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. The Weekender ................................................... . a weekly digest of calls . actions . websites . campaigns . etc . . send your announcements and notes to [email protected] . . please don't be late ! delivered every friday . into your inbox . . http://simsim.rug.ac.be/announcer/ for subscription info & help . ................................................................... 01 . Electronic Frontiers . ACTION ALERT - Australian Australia Internet Censorship 02 . RTMARK . Deconstructing Beck sequel; April 6 Phone In Sick; "the new pieing" 03 . miekal and . a manifesto, a mediachant & 3 questions 04 . Name.Space.Info . NAME.SPACE FILES APPEAL IN NSI ANTITRUST CASE 05 . Robin Hamman . CYBERSOCIOLOGY MAGAZINE ANNOUNCES THE LAUNCH OF ISSUE FIVE 06 . Ron Wakkary . Dia Center for the Arts Forms Alliance with Stadium 07 . planetg . webstock- Paris, Web Bar, 16 Avril 1999 08 . Gerbrand Oudenaarden . Sound of Radio B92 Banned 09 . Alondra Nelson . AfroFuturism | List ................................................................... 01 From: Electronic Frontiers Australia (http://www.efa.org.au) Subject: ACTION ALERT - Australian Internet Censorship *** Please redistribute, but only before April 30th 1999 *** *** and only to appropriate newsgroups, lists and contacts *** INTERNATIONAL ACTION ALERT Please send the message attached below the -<cut here>- mark at the bottom of this message to your local member, and to these emailaddresses: [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] and fax numbers: +61 2 6273 4154 +61 3 9650 0220 +61 2 6277 8520 +61 2 6273 4100 +61 2 6277 8495 +61 2 9334 7799 +61 2 6273 4128 +61 2 6273 4122 +61 2 6273 4117 From: Electronic Frontiers Australia http://www.efa.org.au Sydney 31st March 1999 AUSTRALIA NEEDS YOUR HELP TO FIGHT DRACONIAN INTERNET CENSORSHIP INTRODUCTION The Australian ministry for Communications, Information Technology and the Arts has announced a proposal to introduce draconian measures to block information on the internet that is rated RC, X or R according to Australian film and video classification standards. The Australian Broadcasting Authority (ABA) will administer this regime. The Australian Government requires that online service providers take responsibility to remove RC and X-rated material from the Internet once they have been notified of its existence. The regime also provides for self-regulatory codes of practice for the online service provider industry, to be overseen by the ABA. These codes of practice must include a commitment by an online service provider to take all reasonable steps to block access to such content hosted overseas, once the service provider has been notified of the existence of the material by the ABA. Many millions of websites are likely to be blocked if the proposals are effectively implemented. RC rated content, to be completely censored from the Internet under this regime, includes, but is not limited to, the following types of content: Information that depicts, expresses or otherwise deals with matters of sex, drug misuse or addiction, crime, cruelty, violence or revolting or abhorrent phenomena in such a way that they offend against the standards of morality, decency and propriety generally accepted by reasonable adults, depicts it in a way that is likely to cause offence to a reasonable adult. Or if the content promotes, incites or instructs in matters of crime or violence, the use of proscribed drugs, depictions of practices such as bestiality. Or if it appears to purposefully debase or abuse for the enjoyment of viewers, and which lack moral, artistic or other values, to the extent that they offend against generally accepted standards of morality, decency and propriety. And also includes gratuitous, exploitative or offensive depictions of violence with a very high degree of impact or which are excessively frequent, prolonged or detailed, cruelty or real violence which are very detailed or which have a high impact, sexual violence, sexual activity accompanied by fetishes or practices which are offensive or abhorrent, incest fantasies or other fantasies which are offensive or abhorrent. X-rated content, to be completely censored from the Internet under this regime, is material which contains real depictions of actual sexual intercourse and other sexual activity between consenting adults, including mild fetishes. R-rated