Peer2Politics
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Peer2Politics
on peer-to-peer dynamics in politics, the economy and organizations
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Hacking Households

Creating software has become a flexible, collaborative, and adaptable process: projects develop as code is openly shared, reviewed, adapted, and distributed. Simultaneously, home appliances are increasingly dependent on inflexible standards of production leading to a lack of reparability, less adaptability, and more waste. With affordable technologies of digital manufacturing and electronic platforms, translating code into matter is becoming possible for everyone. Programming object thus seek to bring open source software practices into the world of (open hardware)appliances. Moving away from a top-down approach from corporation to consumer, to one where objects are designed, developed, and produced democratically within open communities.
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Think Different About Hacking? | Gov 2.0: The Power of Platforms

Think Different About Hacking? | Gov 2.0: The Power of Platforms | Peer2Politics | Scoop.it

The words “hacker” and activity of “hacking” have been receiving a great deal of attention over the past few years, in the wake of data breaches, Wikileaks, the Anonymous and LulzSec groups, and now the “Shady Rat” cyberespionage revelations. Given that it’s being reported as the biggest hacking attack ever, the attention is merited.

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Some hackers are bad. But a lot are good: Keren Elazari at TED2014 | TED Blog

Some hackers are bad. But a lot are good: Keren Elazari at TED2014 | TED Blog | Peer2Politics | Scoop.it

In 2010, the late security researcher — or as cybersecurity expert Keren Elazari would like you to call him, the late hacker — Barnaby Jack found a security flaw in two different models of automated teller machines (ATMs). Onstage at a tech security conference, hepublicly demonstrated his ability to make these machines spit out paper money, Elazari says at TED2014. “Barnaby Jack could have easily turned to a career criminal,” she says, “but he chose to show the world his research instead. Sometimes you have to demo a threat to spark a solution.”

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â–¶ Hacking Surveillance Culture - YouTube

Bradley (now Chelsea) Manning, WikiLeaks and Snowden revelations pulled back the curtain on the specific workings of a technology based surveillance culture that continues to expand globally with significant societal implications. This panel will examine privacy issues from a unique angle by using leading technologists and artists' projects as jumping off points. Topics will touch on challenging public discourse, ethics of genetic and public surveillance and how artistic expression can impact surveillance policy. 

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15 brilliant hacks from the TNW Conference Kings of Code Hack Battle - The Next Web

15 brilliant hacks from the TNW Conference Kings of Code Hack Battle - The Next Web | Peer2Politics | Scoop.it


The ‘Kings of Code Hack Battle‘ is always a highlight at TNW Conference. The projects – developed over 30 hours – are often quirky, inventive, beautiful, or a mixture of all three. The batch this year were equally impressive, stunning the crowd and our expert jury.

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