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npub1l7g6...nudk
npub1l7g6...nudk
Let's make great plans for 2026! Tired of fighting alone? Join the Cables of Resistance in Berlin, April 10-12! We are movements and anti-capitalist activists who practise various forms of resistance against big tech. We want to bring together interested people, network and connect local struggles. Also check out the CfP! Whether you are politically active against Big Tech, conducting scientific research or involved in other ways, we look forward to your contribution. image
Shameless self-promotion alert! It was such a pleasure to discuss with @npub157rh...8pny how right-wing governments and international corporations in the European Union are pushing to gut tech regulations with the goal of boosting AI development in totally misguided hope of improving economic growth and geopolitical standing. A place for hope is Berlin, April 10-12, 2026:
Whoop whoop! Get ready for my already favourite event in 2026!! πŸ₯³ ✊ Cables of Resistance ✊ Movement conference against Big Tech Berlin 10-12 April 2026 Save the Date NOW and check out the πŸŽ‡ Call for Participation πŸŽ‡ looking for proposals in 8 tracks (DE/EN): - climate & energy - water & resources - urban policy - labour - militarisation - fascism - feminism - futures Please share and join!
I do not have any positive take on the Franco-German sovereignty summit. Yes, they do not throw the DMA under the omnibus, but apart from that it is an agenda that puts frontier AI before infrastructure, profits before people, EU before global antifascist resistance. And: They still do not even address the core of Big Tech dependence. EU startups are subject to their control through investments and research agendas. Pouring more money into them cements dependence.
RE: "The single defining feature of modern capitalism is that it acts like the party is almost over. So why stop now?" I still remember when that dawned on me when reading Graeber's Debt 🀯 People have been saying they are in late-stage capitalism for decades, if not centuries. It is 100% intuitive that growth and expansion cannot go on forever. But debt as an engine of growth has locked people/organisations/states into extractive behaviour. Strongly recommend the book and the podcast series! View quoted note β†’
"Both Google and Apple recently removed Red Dot, an app people can use to report sightings of ICE officials, from their respective app stores [...] Google told 404 Media it removed apps because they shared the location of what it describes as a vulnerable group that recently faced a violent act connected to these sorts of ICE-spotting appsβ€”a veiled reference to ICE officials." Who is vulnerable and who is at risk? Google joins Apple in executing fascism.
Apparently this requires restating: We should not want a European Palantir. We should not want an open-source Palantir. We should not want a non-commercial Palantir. If it is supposed to do what Palantir does, we should not want it. And I don't care to what extent Palantir's products are shaped by political or profit motives. We know enough to reject its logic altogether.
After reading his book, I am very much moved by the release of Mikola Dziadok from Belarusian prison. He has already spent over ten years in prison (while being slightly younger than me). And his book is testament to an incredibly fearless, courageous and compassionate mind: His case is not an isolated one, so I am even more glad that through his writing I got access to and started to care about political prisoners more generally. (1/3)
Digital sovereignty without techno-nationalism and an ambitious understanding of more democratic technology? It is always such a pleasure to listen to Cecilia Rikap! 🫢 She conveys that we should not just demand governments to β€œget off Big Tech” and β€œbuild local data centres”, but also to go beyond the capitalist paradigm. Uruguay seems an interesting example among various others. Finally managed to listen to her episode with Paris on @npub157rh...8pny πŸ‘‡
β€œFrom economy of occupation to economy of genocide” Francesca Albanese, UN Special Rapporteur, details in remarkably clear words how companies across the world derive benefits from the suffering of people in Gaza. It’s vast - arms, finance, construction, tech, but also universities. β€œ[E]nding it will not happen without holding the private sector accountable, including its executives.” Read the report (incl calls to action for govts+companies): πŸ“„.pdf