content, to be subjected to a mandatory adult verification scheme, includes information about, or containing, drug use, nudity, sexual references, adult themes, horror themes, martial arts instruction, graphic images of injuries, medium or high level coarse language, sex education, health education and drug education. WE NEED YOUR HELP ! If you care about your ability to speak on the Internet, read from the Internet, and exchange ideas on the Internet, without the Australian government deciding for you, it's time to act before these proposals become law. Please take some time to speak out against this government action, by signing and then E-mailing or faxing the attached letter the minister for communications, and other relevant people. For your convenience we have added some addresses: Richard Alston, Minister for communications, IT and the Arts [email protected] Fax: +61 (0)2 6273 4154 AND +61 (0)3 9650 0220 Stephen Smith, labor Shadow Minister for communications, IT and the Arts [email protected] Fax: +61 (0)2 6277 8520 Timothy Fischer, Deputy Prime Minister; Minister for Trade [email protected] Fax: +61 (02) 6273 4128 Jocelyn Newman, Minister for Family and Community Services [email protected] Fax: +61 (02) 6273 4122 Dr David Kemp, Minister for Education, Training and Youth Affairs [email protected] Fax: +61 (02)6273 4117 John Howard, Prime Minister Fax: +61 (0)2 6273 4100 Kim Beazley, leader of the opposition [email protected] Fax: +61 (0)2 6277 8495 David Flint, Chairman of the ABA [email protected] Fax: +61 (0)2 9334 7799 -------------------------------------------------------------------------- PLEASE FAX AND/OR EMAIL THE MESSAGE BELOW TO THE PERSONS MENTIONED ABOVE ----------------------<cut here>------------------------------------------ to: [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] Dear Senator Alston, I consider that the following issues are important with respect to the Internet censorship proposals of the Australian government: The filtering and blocking regime that has been announced by the Australian government will restrict freedom of expression and limit access to information. Government-mandated use of blocking and filtering systems violates basic international human rights protections. These measures will prevent individuals from using the Internet to exchange information on topics that may be controversial or unpopular. They may enable the development of country profiles to facilitate a global/universal rating system desired by governments, block access to content on entire domains, block access to Internet content available at any domain or page which contains a specific key-word or character string in the URL, and over-ride self-rating labels provided by content creators and providers. Government mandated blocking and filtering of content is unreasonable because it does not consider the dynamic nature of the Internet. A website on the Internet that is deemed offensive or illegal today may contain harmless content tomorrow, but is likely to remain blocked in the future by the proposed blacklist model. The effectiveness of the proposed regime will be minimal. It is unlikely that the government blacklist will cover a substantial percentage of adult or offensive content, as there are millions of such locations on the Internet. Tunneling and other technologies that are available make it relatively easy for informed users to access any website they wish despite the existence of a filter. The proposals will not protect minors on the Internet, as they intend to, but will prevent lawful access to information by adults. Additionally the introduction of mandatory adult verification mechanisms poses a threat to privacy of the adult, as these mechanisms are likely to store information about the behavior of adults on the Internet. I believe the great appeal of the Internet is its openness. Efforts to restrict the free flow of information on the Internet, like efforts to restrict what may be said on a telephone, would place unreasonable burdens on well established principles of privacy and free speech. I encourage the Australian government to further take the lead in creating an environment that will help local communities find the best answers to providing greater access to the Internet. I observe that blocking and filtering software programs cannot possibly filter out all objectionable material and instead may provide communities with a false sense of security about providing access. I believe that filters cannot offer the protections provided by education and training. If protection of minors is the intention of the Australian government then minors should be taught the critical skills that are needed as citizens of the information society. ................................................................... 