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Tarek Loubani: Free Software and Hardware bring National Sovereignty

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    preroll music
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    Herald: Our next speaker is Tarek Loubani.
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    He is an emergency physician,
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    working in the Gaza Strip and in Canada
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    and he is developing medical hardware devices.
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    And he is going to tell us about the
    Palestinian use of free hardware and software.
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    So enjoy and give a warm welcome to Tarek.
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    applause
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    Tarek: ... (missing Audio)
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    Thank you to CCC for inviting me
    to give this talk
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    and to you for being here tonight.
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    I want to start with just some very basic information
    here about myself.
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    If we can get the video feed up.
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    OK, so there we go.
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    If you want to get a hold of me, you can find me,
    find this project on github,
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    you can find our team on openmed at freenode,
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    or you can always get a hold of me by e-mail,
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    hopefully one of the easiest e-mails
    you'll ever have to remember.
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    And I'll bring that information up at the end.
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    I want to start then with a story:
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    This is another story, because you heard so many
    about refugees.
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    But this story is a personal one,
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    because it is my story as a refugee.
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    And about the time, that my father reminded me
    of who I was.
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    He put this card in front of me,
    when I was 8 years old.
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    This card was literally the only thing,
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    that atested to my existence as a human being
    for the first 12 years of my life.
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    It says: The director general affirms that
    Tarek Loubani is a palestinian.
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    And as proof, I have given him
    this identity card.
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    Not a lot to work, not a lot to own,
    not a lot to do anything. That was it.
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    And so I sat in front of my father,
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    I just got, I think it was a C
    on some meaningless subject
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    as an 8 year old. Who cares?
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    But he cared. He put that paper in front of me
    and he said:
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    Son, this paper, it doesn't prove
    that you're somebody,
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    it proves, that you're nobody,
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    that you're nothing.
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    And there we were, living in Kuwait with
    a nice appartment that we had rented
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    A and a car outfront. And he said:
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    all of these things didn't belong to us and
    could be taken in a moment.
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    He had only one caveat to this nihilism.
    He said:
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    There is only one thing you have, one thing
    that the wolfs can never take away from you.
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    One thing, that you can never be dispossessed of.
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    And that's what you know,
    that's the information in your head.
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    That's what's up in here.
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    And so was thesapokalyptic warning would
    result in me and my family minus my father
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    because he was trapped in Kuwait at the time
    driving through this:
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    The highway of death
    as it would later be called.
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    With my mother crying tears for weeks
    while she got us out,
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    her 4 children until we finally made our way
    through, I think it was 4 or 5 different countries
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    and into Canada.
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    Mine is a microcosmic lesson of the lesson,
    that all Palestinian were given.
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    Because all Palestinian have been dispossessed
    at some point or will be.
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    What do you think the parents of these
    children will tell them
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    about who they are and what they possess?
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    What do you think is the meaning of their homes
    and physical possessions?
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    What is it that they own or that they have?
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    Their parents will tell them,
    what my parents told me:
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    You have nothing and you are nothing.
    Only what's in here.
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    And so, if they are in their predatory drones
    then we must be the prey.
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    And that means, that we'll always live in the
    third world a different life
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    from the life the people live in the developed
    world.
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    You have to be on one of the two sides of
    that predator drone of that advanced missle,
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    of that technology, that litigation of
    treaty.
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    And we had seen the light of the first world
    from that those refugees camps.
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    We saw it. And what we wanted was not
    the Playstation 4s and the iPhones
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    though yes, of course. Great stuff.
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    What we wanted was the CT scanners
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    and the hospitals that were outfitted so that
    you could feel like you cold go in them
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    and come a whole human being still
    just like you went in.
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    That is the wealth that we wanted. That is the
    wealth that we saw and that is the wealth
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    that they protected.
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    Both metaphorically and literally
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    through all manner of instruments of
    neoliberalism and colonialism.
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    They do it
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    because to them everything, everything
    they see, everything in the world around them
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    is fish.
