Mass Surveillance and Internet Democracy
Last night’s ‘Waatea 5th Estate’ with Bomber Bradbury
featured three
International speakers in New Zealand
for OS//OS on 22/23 August—Evan Henshaw-Plath, Ele
Munjeli and Audrey Tang joined local commentators Green Mp
Keith Locke, Political and Media Commentator from AUT School
of Communication Dr Wayne Hope. This conversation covered
our new Mass-Surveillance laws, the DNC Email Leaks, the
Australian Census Debacle and Post Snowden Internet
Democracy. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AUgtkQ8LdN8&authuser=0 The
Dangers and Opportunities of Technology These three speakers added a great
tone of hopefulness to this discussion which shows that
there are many thinkers outside New Zealand dealing with the
same issues we are facing here. The general message is that
the Internet can either be used as a tool for totalitarian
control and surveillance or as a democratising and playing
field levelling enabler for amore participatory and open
society. Taking a more open source and horizontal approach
to our digital technology, media and our interaction with
institutions is the only way to ensure that we take
advantage of these possibilities for greater representation
and participation in democracy in the
future.
Closed Source Technology = Less
Security Cyber Rights and a Healthy
Democracy Henshaw-Plath states that the Snowden
revelations show the shocking extent of the level of spying
going on but also the deliberate breaking of encryption by
the government is an issue. This is an issue he believes as
it highlights potential for abuse of power for political
means which is a problem for many
activists. Privacy and
Surveillance This forced them to move to a new
way of democracy ‘post-representative democracy’ which
allows for wider numbers of citizens to engage in democracy
through technology. Potential of the Internet and
Digital Democracy Evan believes we see the hints of
the possibility for a radical increase of democracy using
the internet—he refers to exciting opportunities
such as the Iceland Pirate Party seeking to use the internet
to redraft the constitution. Audrey—sees the
Internet as a hope for more integration and innovative and
sees potential for the bottom up and horizontal
processes. Audrey Tang
is a Civic Hacker and part of
Taiwan’s g0v (“gov-zero”), a vibrant community
focusing on creating tools for the civil society, with the
call to “fork the government”. Evan Henshaw-Plath
is a Civic Tech activist and was the lead developer and
architect in building Odeo’s Ruby on Rails web application
platform and lead developer on the team that created Twitter
Ele Munjeli has a
computer science degree from The Evergreen State College in
Olympia, Washington, USA and speaks, codes, and consults on
infrastructure features and requirements for virtual
democracies, both for extending existing governments with
digital services, and creating sovereign clouds for emerging
democracies in hostile territory.
Citizens
Trust in democracy and governments ability to manage online
projects has been damaged by recent situations such as the
DNC email leaks the Australian Census debacle and the
Snowden Revelations.
According to Munjali, closed source
technology is the cause of such problems and that if the
Australian Census had been done in Open Source it would have
been less like to fail and at least would have guaranteed
the public has transparency about what went
on.
Munjali believes there is a growing
lack of faith in political parties digital literacy and poor
technology means people no longer trust their information
with government.
Audrey brings an interesting
perspective to this conversation on privacy and surveillance
as she grew up in Taiwan under the shadow of the great
‘Firewall of China’.
Ele sees Digital Democracy as
providing the only real opportunity for authentic demcracy
in today’s society.
Tickets
Available
There are still Tickets Available to
hear these three plus many more amazing speakers at OS//OS
2016 on Monday 22/23 August at Michael Fowler Centre in
Wellington.
Grab your ticket now to join us
there.