02 Date: Wed, 31 Mar 1999 05:45:51 +0100 From: [email protected] To: Multiple recipients of <[email protected]> Subject: ann! ... Deconstructing Beck sequel; April 6 Phone In Sick; "the new pieing" FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE March 29, 1999 RTMARK, a clearinghouse for anti-corporate activism, announces its spring series of strategic initiatives directed against corporations and the carefully-constructed corporate image. The series kicks off with the following projects (see below for full releases): * "Extracted Celluloid," the "Deconstructing Beck" sequel and film music rip-off; * the second annual USA Phone In Sick Day; and * a "new pieing" event in Vancouver, Canada. The series will also feature four more projects, including a system for the theft and redistribution of commercialized video art (http://rtmark.com/2995.html). In addition, RTMARK is unveiling a new section, "Hats Off to Clarity" (http://rtmark.com/hatsoff.html), which currently boasts Diesel's "sawing nude women to bits" ad campaign. (That campaign caused an uproar in Europe but is unknown so far in the U.S., a situation RTMARK hopes to remedy.) The redesign of http://rtmark.com/, another quarterly capstone, features a new project communication system, as well as "appropriations" of corporate websites (http://rtmark.com/shell.html, http://rtmark.com/mcdonalds.html) as described at http://www.nytimes.com/library/tech/99/03/cyber/artsatlarge/18artsatlarge.html. Andrei Codrescu, RTMARK Media Fund manager and NPR Commentator, says of these initiatives: "RTMARK continues to gain territory in the ongoing battle between faceless corporations and what used to be known as human beings, now in the process of becoming corporate appendages." (http://rtmark.com/fundmedia.html) ---------------------------------------------------------- "EXTRACTED CELLULOID": FILM MUSIC RIP-OFF BUILDS ON "DECONSTRUCTING BECK" SUCCESS Groups aim to further dialogue on corporate abuses of law Contacts: RTMARK (mailto:[email protected]; http://rtmark.com/ppdb.html) Illegal Art (mailto:[email protected]; http://www.detritus.net/illegalart/) "Extracted Celluloid" is a collection of brilliant but illegal resamplings of film music, produced by Illegal Art with the support of RTMARK, which gathered $3,500 from anonymous donors to help with production costs. Illegal Art describes the CD as an effort to "present commentary and ideas that stand in direct opposition to the media and sonic cliches from which they were derived." Last year, RTMARK channeled $5,000 to Illegal Art for its enormously popular "Deconstructing Beck," a compilation that illegally sampled the music of recording artist Beck (see http://rtmark.com/pressdb.html for press fallout). "'Extracted Celluloid,'" RTMARK spokesperson Ray Thomas said, "is an even better investment for RTMARK donors. While Beck is arguably a terrific artist, most of the film music that 'Extracted Celluloid' samples is much more a product of the corporate bottom line. By taking this commercial dross and making something great of it, Illegal Art is making a very strong statement about taking control of our lives back from corporations." Illegal Art's pseudonymous spokesperson, Philo T. Farnsworth, hopes the CD helps make a point about copyright: "Copyright law was designed to protect artists' rights, but it has been perverted to the point where today it only protects corporate earnings." As with "Deconstructing Beck," Negativland and their Seeland label (http://www.negativland.com/nmol/seeland.html#extracted) are co-releasing this project with Illegal Art. The official release date of "Extracted Celluloid" is April 9; until then it can be previewed at http://www.detritus.net/illegalart/preview.html. Among the soundtracks sampled on the CD are those of the movies Titanic, Saturday Night Fever, The Wizard Of Oz, Cheech and Chong, and Dr. Strangelove. ---------------------------------------------- RTMARK SPONSORS USA PHONE IN SICK DAY, APRIL 6 Last year's event was wildly successful Contacts: RTMARK (mailto:[email