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    They can't see the world any other way.
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    And so they think, that if you catch a fish
    I can't have that same fish.
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    And they don't realise, that we live in a
    different world, where not everything is fish.
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    Where there is information
    and that information can go anywhere,
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    and be anything and it can help everybody
    at the same time.
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    It's not a new concept.
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    It's a concept that was almost perfected
    by Magritte, 85 years ago
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    represented here:
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    That is not a pipe.
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    It is the information to make a pipe.
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    That is not an STL. Or that is not a
    reproduction, that is an STL.
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    Let's put some economic terms on this,
    because the people, who we are working against,
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    the people who promote the anti commons
    they put language on this stuff.
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    This is the main language.
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    We can divide it into two main axes:
    excludable and rivalrous.
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    All items more or less fall into these categories.
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    And so fish falls into this category. It is a
    non-excludable, largely commodity
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    that is rivalrous. Indeed
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    it is very hard to keep people from
    catching fish out in the harbour.
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    But if one person catches one fish, then
    the next person can not.
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    Where society wants us to be by and large is right here:
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    Products that are non-rivalrous but excludable.
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    Think for example of an mp3. An mp3 should be this:
    public good, it is not excludable,
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    you can't keep people from it.
    It is non-rivalrous.
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    You give somebody an mp3, you haven't
    taken away an mp3 from anybody else.
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    And yet, what is desired, is for everything
    to be here:
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    A club good.
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    You need a membership.
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    Be that the country you live in or
    the amount of money that you make.
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    It is excludable.
    Because they have excluded you.
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    Not because of any inaid or inherant reason.
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    How can we turn things from club goods
    into public goods or
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    another question: how have they turned things
    from public goods into club goods?
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    Well, here two men who've led the charge:
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    Birch Bayh and Bob Dole.
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    They came up with this legislation, that
    ended up, basically making it so, that
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    one thing that was available, non-excludable
    and non-rivalrous, that is
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    all of the information coming out of universities
    and these sorts of charities and other little groups
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    could now be patented. Patenting is the
    main weapon here.
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    That's how you turn things from usable by
    everybody, available to everybody
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    to usable by a few and available to few.
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    Their policy was absolutely a success.
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    Here you see the patents, starting from 1963
    all the way to 2014. Total patents granted.
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    1980 is highlighted in blue. Everything before
    that is basically since the time of a man
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    named Vannevar Bush,
    who kind of floated the main idea,
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    that information should kind of be out for folks.
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    And as you can see, it's relatively stable.
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    More or less minor deviations
    more or less the same.
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    But from 1980 to 2014 it virtually looks exponential.
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    So closer with the numbers.
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    1980 66 thousend patents, in 2014 326033.
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    And so these weapons, they've resulted in
    us not being able to take things from
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    simple idea to something we can use,
    but instead we are loaded,
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    we have to walk through these landmines.
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    Now, this is a story that you all already know.
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    Because it doesn't matter what country
    you live in.
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    I'm guessing that everybody here lives in
    first world.
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    These are issues, that innovators in the first world
    must content with.
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    But by and large these are issues that stop
    people in the first world from becoming rich.
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    In the third world these are issues,
    that can mean the difference between
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    life and death.
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    applause
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    Here is an example from the late 90s
    early 2000s.
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    Profiteering pharmaceutical companies versus
    South Africa.
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    South Africa was in the middle of a
    absolutely terrible crisis,
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    which arguable they have not exited
    with HIV AIDS
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    and pharmaceutical companies using
    the weapon of patents
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    were saying: ehm, sorry, we can not give you
    this medication at the rate you can affort,
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    we can not give this medication to everybody,
    because what protects our profits?
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    Now, most people aren't that crass most of the
    time, there are not saying what protects our profits,
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    because that's bad public relations.
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    But they say: Oh, what about our research and
    development funds etc etc.
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    Of course mostly done on the public dime.
