OEB 2015 - Opening Plenary - Cory Doctorow
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0:00 - 0:01(Cory Doctorow) Thank you very much
-
0:01 - 0:05So I'd like to start with something of a
benediction or permission. -
0:05 - 0:08I am one of nature's fast talkers
-
0:08 - 0:11and many of you are not
native English speakers, or -
0:11 - 0:13maybe not accustomed
to my harsh Canadian accent -
0:13 - 0:16in addition I've just come in
from Australia -
0:16 - 0:19and so like many of you I am horribly
jetlagged and have drunkenough coffee -
0:19 - 0:21this morning to kill a rhino.
-
0:22 - 0:24When I used to be at the United Nations
-
0:24 - 0:27I was known as the scourge of the
simultaneous translation core -
0:27 - 0:30I would stand up and speak
as slowly as I could -
0:30 - 0:32and turn around, and there they
would be in their boots doing this -
0:32 - 0:35(laughter)
When I start to speak too fast, -
0:35 - 0:38this is the universal symbol --
my wife invented it -- -
0:38 - 0:42for "Cory, you are talking too fast".
Please, don't be shy. -
0:42 - 0:46So, I'm a parent , like many of you
and I'm like I'm sure all of you -
0:46 - 0:49who are parents, parenting takes my ass
all the time. -
0:50 - 0:55And there are many regrets I have
about the mere seven and half years -
0:55 - 0:57that I've been a parent
but none ares so keenly felt -
0:58 - 1:01as my regrets over what's happened
when I've been wandering -
1:01 - 1:05around the house and seen my
daughter working on something -
1:05 - 1:09that was beyond her abilities, that was
right at the edge of what she could do -
1:09 - 1:13and where she was doing something
that she didn't have competence in yet -
1:13 - 1:17and you know it's that amazing thing
to see that frowning concentration, -
1:17 - 1:20tongue stuck out: as a parent, your
heart swells with pride -
1:20 - 1:21and you can't help but go over
-
1:21 - 1:23and sort of peer over their shoulder
what they are doing -
Not Syncedand those of you who are parents know
what happens when you look too closely -
Not Syncedat someone who is working
beyond the age of their competence. -
Not SyncedThey go back to doing something
they're already good at. -
Not SyncedYou interrupt a moment
of genuine learning -
Not Syncedand you replace it with
a kind of embarrassment -
Not Syncedabout what you're good at
and what you're not. -
Not SyncedSo, it matters a lot that our schools are
increasingly surveilled environments, -
Not Syncedenvironments in which everything that
our kids do is watched and recorded. -
Not SyncedBecause when you do that, you interfere
with those moments of real learning. -
Not SyncedOur ability to do things that we are not
good at yet, that we are not proud of yet, -
Not Syncedis negatively impacted
by that kind of scrutiny. -
Not SyncedAnd that scrutiny comes
from a strange place. -
Not SyncedWe have decided that there are
some programmatic means -
Not Syncedby which we can find all the web page
children shouldn't look at -
Not Syncedand we will filter our networks
to be sure that they don't see them. -
Not SyncedAnyone who has ever paid attention
knows that this doesn't work. -
Not SyncedThere are more web pages
that kids shouldn't look at -
Not Syncedthan can ever be cataloged,
and any attempt to catalog them -
Not Syncedwill always catch pages that kids
must be looking at. -
Not SyncedAny of you who have ever taught
a unit on reproductive health -
Not Syncedknow the frustration of trying
to get round a school network. -
Not SyncedNow, this is done in the name of
digital protection -
Not Syncedbut it flies in the face of digital
literacy and of real learning. -
Not SyncedBecause the only way to stop kids
from looking at web pages -
Not Syncedthey shouldn't be looking at
-
Not Syncedis to take all of the clicks that they
make, all of the messages that they send, -
Not Syncedall of their online activity
and offshore it to a firm -
Not Syncedthat has some nonsensically arrived at
list of the bad pages. -
Not SyncedAnd so, what we are doing is that we're
exfiltrating all of our students' data -
Not Syncedto unknown third parties.
-
Not SyncedNow, most of these firms,
their primary business is -
Not Syncedin serving the education sector.