protected]; http://rtmark.com/phoneinsick.html) Decadent Action (mailto:[email protected]; http://www.underbelly.demon.co.uk/decadent/docs/sickcont.htm) For the second year in a row, the British are coming--not to impose their tea but to wean us from it. Last year's RTMARK-funded event was credited with causing the "sickout" of 80% of the Irish police force, as well as some prison guards; the previous year's event, its first, was blamed for 2000 British Airways employees phoning in sick. This year's call to laziness, which occurs near the thirtieth anniversary of John Lennon and Yoko Ono's "Bed Peace" action, has already received attention on French and Canadian television, British and Australian radio, and in European newspapers and magazines. RTMARK wishes to bring to the event U.S. attention as well. Phone In Sick Day was begun in Britain by "consumer terrorists" Decadent Action. The avowed purpose of Decadent Action is "to destroy the monetary system... at their leisure," via a campaign of luxury living funded by shoplifting and credit. A Decadent Action spokesperson said that in addition, phoning in sick is fast becoming "a genuine alternative to the organized strike." NPR commentator Andrei Codrescu, who phoned in sick on the air for last year's event, said that phoning in sick "is a terrific thing to do if you feel well. You should phone in and say, 'I feel very well, so i will not murder my time by participating in your rituals.' I think if enough people did that, the machinery would falter." RTMARK and Decadent Action are calling on workers to phone in sick on April 6 for any reason at all--in protest, in commemoration of murdered time, or simply in the interests of personal pleasure. -------------------------------------------------- BUSINESSMAN INVITES OTHERS TO DIVE FOR HIS DOLLARS Vancouver group have some very smelly plans for their city Contacts: RTMARK (mailto:[email protected]; http://rtmark.com/fundmagx.html) Event organizers (mailto:[email protected]) In an unpleasant variation on the now-familiar pieings of unsavory public figures, a Vancouver group will use several thousand dollars in RTMARK-solicited funding to stage a famous scene from Terry Southern's The Magic Christian. By advertising free money obtainable only by diving into a vat of human offal, the group aims to make a statement on "the real roots of corporate power." The source of the funding, who heard of the project on RTMARK's Magic Christian Fund bulletin board (http://rtmark.com/fundmagx.html), wishes to be identified only as a Canadian businessman. "Blood may be thicker than water, but manure is definitely funnier," he said. The event is scheduled for Good Friday, April 2nd. It will take place in a public park, where members of the Vancouver Board of Trade will be holding a department picnic, according to the organizers, who may be contacted via mailto:[email protected]. ----------- Special note: RTMARK wishes to call attention to the Help B92 campaign, at http://helpb92.xs4all.nl, dedicated to keeping Yugoslavia's sole source of independent radio information operational. Please help in any way you can--financially or with publicity--at this crucial moment in the region's history. ................................................................... 03 Date: Wed, 31 Mar 1999 10:35:29 -0600 From: miekal and <[email protected]> Subject: a manifesto, a mediachant & 3 questions (the unwar {z}one) http://net22.com/qazingulaza/o_so_vo/index.html ................................................................... 04 From: "Name.Space.Info" <[email protected]> Subject: NAME.SPACE FILES APPEAL IN NSI ANTITRUST CASE Date: Wed, 31 Mar 1999 15:47:22 +0000 New York March 31, 1999 For Immediate Release: NAME.SPACE FILES APPEAL IN NSI ANTITRUST CASE The pioneer Internet Domain Name Registry Name.Space filed an appeal today at the US Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit in an ongoing antitrust battle against Network Solutions, Inc. (NSI), the publicly traded Virginia company who was recently granted antitrust immunity by a lower court, and the National Science Foundation (NSF). Name.Space filed the antitrust suit on March 20, 1997 after NSI refused the company's request to add new toplevel domains to the root directory of the Internet, which NSI controls under a contract with the US Government. On March 19, 1999, two years after the suit was filed, district court Judge Robert P. Patterson ruled in favor