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hydrarchist writes:

Draft version 1.0

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Introduction

At the n5m hacktivist conference, September 2003, collaborative and locational mappers met to organise themselves to work more closely by organising quarterly meetings over the next year and agreeing to share resources. As a contribution to this work the UO has published this text to address the implications posed by the use of Semantic Web as a part of the social projects of the Free Information movement.


Who Are The Freemasons of the Future?

The first and most salient fact about the Freemasons of the Future is that they do not exist. However they are sentient beings trying to struggle into existence. From their perspective they are involved in a life and death struggle to ensure their own past, some of which we perceive as the present. Located in the distant future after time travel has become commonplace they endeavour to sojourn into what they regard as history to create the conditions which they consider as necessary for their own existence. But this does not mean they are going to be successful.

"Remembering Arthur Kinoy"

Stanley Aronowitz, September 29, 2003


Arthur Kinoy, best known as a leading civil rights attorney during the zenith of the protest phase of the movement during 1960s, and as a law professor who taught for some 20 years at Rutgers University, died in September 2003. He was 82 years old and lived in Montclair, New Jersey.

Five Anarchists Arrested in Barcelona, Spain, Sept. 16, 2003


Six anarchists were arrested the morning of September 16th in Barcelona and charged as
terrorists. Among other charges, they're being accused of sending a book-bomb, urban
terrorism, planning two assassinations, illegal possession of firearms, arson attacks,
belonging to a terrorist group, etc.

"Distrust of U.S. Fuels Stories About Source of the Attacks"

Ian Johnson, Wall Street Journal

Munich, Germany -- Andreas von Bulow's book has climbed the
German bestseller list, his lectures are jammed and, after
two years of mounting frustration, his ideas are gaining
traction.


His thesis: The U.S. government staged the Sept. 11, 2001,
attacks on New York and Washington to justify wars in
Afghanistan and Iraq. It is a tentative theory, he admits,
based mostly on his doubt that Osama bin Laden's al Qaeda
terrorist group launched the attacks. "That's something
that is simply 99% false," he said at a reading of his book
on the second anniversary of the attacks.

Dear Colleagues,

It is with great personal sorrow that we inform you of the death of Edward W. Said, today, the 24th of September, 2003, at approximately 4 p.m. EST. Edward had been very ill for the past couple of weeks and last night he was re-admitted to the hospital (he had been released last week and was thought to be recovering). However, it was not to be and this afternoon, he was taken off the respirator and died shortly thereafter. For us -- and we know for the entire academic community as well as everyone who had believed in Palestinian sovereignty, not to mention the self-determination of oppressed and exploited people worldwide -- this is a loss that will never be overcome.


Meera Sethi

Resource and Communications Officer

Cultural Pluralism and the Arts

University of Toronto at Scarborough

1265 Military Trail

Scarborough Ontario M1C 1A4

416-287-7136

cpa@utsc.utoronto.ca

website: citd.utsc.utoronto.ca/cpa/

hydrarchist writes:

"Give Sky the 'Boot' "

Telestreet Rome

A flurry of activity has convulsed the Italian Telestreet project in recent days. This coordination of micro-broadcasters first came on air in the summer of 2002 in the form of Orfeo Tv, a neighborhood station based in Bologna, and a slew of others launched shortly thereafter. Transmissions occur on frequencies allocated to commercial broadcasters which lie unused either for reasons of local topography or due to simple lack of interest on the part of the assignee. Given the outlandish concentration of media ownership in Italy - where 90% of the audio-visual media is controlled directly or indirectly by Silvio Berlusconi - this recycling of frequencies has become a flashpoint for the development of critical approaches to information production and distribution. Despite being in breach of the law only one station had encountered legal problems until last thursday. Telefabrica was broadcasting in the area around the Fiat factory in Termini Imerese, where workers were on strike and involved in generalized protests against restructuring and layoffs, when they were closed by the Carabinieri in december of last year. They subsequently went back on air.

Last week the axe fell again, this time in the small town of Sigallia, near Ancona, in central Italy. A voluntary group principally occupied with care for the disabled had been broadcasting with the involvement of local members of the centre-left party, Democratici della Sinistra, under the name "DiscoVolante". The station was raided and closed by the Carabinieri for being in breach of the broadcasting regulations, and the studio sealed. Meanwhile it was learned that another Telestreet, this time in Pechioli near Pisa, would be closed on September 26th. In Pechioli the project is actually supported by the town council. Paradoxically, thus, these two recent targets represent those with strong institutional affiliations who practice a form of broadcasting that would appear to fall within very orthodox definitions of legitimacy. Media insurgents did not let this attack go unpunished, as you will see below, but first a a little context....

hydrarchist writes

WSIS? WE SEIZE!

Over the past months, activists and artists with different backgrounds
ranging from indymedia centers to the noborder-networks, from the Free
Software movement to community media, from grassroots campaigns to hacker collectives, have been discussing how to intervene in, outside of, counter to, or as an alternative to the agenda and organisation of the World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS) from December 10th to 12th in Geneva, Switzerland.

"Dying Vagrant Hailed as 'Extraordinary Artistic Talent' "

John Lichfield and Will Bland, The Independent 24 September 2003

A down-and-out artist who has spent the past two years sleeping and
working on the street in Paris has been hailed as an "extraordinary
talent".

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