-
Not SyncedMost of them service
the government sector. -
Not SyncedThe primarily service governments in
repressive autocratic regimes. -
Not SyncedThey help them make sure that
their citizens aren't looking at -
Not SyncedAmnesty International web pages.
-
Not SyncedThey repackage those tools
and sell them to our educators. -
Not SyncedSo we are offshoring our children's clicks
to war criminals. -
Not SyncedAnd what our kids do, we know,
is they just get around it, -
Not Syncedbecause it's not hard to get around it.
-
Not SyncedYou know, never underestimate the power
of a kid who is time-rich and cash-poor -
Not Syncedto get around our
technological blockades. -
Not SyncedBut when they do this, they don't acquire
the kind of digital literacy -
Not Syncedthat we want them to do, they don't
acquire real digital agency -
Not Syncedand moreover, they risk exclusion
and in extreme cases, -
Not Syncedthey risk criminal prosecution.
-
Not SyncedSo what if instead, those of us who are
trapped in this system of teaching kids -
Not Syncedwhere we're required to subject them
to this kind of surveillance -
Not Syncedthat flies in the face
of their real learning, -
Not Syncedwhat if instead, we invented
curricular units -
Not Syncedthat made them real first class
digital citizens, -
Not Syncedin charge of trying to influence
real digital problems? -
Not SyncedLike what if we said to them:
"We want you to catalog the web pages -
Not Syncedthat this vendor lets through
that you shouldn't be seeing. -
Not SyncedWe want you to catalog those pages that
you should be seeing, that are blocked. -
Not SyncedWe want you to go and interview
every teacher in the school -
Not Syncedabout all those lesson plans that were
carefully laid out before lunch -
Not Syncedwith a video and a web page,
and over lunch, -
Not Syncedthe unaccountable distance center
blocked these critical resources -
Not Syncedand left them handing out photographed
worksheets in the afternoon -
Not Syncedinstead of the unit they prepared.
-
Not SyncedWe want you to learn how to do the Freedom
of Information Act's requests -
Not Syncedand find out what your
school authority is spending -
Not Syncedto censor your internet access
and surveil your activity. -
Not SyncedWe want you to learn to use the internet
to research these companies and -
Not Syncedwe want you to present this
to your parent-teacher association, -
Not Syncedto your school authority,
to your local newspaper." -
Not SyncedBecause that's the kind
of digital literacy -
Not Syncedthat makes kids into first-class
digital citizens, -
Not Syncedthat prepares them for a future
in which they can participate fully -
Not Syncedin a world that's changing.
-
Not SyncedKids are the beta-testers
of the surveillance state. -
Not SyncedThe path of surveillance technology
starts with prisoners, -
Not Syncedmoves to asylum seekers,
people in mental institutions -
Not Syncedand then to its first non-incarcerated
population: children -
Not Syncedand then moves to blue-collar workers,
government workers -
Not Syncedand white-collar workers.
-
Not SyncedAnd so, what we do to kids today
is what we did to prisoners yesterday -
Not Syncedand what we're going to be doing
to you tomorrow. -
Not SyncedAnd so it matters, what we teach our kids.
-
Not SyncedIf you want to see where this goes, this
is a kid named Blake Robbins -
Not Syncedand he attended Lower Merion High School
in Lower Merion Pennsylvania -
Not Syncedoutside f Philadelphia.
-
Not SyncedIt's the most affluent school district
in America, so affluent -
Not Syncedthat all the kids were issued Macbooks
at the start of the year -
Not Syncedand they had to do their homework on
their Macbooks, -
Not Syncedthey had to bring them to school every day
and bring them home every night. -
Not SyncedAnd the Macbooks had been fitted with
Laptop Theft Recovery Software, -
Not Syncedwhich is fancy word for a rootkit, that
let the school administration -
Not Syncedscovertly (check) operate the cameras
and microphones on these computers -
Not Syncedand harvest files off
of their hard drives -
Not Syncedview all their clicks, and so on.
-
Not SyncedNow Blake Robbins found out
that the software existed -
Not Syncedand how it was being used
because he and the head teacher -
Not Syncedhad been knocking heads for years,
since he first got into the school, -
Not Syncedand one day, the head teacher
summoned him to his office -
Not Syncedand said: "Blake, I've got you now."