of NSI and the NSF, granting NSI immunity from antitrust laws, recognizing NSI's contract with the NSF, and later the NTIA, as protection from prosecution. The Court's opinion also dismissed Name.Space's First Amendment claims stating that domain names are like telephone numbers and are not free speech. Name.Space Founder and CEO, Paul Garrin, comments that "the Court's decision was a political decision and not a legal one. I believe that the Judge did not fully understand this case or the Internet, as he admitted, and would not make a decision on the present legal issues, so he simply rubberstampped the Defandants' briefs. I am glad to take the case on to a higher court where I hope it will be more seriously reviewed." Name.Space offers new and innovative domain services and new top level domain names (TLDs) such as "art." "cam." "law." "media." and "sex." and hundreds of others which they believe are a needed change to the legacy "com." "org." and "net." domains that have become over-crowded and limit market choice and free expression. Since the beginning of its operations in 1996, Name.Space has processed thousands of requests for new top level domains and believes that the demand will grow as more users connect to the Internet. Name.Space believes that NSI is unfairly using its monopoly position to control the market while hiding behind its government contract. The artificial scarcity imposed by limiting consumer choice to "com." "org." and "net." has allowed NSI to realize substantial monopoly profits and a huge market capitalization while eliminating competition from firms as such as Name.Space. Since 1996 Name.Space was the first to have a fully functional real time domain registry specializing in new toplevel domains and later adapted to resell the legacy domains. Name.Space is a leader in developing new services to enhance the domain name system, and bring a wider range of services at a lower cost to the consumer. Glenn Manishin, lead counsel for Name.Space said that "the district court's decision extends antitrust immunity never contemplated by Congress and would provide blanket protections against any claim for all government contractors. The court's cavallier treatment of the serious First Amendment issues arising from TLDs and internet domain names will merit more rigorous analysis on appeal." Name.Space is confident that it will prevail in the appeal on legal grounds, and intends to pursue its claim for treble damages under the antitrust laws. Contact: Name.Space http://Name.Space.Beats-NetworkSolutions.com 212.677.4080 [email protected] Glenn Manishin: 202.955.6300 Stephanie Joyce: 202.955.6300 http://name.space.xs2.net http://sWhois.net ................................................................... 05 From: Robin Hamman <[email protected]> CYBERSOCIOLOGY MAGAZINE ANNOUNCES THE LAUNCH OF ISSUE FIVE TOPIC: GRASSROOTS POLITICAL ACTIVISM ONLINE Joint Issue With Crash Media Published Online 01 April, 1999 Editor: Robin Hamman (HRC: London) Guest Co-Editor: Micz Flor (Public Netbase t0: Vienna) Cybersociology Magazine ( http://www.cybersociology.com ) is a multi-disciplinary, non-profit webzine which takes a critical look at cyberculture, cyberspace, online communities, and life online. Articles, project reports, and reviews published here only start the discussion. Readers are encouraged to contribute their own ideas and criticisms by interacting through the the email discussion list, chat room, and the new message board forum. __________________________________________ CONTENTS ISSUE FIVE: GRASSROOTS POLITICAL ACTIVISM ONLINE ++++++ Feature Articles ++++++ * The High Tech Gift Economy, by Richard Barbrook, PhD. Richard is the coordinator and a founding member of the Hypermedia Research Centre at the University of Westminster. He is co-author with Andy Cameron of "The California Ideology", an important critique of West Coast Neo-Liberalism, and has written a number of books including "Media Freedom" (Pluto, 1995). In this piece, excerpted from his forthcoming book "The Holy Fools" (Verso, 1999) Barbrook looks at DIY culture on the internet and other topics. * Labour@Cyberspace:Problems in Creating a Global Solidarity Culture, by Peter Waterman. Peter is the author of "Globalisation, Social Movements and the New Internationalisms" (1998) and "Labour Worldwide in the Era of Globalisation" (1999). In this article, he expertly discusses the need for, and problems