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    But in the end every once in a while, we happen to
    see, one of the type, who pops up, who speaks
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    a little bit more from the heart, as we have seen
    recently.
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    What my father told me initially, was what I've been
    taught for all the years of my life.
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    music
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    What he told me is that either
    you are one of the predators
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    or one of the prey.
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    It is an absolutely irrefutable truth.
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    It's a natural order.
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    It is absolut. God gave us this.
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    You have to be on one side or the other.
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    You just have to accept it.
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    music of video still playing
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    And so if you're born the caribou,
    you have to own that existence,
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    and just accept it.
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    Well, just before I got on my plane here.
    I was at work as a doctor.
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    When I went to my shift, I did not go there,
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    so that I would allow the natural order
    to take its course.
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    I did not wake up today, so that the natural
    order would take its course.
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    Fuck the natural order.
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    And fuck the world's who are behind it.
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    I don't want it.
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    People in Palestine don't want it.
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    My patience don't want it.
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    None of us want it.
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    So, why do we accept it?
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    If we look at the world around us
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    what we're seeing then, is this thing, that
    we want to just throw off that natural order.
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    But the terms of our insurgency have to be
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    careful.
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    You can't as the caribou look at the wolf and say:
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    ehm, well, I don't really care, you know,
    fuck you and fuck your natural order
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    and I am not participating.
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    You have to be careful,
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    because they are potent, they are dangerous.
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    In this particular case the main danger
    to us in the third world and developing nations
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    is treaties.
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    These laws are applied on us by treaty and
    you can't just opt out.
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    The Palestinian economic system is shut down
    by FIAT
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    Medication can't arrive by FIAT.
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    All of these things happen, because we are too
    weak.
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    And so, how do you respond?
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    What is the tool of resistance?
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    We eluded to it earlier.
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    My father even told it to me as a child.
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    Knowledge
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    and the Commons
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    That is where a better future comes from.
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    And that is where our examples live.
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    So let's think about the free software movement.
    Let's look at some examples.
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    Some of you are German.
    Munich is one such example.
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    Munich has shifted allmost all of their city
    digital infrastructure into free and open source.
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    They even have their own Linux distribution.
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    That's pretty amazing actually.
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    There are other examples, that are some minor
    cities here and there.
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    There are some state wide examples.
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    For example, such as Kerala in India.
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    The chief minister basically like the prime, the
    highest person within Kerala at the time said:
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    We believe that free and open-source software
    is an essential component in our drive to
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    democratise information technology and bring
    its benefits to all sections of society.
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    In additon to Kerala, Tamil Nadu has done
    something similar, also in India.
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    And then there are some partial ministry level
    efforts, that have been happening,
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    for example Italy, in their ministry of, I think it is,
    defense or interior, you know, had decided
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    just a small move to go from Microsoft Office
    to Libre Office.
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    Apperently small moves, but really
    meaningful to the people around us.
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    We'll look at this from places like
    Palestine, like the Gaza Strip, where I work,
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    and we think, why can't we do that?
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    Why can't we participate in these commons?
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    What is it, that we can do to contribute?
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    At the national level, there are a couple of very
    potent examples.
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    The two main examples, that I ran into,
    were Equador and Brazil.
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    Equador, if you guys were at the talk yesterday
    is a very interesting and nuanced place.
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    So there are some authoritarian tendencies.
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    Bethany Horne, who I believe is in our
    audiency here, I won't point her out,
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    is one person, who's been visited by the
    authoritarianism of the group.
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    But notwithstanding, they are doing some very
    good things and one of those very good things
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    is free software at the national level.
    That's actually quite incredible.
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    Directed from the presidency.
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    Brazil very similar. Brazil started their move
    almost the same time, maybe a little bit before.
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    So, Palestine looks quite ripe. For exactly the
    same thing we've been seen,
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    has a few characteristics:
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    These are the literacy levels of
    a few different countries.
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    United States and Germany,
    basically 1% who are illiterate.