-
Not Syncedand handed him a print-out of Blake
in his bedroom the night before, -
Not Syncedtaking what looked like a pill,
and said: "You're taking drugs." -
Not SyncedAnd Blake Robbins said: "That's a candy,
it's a Mike and Ike candy, I take them -- -
Not SyncedI eat them when I'm studying.
-
Not SyncedHow did you get a picture
of me in my bedroom?" -
Not SyncedThis head teacher had taken
over 6000 photos of Blake Robbins: -
Not Syncedawake and asleep, dressed and undressed,
in the presence of his family. -
Not SyncedAnd in the ensuing lawsuit, the school
settled for a large amount of money -
Not Syncedand promised that
they wouldn't do it again -
Not Syncedwithout informing the students
that it was going on. -
Not SyncedAnd increasingly, the practice is now
-
Not Syncedthat school administrations hand out
laptops, because they're getting cheaper, -
Not Syncedwith exactly the same kind of software,
-
Not Syncedbut they let the students know and t
hey find that that works even better -
Not Syncedat curbing the students' behavior,
-
Not Syncedbecause the students know that
they're always on camera. -
Not SyncedNow, the surveillance state is moving
from kids to the rest of the world. -
Not SyncedIt's metastasizing.
-
Not SyncedOur devices are increasingly designed
to treat us as attackers, -
Not Syncedas suspicious parties
who can't be trusted -
Not Syncedbecause our devices' job is to do things
that we don't want them to do. -
Not SyncedNow that's not because the vendors
who make our technology -
Not Syncedwant to spy on us necessarily,
-
Not Syncedbut they want to take
the ink-jet printer business model -
Not Syncedand bring it into every other realm
of the world. -
Not SyncedSo the ink-jet printer business model
is where you sell someone a device -
Not Syncedand then you get a continuing
revenue stream from that device -
Not Syncedby making sure that competitors can't make
consumables or parts -
Not Syncedor additional features
or plugins for that device, -
Not Syncedwithout paying rent
to the original manufacturer. -
Not SyncedAnd that allows you to maintain
monopoly margins on your devices. -
Not SyncedNow, in 1998, the American government
passed a law called -
Not Syncedthe Digital Millennium Copyright Act,
-
Not Syncedin 2001 the European Union
introduced its own version, -
Not Syncedthe European Union Copyright Directive.
-
Not SyncedAnd these two laws, along with laws
all around the world, -
Not Syncedin Australia, Canada and elsewhere.
These laws prohibit removing digital laws -
Not Syncedthat are used to restrict
access to copyrighted works -
Not Syncedand they were original envisioned as a way
of making sure that Europeans didn't -
Not Syncedbring cheap DVDs in from America,
-
Not Syncedor making sure that Australians didn't
mport cheap DVDs from China. -
Not SyncedAnd so you have a digital work, a DVD,
and it has a lock on it and to unlock it, -
Not Syncedyou have to buy an authorized player
-
Not Syncedand the player checks to make sure
you are in region -
Not Syncedand making your own player
that doesn't make that check -
Not Syncedis illegal because you'd have
to remove the digital lock. -
Not SyncedAnd that was the original intent,
-
Not Syncedit was to allow high rates to be
maintained on removable media, -
Not SyncedDVDs and other entertainment content.
-
Not SyncedBut it very quickly spread
into new rounds. -
Not SyncedSo, for example, auto manufacturers now
lock up all of their cars' telemetry -
Not Syncedwith digital locks.
-
Not SyncedIf you're a mechanic
and want to fix a car, -
Not Syncedyou have to get a reader
from the manufacturer -
Not Syncedto make sure that you can
see the telemetry -
Not Syncedand know what parts to order
and how to fix it. -
Not SyncedAnd in order to get this reader,
you have to promise the manufacturer -
Not Syncedthat you will only buy parts
from that manufacturer -
Not Syncedand not from third parties.
-
Not SyncedSo the manufacturers can keep
the repair costs high -
Not Syncedand get a secondary revenue stream
out of the cars. -
Not SyncedThis year, the Chrysler corporation filed
comments with the US Copyright Office, -
Not Syncedto say that they believed that
this was the right way to do it -
Not Syncedand that it should be a felony,
punishable by 5 years in prison -
Not Syncedand a $500'000 fine,
-
Not Syncedto change the locks on a car that you own,
so that you can choose who fixes it. -
Not SyncedIt turned out that when they advertised
-
Not Synced-- well, where is my slide here?