of, creating a global model for labour activism online. * Internet Against Censorship: by Drazen Pantic, Head of OpenNet, Radio B92's Internet department in Belgrade, FR Yugoslavia. Drazen discusses the use of the Internet in the work of independent Serbian radio station, B-92. Includes editor notes on the current situation at B-92 following NATO bombardment and the media crackdown. * Cyberpower and the Meaning of Online Activism, by Tim Jordan a member of the New Politics Research Group, Department of Sociology, at the University of East London. Tim is the author of "Cyberpower: the culture and politics of cyberspace and the Internet" co-editor [with A. Lent] of "Storming the Millennium: the new politics of change". In this article, Jordan creates an analysis of three levels of cyberpower: that of the 'individual" the "social' and the 'imaginary'. You'll have to read the article to find out his conclusion... * Punk Science, by Dr. Rachel Armstrong MA BMBCh. Rachel is the author of Sci Fi Aesthetics, television presenter for 'The Frame' on BBC's UK Arena channel, Lecturer at The Bartlett School of Architecture, UCL, a multimedia producer and medical doctor specialising in the evolution of humankind through 'unnatural interventions'. She is the author of 'A Gray's Anatomy', a forthcoming fiction book for Serpents Tail. In this article, Dr. Armstrong critically discusses the uncomfortable relationship between science/medicine and art/humanities. * Cyborg Film Making, by Dr. Rachel Armstrong MA BMBCh (See further details above). In this wide ranging article, Dr. Armstrong discusses the complex boundaries between art, the body, and the crossing of these boundaries by the cyborg. * The Borg: A critique, by David Gordon, Department of Social Anthropology at the University of St. Andrews, Scotland. In this article, David blends his own field research on sex misrepresentation online with critiques of existing theoretical and methodological research on the cyborg. * Roam-Antics on the Cyber-Horizon or Home-Wrecking for a New Millennium?, by Judy Hempel (aka Judygod). Judy is a student at Yavapai College in Prescott, Arizona. In this article, Judy writes candidly about the experiences her family has had with falling in love online. First her daughter fell in love online and left home to marry her new partner, despite the reservations of Judy and others. Then, Judy did the same thing herself... * Admirable Utopian World, by Eduardo Duarte. Eduardo is a PhD student in the program of Social Science in So Paulo (PUC-SP), Brazil. He holds an MA in Anthropology and is an assistant teacher at UFPE. In this contribution, he writes about the consequence of the implantation of telematic systems for Brazilian society. * LESSONS LEARNED: SOME THOUGHTS ON THE FUTURE OF ON-LINE COMMUNITY NETWORKS, by George Hunka. Among other things, George is Communications Coordinator for The Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art in New York City. This article provides an excellent overview of the current state of the community networking movement. We can learn a lot from the successes and failures described here. * Study of Men and Women's Gender Display in Text-based Communication, By: Sema Nicole Seyedi. Sema is a sociology student at the University of California Monterey Bay.This papers is a well researched study of the participation of male and female students using computer mediated communication (CMC) at CSUMB. ++++++ Field Reports/Project Reports ++++++ * INDONESIA: The Net as a Weapon, By Tedjabayu. Despite over three decades of success at intimidating and censoring the media, the Indonesian government has not yet found a way to stop people using the Internet to express their views. * Introducing Radio Free Monterey, by Barbara Steinberg . Barbara is the founder of The Web Sociology List, Western Hang Gliders Online, and co-founder of Radio Free Monterey. She also hosts the Writers and Society conference at the trAce Online Writers Community and is a student in the Interactive Telecommunications Program at NYU. In this field report, Steinberg discusses the origins and ideals of a community based web radio station, Radio Free Monterey. * Online Community Builders Toolkit for Activists, by Robin Hamman (email: [email protected]). Grassroots political activists can now use the internet to help organise their groups. This can be done by adding interactive community building features to a website