The Anarchy: The Relentless Rise of the East India Company.
- Deudney, Daniel – Dark Skies: Space Expansionism, Planetary Geopolitics, and the Ends of Humanity.
- Frieman, Catherine J – An archeology of innovation
- Graham, Stephen, and Marvin, Simon – Splintering Urbanism
- Knox, Hannah, and Penny Harvey – Roads: An Anthropology of Infrastructure and Expertise.
- Long, Pamela O. – Engineering the Eternal City: Infrastructure, Topography, and the Culture of Knowledge in Late Sixteenth-Century Rome.
- Negri, Antonio – The End of Sovereignty
- Swenson, Edward – Infrastructures of Religion and Power: Archaeologies of Landscape, Ritual, and Semiotics.t
previous books read in this reading group:
- European Objects – Brice Laurent
- Lifelines of our Society – Dirk van Laak
- The Apple II Age – Laine Nooney
- Telegraphic Imperialism – Deep Kanta Lahiri Choudhury
- The Smartness Mandate – Orit Halpern
- Technology of Empire – Daqing Yang
- News from Germany – Heidi J.S. Tworek
- balkan cyberia – viktor petrov
- how not to network a nation – benjamin peters
- technologies of speculation – sun-ha hong
- the closed world – paul edwards
- four internets – kieron o’hara & wendy hall
- what is wrong with rights – radha d’souza
- digital design and topological control – parisi
- golden age of analog – galloway
- countering the cloud – luke munn
- medium design – keller easterling
- reluctant power – rita zajác
- between truth and power – julie cohen
- the question concerning technology in china – yuk hui
/* We use CEST between the last Sunday of March until the last Sunday of October, then we switch back to CET
# open reading group environment reading group (ending December 31st 2025) February 2024
bi- weekly tuesday session 16:00 – 17:00 cet (once every two weeks)
facilitated by fieke@criticalinfralab.net
meet up here: https://uva-live.zoom.us/j/5689070082 | sign up for the mailinglist here and add you reading suggestions here.
Upcoming readings:
Book: AI Infrastructures and Sustainability: Expanding Perspectives on Automation, Communication and Media edited by Anne Mollen, Fieke Jansen, Sigrid Kannengießer, and Julia Velkova. Email fieke@criticalinfralab.net for a copy of the chapters
– Sept 9 – Introduction and ‘Follow the Thing AI’ by Anna Valdivia
– Sep 23 – ‘Amazonia’s Place in AI: Minerals and Mining as the Cradle of Infrastructuring‘ by Débora Leal, Max Krüger and Sigrid Kannengießer and ‘Growing the Cloud at the “Corner of the Atlantic”‘ by AIIago Bojczuk.
– Oct 7 – ‘Aligning Energy Grids, Clouds and Public Values in Sweden‘ by Julia Velkova and ‘Aquaculture, AI, and the Planetary Domestication‘ by Patrick Brodie
– Oct 21 – ‘The Cruel Optimism of the Sustainable Cloud‘ Hamsini Sridharan and ‘Narratives of indispensability and infrastructural solutionism of AI companies‘ Salla-Maaria Laaksonen and Meri Frig
– Nov 4 – ‘Alliance or Self-reliance in New Geopolitical Technosphere‘ Malgorzata Winiarska-Brodowska and ‘Discursive Infrastructuring of AI in Russia‘ Olga Dovbysh
– Nov 18 – ‘Entangled sustainabilities‘ Anne Mollen and ‘Not Seeing the Data for the Trees‘ by Gerwin van Schie and Inte Gloerich
– Dec 2 – ‘Responsiveness and AI in Environmental Governance‘ Jędrzej Niklas and ‘AI Infrastructures, Total Mobilisation and Decomputing‘ Dan McQuillan
– Dec 16 – ‘More compute for a burning planet?‘ by Fieke Jansen and Niels ten Oever and ‘The Good Infrastructure‘ by Johanna Sefyrin and Julia Velkova
previous books and articles read in this reading group:
– pollution is colonialism by Max Liboiron
– myth of green capitalism by Katharina Pistor
– from moore’s law to the carbon law by Daniel Pargman, Aksel Biørn-Hansen, Elina Eriksson, Jarmo Laaksolaht, Markus Robèrt
– solarities; seeking energy justice by After Oil Collective
– the value of a whale by Adrienne Buller
– after geoengineering: climate tragedy, repair, and restoration by Holly Jean Buck
– against crisis epistemology by kyle whyte
– discard studies: wasting, systems, and power by Max Liboiron and Josh Lepawsky
– An alternative planetary future? Digital sovereignty frameworks and the decolonial option by Sebastián Lehuedé
– ‘Socialism is not just Built for a Hundred Years’: Renewable Energy and Planetary Thought in the Early Soviet Union (1917–1945) by Daniela Russ
– Resource Radicals: From Petro-Nationalism to Post-Extractivism in Ecuador by Thea Riofrancos
– The Security–Sustainability Nexus: Lithium Onshoring in the Global North by Thea Riofrancos
– The Internet Shutdown and Revolutionary Politics: Defining the Infrastructural Power of the Internet by Michael Truscello
– The world wide web of carbon: Toward a relational footprinting of information and communications technology’s climate impacts by Anne Pasek, Hunter Vaughan, and Nicole Starosielski.