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    Brazil and Equador 90.4 and 91.6
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    Palestine 95.3. That's the Westbank and the
    Gaza Strip. My best guess, if you would include
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    the diaspora that number would go significantly up.
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    Because the diaspora tends to be well educated.
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    That means that this lesson
    that my father gave me is a lesson that
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    clearly Palestinians have been receiving for
    years if not decades.
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    They're intelligent people, they're well educated.
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    They're living under occupation and they want to
    see a change.
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    So, we've started all of the same things
    that you would expect.
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    We started of course replacing all of our servers
    with Apache based
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    if any of them were ever on Windows.
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    We've started of course using backends for
    our contact management systems, like
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    Joomla and Drupal.
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    Of course, we started doing those things.
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    In terms of the infrastructure that's more or less
    the step where we are.
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    We are at infrastructural components rather
    then desktops.
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    We have a very nascent EMR,
    that will be coming up hopefully soon.
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    And we expect that this EMR will leverage at the
    best of what we have and what we see.
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    However there is something else that's interessing
    a response to the necessity we have in Palestine.
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    We learned that lesson from people, decorating
    their shoes, submerging their computers
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    from Novenas and homemade
    chicken CT scanners.
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    And what we started doing is making our
    own hardware as well.
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    I believe that the Gaza Strip is the first place
    that is trying a national level strategy for
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    open source hardware and is pushing it hard.
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    We saw 3D printers, we saw how they worked.
    We wanted our own and we got them.
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    Leftmost is the very first 3D printer ever
    made in Gaza.
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    In the middle and the next one are their children.
    Made entirely in Gaza.
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    Some of the electronics have to come in,
    all of the motors are salvaged from garbage.
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    We expect that within a year, we'll be able to
    make everything domestically.
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    That's our hope and that's our dream and
    I think we can get there.
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    Of course my own work has been to make
    medical devices.
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    That's where I've been leveraging them.
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    This is a stethoscope, a very early version.
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    This is the final version as of 3 weeks ago
    approved by Health Canada.
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    This is a first world medical device,
    that is available for pennies.
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    applause
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    2 Dollars and 50 Cents to replace
    a 300 Dollar stethoscope.
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    It's not that people have 300 Dollar stethoscope
    running around, I said they had nothing.
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    Now they have something.
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    It's been with the help of Kliment, who you will
    recognise from around here and
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    Jenn who you will recognise from here
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    and some engineers, who I can't really show,
    because I fear for their safety.
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    Our Palestinians, the heros,
    the real heros of this work.
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    And as you can see here from a frequency-audio
    response curve, it's as good as anything out there.
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    We're working next on a pulse oximeter with the
    help of really talented engineer Hanan Anis
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    from University of Ottawa. And that should be
    ready by the middle of next year.
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    Surgical tools will be forthcoming, because
    right now in Gaza we're washing everything
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    with salt water.
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    And prostetics are coming, we hope.
    Lots of issues there, but not technical.
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    We have this origin story for the commons, as
    so the commons was something from the past.
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    That was there and then now it's gone.
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    But that origin story, I think, is a myth.
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    And when we recognise, that the commons
    are actually an evolution of where we are
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    rather than somewhere that we were before,
    we trying to reclaim.
  • 23:38 - 23:43
    Then I think the next step is trying to
    figure out, how to get back there.
  • 23:43 - 23:49
    At that's what we are trying to do in Palestine.
    How do we get back there?
  • 23:49 - 23:56
    The biggest way is to break down those borders
    and blockades and share information.
  • 23:56 - 24:04
    And so, I want to invite you, all of you
    to come with me to Gaza
  • 24:04 - 24:12
    In May for the first international Free and
    Open Source Health Conference.
  • 24:12 - 24:18
    Where we will discuss these ideas
    and where we will try to move forward
  • 24:18 - 24:23
    the commons. If the anti commons
    is generally funded by
  • 24:23 - 24:27
    military industrial complex, as we see within
    Silicon Valley and so on,
  • 24:27 - 24:32
    then maybe this commons can be funded
    by the ever green spending
  • 24:32 - 24:36
    that we always have in health care.