using free email lists, chat rooms, instant opinion polling, and message boards. This toolkit was presented at the Next Five Minutes (n5m) Tactical Media Conference in Amsterdam, 12-14 March 1999. * The Association for Progressive Communications (APC) is the world's most extensive network of Internet providers dedicated to serving non-governmental organisations (NGOs) and citizen activists. Since 1987, APC members have been providing fast, reliable, easy to use communication tools. * Computer Aid International: sends second hand PCs to the Third World. Find out how you can help... ++++++ Books Reviewed ++++++ [ Note: A number of book and website reviews in this issue will not be available until early next week. Apologies for any inconvenience this may cause.] * Cyberdemocracy: Technology, cities and civic networks Edited by Roza Tsagarousianou, Damian Tambini and Cathy Bryan. Routledge, London 1998 * Processed Lives. Gender and Technology in Everyday Life. Edited by Jennifer Terry and Melodie Calvert (1997). London- New York: Routledge * The Technology of Orgasm: Hysteria, the Vibrator, and Women's Sexual Satisfaction, by Rachel P. Maines. Johns Hopkins UP: Baltimore, 1999 * "Cyberville: Clicks, Culture, and the Creation of an Online Town" by Stacy Horn, Founder of ECHO BBS, New York. * Communities in Cyberspace, Edited by Peter Kollock and Marc Smith. 1999. * Virtual Futures. Cyberotics, Technology and Post-Human Pragmatism. Edited by J. B. Dixon and E. J. Cassidy. Routledge, London and New York, 1998. * "Station Rose 1st Decade: 1988-98.10 years of native multimedia art." edited by Gary Danner. PLEASE VISIT: http://www.cybersociology.com ................................................................... 06 Date: Thu, 1 Apr 1999 14:32:16 -0800 From: Ron Wakkary <[email protected]> To: Multiple recipients of <[email protected]> Subject: ann! ... announce: Dia Center for the Arts Forms Alliance with Stadium For Immediate Release April 1, 1999 Contact: Fitz & Co (212) 627-1455 fax (212) 627-0654 [email protected] Dia Center for the Arts Forms Alliance with Stadium Dia Center for the Arts is pleased to announce a new alliance with Stadium, an independent web site for artists' projects located at www.stadiumweb.com. Stadium has produced projects with artists David Askevold, Louise Lawler, Allan McCollum, John Simon, Lawrence Weiner and Maciej Wisniewski, among others. Dia will "host" and promote Stadium, which will continue to produce projects independently, under the direction of it's co-founder, Ron Wakkary. "Stadium@Dia," as it will be called, will continue to be accessible via its current URL, www.stadiumweb.com, as well as via links from Dia's site at www.diacenter.org. Dia will continue its own series of artists' projects for the web, of which ten projects have been completed to date. "Dia has fostered net-based artwork since 1994, when we began developing our first artists' projects for the web," said Dia's Director, Michael Govan. "We are happy to provide a home for Stadium which, along with Dia, was a pioneer in commissioning artists to make work directly for the web. Together, Dia and Stadium will have a significant and continually growing audience for these digital artworks." Lynne Cooke, Dia's Curator, said "Stadium has an affinity to Dia in its approach to creating these projects -- like Dia, it too has been committed to producing site-related projects from a wide range of artists, some of whom may not have otherwise worked in this medium." Stadium's Director, Ron Wakkary, added "combined, the shared and different pursuits of Stadium and Dia in fostering net-based art practice will make an exciting partnership. Dia once again has shown that their defining nature is to be a forward-looking cultural institution by supporting a new entity like Stadium in this way." Dia's series of artists' projects for the web has been funded by the Lila Wallace-Reader's Digest Fund and the New York State Council on the Arts. Projects in this series include works by Arturo Herrera, Diller + Scofidio, Kristin Lucas, Claude Closky, Tim Rollins and K.O.S., Cheryl Donegan, Molissa Fenley, Susan Hiller, Komar & Melamid, and a collaboration by Constance De Jong, Tony Oursler and Stephen Vitiello. Dia Center for the Arts is a tax-exempt charitable organization. Established in 1974, the institution has become one of the largest in the United States dedicated to contemporary art and contemporary culture. In fulfilling this commitment, Dia sustains diverse programming in visual arts, poetry, arts education, and critical discourse and debate. ................................................................... 