– Shifting from ‘sustainability’ to regeneration by Bill Reed
– A Digital Tech Deal: Digital Socialism, Decolonization, and Reparations for a Sustainable Global Economy by Michael Kwet
– We Need To Rewild The Internet by Maria Farrell and Robin Berjon
– Beyond Wiindigo Infrastructure by Winona LaDuke and Deborah Cowen
– How ‘Green’ Computing is Opening Up a New Frontier in Arctic Norway by Janna Frenzel
– A resourcification manifesto: Understanding the social process of resources becoming resources
– What might degrowth computing look like? + Strategies for Degrowth Computing
Water justice and technology. The Covid-19 crisis, computational resource control, and water relief policy
– Draft paper on IETF; framing environmental concerns and sustainability solutions by Fieke Jansen + Solar Protocol: Exploring Energy-Centered Design
– Draft dissertation chapter about the ITU and IETF work on environment-related standards by Kimberly Anastacio
– ‘The compost engineers and sus saberes lentos: a manifest for regenerative technologies‘ by Joana Varon and Lucía Egana
– Afterlife and decolonial relations’ and ‘Chemical Regimes of Living’ Michelle Murphy ‘
– Elemental infrastructures for atmospheric media: On stratospheric variations, value and the commons by D. McCormack and The Elements of Media Studies by N. Starosielski
– On Nonscalability: The Living World Is Not Amenable to Precision-Nested Scales by Anne Tsing
– Towards Planet-Proof Computing: Ten Key Elements EU Data Centre Sustainability Policy Should Take Onboard by Jessica Commins and Kristina Irion.
– Toxic politics: Acting in a permanently polluted world by Max Liboiron, Manuel Tironi, and Nerea Calvillo ‘
– Air as Medium by Eva Horn
– Elemental infrastructures for atmospheric media: On stratospheric variations, value and the commons by D. McCormack
– Saturation: An elemental politics’ (introduction) by Melody Jue and Rafico Ruiz
– Climatic media: Transpacific experiments in atmospheric control (introduction) by Yuriko Furuhata
# talk - presentation - panel Down with datacenters: developing critical policy for environmentally sustainable tech in Europe January 2024
Fieke Jansen and Corinne Cath are organizing a panel with a focus on data centers at Privacy Camp 24 in Brussels on 24 Jan. Data centers – the large windowless buildings full of server racks providing the computational power of the digital society – are increasingly at the heart of political contention in Europe. The building of hyperscalers in the Netherlands, Ireland and Spain are aided by opaque governance processes and have met resistance from local communities. These examples are indicative of a larger trend. Across Europe, large Big Tech companies are buying up land, gobbling up natural resources like water, wind, and energy, to build large-scale data centers for selling privacy-invasive services and software. Where local protests against the impending arrival of hyperscalers have been successful they have displaced its construction to other, often more vulnerable territories.
To address concerns around the energy consumption of data centers the EU is developing some guidelines to limit the tech industries’ carbon footprint– i.e. in the energy directive–and some nation-states are considering data center policy. Yet, none of these state interventions addresses the premise of infinite growth and extraction for which these data centers are built. We believe that given the growth of these data centers, a critical intervention is needed now that sets the tone for EU-wide debates on the future of the computing industry, one that centers people and planet over profit and capital.
Moderator:
- Dr. Corinne Cath, postdoctoral researcher at the programmable infrastructures group (led by Dr. Seda Gürses) of the University of Delft
Speakers:
- Dr. Fieke Jansen, post-doctoral researcher and co-PI critical at the infrastructure lab, University of Amsterdam
- Claire Pershan, EU Advocacy Lead for the Mozilla Foundation, Mozilla
- Kim van Sparrentak, MEP GroenLinks Europa, The Greens/EFA
- Michelle Thorne, Director of Strategy and Partnerships at the Green Web Foundation and a co-initiator of the Green Screen Coalition