  • 24:36 - 24:40
    Health care is one of the biggest spends
    in the Gaza Strip.
  • 24:40 - 24:47
    And if we direct it in the right places we can also
    use it to develop our national sovereignty.
  • 24:47 - 24:53
    Join me, in whatever where you can.
  • 24:53 - 24:57
    And let's make it more sovereign
    better place.
  • 24:57 - 24:59
    For Gaza and for everywhere else.
  • 24:59 - 25:00
    Thank you.
  • 25:00 - 25:12
    applause
  • 25:12 - 25:19
    Herald: Thank you for the talk.
    And we have about 5 min for questions.
  • 25:19 - 25:27
    So please if you have any questions line up
    in front of one of the microphones.
  • 25:32 - 25:33
    Please!
  • 25:33 - 25:41
    Question: I would like to know, how did you
    distribute your open source instruments.
  • 25:41 - 25:48
    Is it also possible for other countries that have
    the same problems as in Palestinian areas
  • 25:48 - 25:50
    to get those?
  • 25:50 - 25:55
    Tarek: Yes, absolutely. One thing we don't do
    is give medical devices.
  • 25:55 - 26:00
    Anybody who's interested, and there have been
    few ministry to ministry contacts on this,
  • 26:00 - 26:05
    is basically encouraged to start up their own
    fundamentally fab lab.
  • 26:05 - 26:12
    So, what we do is, we go into a country, talk to their
    engineers, engineering departments and so on,
  • 26:12 - 26:17
    and we try to get them up and running,
    so that they're manufacturing their own stuff.
  • 26:17 - 26:24
    This means anybody who's tried to start an open
    source project or free and open source project
  • 26:24 - 26:27
    will know that the more contributors the better.
  • 26:27 - 26:28
    You don't want consumers.
  • 26:28 - 26:30
    You want people, who are participating.
  • 26:30 - 26:36
    And so anybody who wants to... it's under an open
    source licence. The open hardware licence.
  • 26:36 - 26:40
    And actually it's also cross licenced to GPLv3.
  • 26:40 - 26:45
    Please take it. It would be my privilege to see it
    in the news everywhere else. It really would be.
  • 26:45 - 26:51
    Everybody who's working on it, wants to see that.
  • 26:56 - 27:02
    Herald: OK, thank you very much again and see
    you at the next talk, enjoy the rest of the conference.
  • 27:02 - 27:06
    Oh, wait we have a question from the internet
    it seems.
  • 27:06 - 27:11
    Question: What would be the solution to Palestine?
  • 27:15 - 27:20
    Tarek: I don't think you need to worry about the
    occupation. I think that's the question.
  • 27:20 - 27:23
    Don't worry about the occupation.
  • 27:23 - 27:27
    The occupation is a little bit like a marathon.
  • 27:27 - 27:31
    You have to keep working, we see the end though.
  • 27:31 - 27:34
    The Palestinian will take care of their own freedom.
  • 27:34 - 27:36
    You don't need to worry about that one.
  • 27:36 - 27:41
    All you need to do as much as possible,
    is try to not participate within the occupation.
  • 27:41 - 27:47
    Now, I travel through Israel and nobody, who
    travels through Israel is allowed to endorse
  • 27:47 - 27:53
    the boycott divestment and sanctions campaign,
    because that would be illegal and would mean
  • 27:53 - 27:55
    I could not travel through Israel.
  • 27:55 - 27:59
    However some people consider it to be a
    nonviolent way of participating against
  • 27:59 - 28:02
    the occupation.
  • 28:02 - 28:07
    Now, what we do need to do is figure out
    what happens the day after occupation
  • 28:07 - 28:16
    that's what worries me. For example there is
    a Coca Cola bottling company being built
  • 28:16 - 28:22
    in the Gaza Strip. Why? It's going to use more
    water than the entire Gaza Strip has available to it.
