Sulla stessa linea è di recente uscito
"Fake You – An Activist’s Guide to Defeating Disinformation" di Simona Levi et al.

https://xnet-x.net/en/fakeyou-disinformation-free-download/

Conferences about disinformation are mainstream. They are appealing, and 
institutions love them. They all seem to follow the same formula: a star 
speaker, boasting a fashionable biography (that omits the financial or 
client-affective ties to a political party) rattles off a list of stereotypical 
evils of technology, leading to a conclusion that could be summarised like 
this: “Given the very new danger of disinformation and fake news brought by the 
Internet and Artificial Intelligence (Al), for your own sake, the solution is 
to create institutions that ensure that internet and digital are not evil and - 
basically - ‘regulate’ freedom of expression in the digital era for the sake of 
the Truth.”

This false conclusion is the main reason for this book: fake news is used as an 
excuse to curtail civil rights.

rob

Il 10/08/24 16:12, J.C. DE MARTIN ha scritto:
*“One day they might come for you”
*/Digital rights activist Andrew Lowenthal on progressives' support for the censorship-industrial complex
/
Thomas Fazi

Aug 05, 2024

In this guest post, Maike Gosch, a German communication strategist, writer and former lawyer — whose article on the banning of the German magazine Compact I published recently — interviews Andrew Lowenthal, the founder and managing director of the digital civil liberties organisation liber-net.

Lowenthal is an Australian digital rights activist of German-Jewish descent. For almost 18 years he was the Executive Director of EngageMedia, an Asia-based NGO focused on human rights online, freedom of expression and open technology. The digital rights environment in which Lowenthal spent most of his adult life was avowedly progressive — as was Lowenthal himself.

[...]

continua qui: https://www.thomasfazi.com/p/one-day-they-might-come-for-you



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