Oh, there we go -- -
Not Syncedwhen they advertised that
it wasn't your father's Oldsmobile, -
Not Syncedthey weren't speaking metaphorically,
they really meant -
Not Syncedthat even though your father
bought the Oldsmobile, -
Not Syncedit remained their property in perpetuity.
-
Not SyncedAnd it's not just cars,
it's every kind of device, -
Not Syncedbecause every kind of device today
has a computer in it. -
Not SyncedThe John Deer Company, the world's leading seller of heavy equipment
-
Not Syncedand agricultural equipment technologies,
-
Not Syncedthey now view their tractors as
information gathering platforms -
Not Syncedand they view the people who use them
-
Not Syncedas the kind of inconvenient gut flora
of their ecosystem. -
Not SyncedSo if you are a farmer
and you own a John Deer tractor, -
Not Syncedwhen you drive it around your fields,
the torque centers on the wheels -
Not Syncedconduct a centimeter-accurate soil
density survey of your agricultural land. -
Not SyncedThat would be extremely useful to you
when you're planting your seeds -
Not Syncedbut that data is not available to you
-
Not Syncedunless unless you remove the digital lock
from your John Deer tractor -
Not Syncedwhich again, is against the law
everywhere in the world. -
Not SyncedInstead, in order to get that data
-
Not Syncedyou have to buy a bundle with seeds
from Monsanto, -
Not Syncedwho are John Deer's seed partners.
-
Not SyncedJohn Deer then takes this data that they
aggregate across whole regions -
Not Syncedand they use it to gain insight
into regional crop yields -
Not SyncedThat they use to play the futures market.
-
Not SyncedJohn Deer's tractors are really just
a way of gathering information -
Not Syncedand the farmers are secondary to it.
-
Not SyncedJust because you own it
doesn't mean it's yours. -
Not SyncedAnd it's not just the computers
that we put our bodies into -
Not Syncedthat have this business model.
-
Not SyncedIt's the computers that we put
inside of our bodies. -
Not SyncedIf you're someone who is diabetic
-
Not Syncedand you're fitted with a continuous
glucose-measuring insulin pump, -
Not Syncedthat insulin pump is designed
with a digital log -
Not Syncedthat makes sure that your doctor
can only use the manufacturer's software -
Not Syncedto read the data coming off of it
-
Not Syncedand that software is resold
on a rolling annual license -
Not Syncedand it can't be just bought outright.
-
Not SyncedAnd the digital locks are also
used to make sure -
Not Syncedthat you only buy the insulin
that vendors approved -
Not Syncedand not generic insulin
that might be cheaper. -
Not SyncedWe've literally turned human beings
into ink-jet printers. 12:21
- Title:
- OEB 2015 - Opening Plenary - Cory Doctorow
- Description:
-
Cory Doctorow - Writer, Blogger, Activist - USA
The Opening Plenary session of OEB 2015 looked at the challenges of modernity and identify how people, organisations, institutions and societies can make technology and knowledge work together to accelerate the shift to a new age of opportunity.
More info: http://bit.ly/1lugQWX
- Video Language:
- English
- Team:
Captions Requested
- Duration:
- 29:46
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Cathy edited English subtitles for OEB 2015 - Opening Plenary - Cory Doctorow | |
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Claude Almansi edited English subtitles for OEB 2015 - Opening Plenary - Cory Doctorow | |
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Claude Almansi edited English subtitles for OEB 2015 - Opening Plenary - Cory Doctorow | |
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Claude Almansi edited English subtitles for OEB 2015 - Opening Plenary - Cory Doctorow | |
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Claude Almansi edited English subtitles for OEB 2015 - Opening Plenary - Cory Doctorow | |
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Claude Almansi edited English subtitles for OEB 2015 - Opening Plenary - Cory Doctorow | |
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Claude Almansi edited English subtitles for OEB 2015 - Opening Plenary - Cory Doctorow | |
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Claude Almansi edited English subtitles for OEB 2015 - Opening Plenary - Cory Doctorow |