  • 28:22 - 28:27
    More concrete than in all of the construction
    projects. Why?
  • 28:27 - 28:31
    Because they are looking for the day after
    occupation.
  • 28:31 - 28:35
    And what I don't want is for Palestine to turn
    into South Africa.
  • 28:35 - 28:42
    Beautiful dreams, excellent vision and you
    loose the war the day after the occupation ends.
  • 28:42 - 28:46
    That's why we have to encourage
    these democratic institutions.
  • 28:46 - 28:51
    That's why we have to participate in these, I guess
    essentually like chaos based
  • 28:51 - 28:56
    anarchist based collectives, that are going to move
    forward the democratic process there
  • 28:56 - 29:00
    and everywhere else.
  • 29:00 - 29:05
    applause
  • 29:05 - 29:11
    Herald: So we have time for one final question.
    The microphone at the right please.
  • 29:11 - 29:16
    Question: The big one. Can you say something
    about the interface between open medical devices
  • 29:16 - 29:23
    and regulation? So in Europe most of the stuff is
    public or a lot of it is public, so you have two layers
  • 29:23 - 29:28
    of regulation: one is what devices you're authorised
    to use and operating on the human body.
  • 29:28 - 29:32
    The other one is how you're authorised
    to buy the stuff,
  • 29:32 - 29:36
    so procurement regulation is very, very rigid
    in some European countries
  • 29:36 - 29:41
    in term of medical devices. Most of the stuff
    would be illegal.
  • 29:41 - 29:46
    Tarek: It was very important for us, the project
    wasn't, you know, people have made stethoscopes
  • 29:46 - 29:51
    and actually a lot of people told me this. They
    said, your's isn't the first 3D printed stethoscope.
  • 29:51 - 29:54
    I made one, we made one, whatever it is.
  • 29:54 - 29:57
    And it is true, we are not nearly the first
    3D printed stethoscope.
  • 29:57 - 30:05
    We are the first validated and now Health Canada
    approved 3D printed stethoscope.
  • 30:05 - 30:13
    I think that these regulations are actually
    a good thing, because the population is
  • 30:13 - 30:17
    an incredibly vulnerable population
    on the other side.
  • 30:17 - 30:21
    We see a lots of experiments being run on poor,
    disenfranchised people.
  • 30:21 - 30:23
    It happens in the first world.
    Think Tuskegee and
  • 30:23 - 30:26
    similar things are happening today.
  • 30:26 - 30:32
    It happens in the third world,
    think Nestle and such projects.
  • 30:32 - 30:35
    So I think the regulations are a good thing.
  • 30:35 - 30:39
    The FDA, you know, probably not. It's very
    expensive, very hard to get through.
  • 30:39 - 30:45
    But it's not taxing to get through
    reasonable regulatory bodies, like Health Canada.
  • 30:45 - 30:51
    I myself don't object. What I see in the Gaza Strip
    is people there want to know
  • 30:51 - 30:56
    that they're not receiving garbage. So they're
    asking for these regulatory approvals.
  • 30:56 - 31:02
    The Gaza Strip will not use expired medical
    devices, that people, you know well-wishers and
  • 31:02 - 31:07
    some hospital in the first world that decided
    I like rather throw this away in the Gaza Strip
  • 31:07 - 31:10
    than throw this away in the garbage.
    No we don't want that.
  • 31:10 - 31:16
    There is a dignity as well that has to be provided.
    And that dignity comes with the same standards
  • 31:16 - 31:21
    being met in the third world as in the first world
  • 31:21 - 31:27
    Herald: OK, thank you very much. Unfortunately
    we are out of time, but I hope you enjoy the
  • 31:27 - 31:30
    rest of the congress and see you at the next talk.
  • 31:30 - 31:34
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  • 31:34 - 31:41
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Title:
Tarek Loubani: Free Software and Hardware bring National Sovereignty
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Video Language:
English
Duration:
31:41

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