07 Date: Thu, 1 Apr 1999 18:25:07 +0200 (MET DST) From: planetg <[email protected]> (by way of [email protected]) Subject: webstock- Paris, Web Bar, 16 Avril 1999 PLANET GENERATION GLOBAL MOVE WEBSTOCK : CYBERCULTURE CONTRE GENOCIDE Paris, Web Bar, 16 Avril 1999 Alors que se produit au coeur de l'Europe un des gnocides les plus importants de l'histoire, les ART-IVISTES de la gnration plantaire et globale intensifient l'ART-EVOLUTION. Avec Webstock continuum vido-musical New York - San Francisco - Toulouse - Paris, en direct sur le serveur franais de Nirvanet depuis le 6 mars 1999 : Webstock Real video : images dAlbanie dites par AndroGnius de New York avec laide de Jeff de Transmut (Paris) sur un live musical de King et Dr Floy avec la participation dartistes Albanais. Webstock Kanibal$ : images en avant premire du spectacle multimdia Kanibal$ de Josh de lassociation Zeohs Toulouse. San Francisco : soire Electronic Dub de Josh Clayton sur technostate (http://www.technostate.com) New York : soire Koncrete Jungle avec Dj DelMar (http://www.digitalnoise.com) Montauban : Le Son de lInnocence avec Dj Rone Rejoignez-nous au web bar, 32 rue de Picardie, 75003 Paris, le 16 Avril de 19h 24 h pour un forum et une soire live avec la participation d'artistes Albanais et de Planet Generation (France-Hati-New York) et le soutien de la Fondation France-Liberts. http ://www.nirvanet.com dans la rubrique understand (cliquer sur kosovo-webstock) http ://www.lesouvriers.com/webstock http ://www.webbar.fr e mail : [email protected] ................................................................... 08 Date: Fri, 2 Apr 1999 14:29:14 +0200 From: "Gerbrand Oudenaarden" <[email protected]> To: Multiple recipients of <[email protected]> Subject: ann! ... Sound of Radio B92 Banned Pressrelease Radio B92 Amsterdam, April 2, 1999 http://helpb92.xs4all.nl Sound of B92 Banned Government officials have shut down radio B92 - silencing the last independent voice in Serbia. In the early hours of Friday morning, April 2, police officers arrived to seal the station's offices, and ordered all staff to cease work and leave the premises immediately. A court official accompanied the police. He delivered a decision from the government-controlled Council of Youth to the station's manager of 6 years - Sasa Mirkovic - that he had been dismissed. The council of youth replaced Sasa Mirkovic with Aleksandar Nikacevic, a member of Milosevic's ruling Socialist Party of Serbia, thus bringing B92 under government control. B92 has been the only source of alternative information in and from Serbia since the start of NATO airstrikes against Yugoslavia 10 days ago. Although a ban on the station's transmitter in the morning of the first day of airstrikes - Wednesday March 24 - took the station off the air, B92 has continued to broadcast news and information via the Internet and satellite. On the same day as Federal Telecommunications' officials seized the station's transmitter police officers also detained the station's chief editor - Veran Matic. He was released unharmed and without explanation eight hours later. Since the transmission ban on B92 the station has been heavily policed and has been operating under severe restrictions. The ban on B92 is the latest in a series of crackdowns on free media in the past week. The wave of media repression has resulted in the closure of a large number of members of the B92-led independent broadcasting network - ANEM, and all independent press. Since the launch of B92 news broadcasts on the web last Wednesday its site has had some 15 million visitors. Support sites such as http://helpb92.xs4all.nl report 16,000 visitors per day. Local radio stations across Europe have been re-broadcasting b92 audio signal from the Internet. B92 is the leading independent broadcaster in Yugoslavia, and established the national re-broadcasting network of 35 radio and 18 television stations - ANEM - in 1996. The station was due to celebrate its 10th anniversary this May. Help B92: http://helpb92.xs4all.nl B92: http://www.b92.net ................................................................... 09 Date: Fri, 02 Apr 1999 09:37:33 -0500 From: Alondra Nelson <[email protected]> To: Multiple recipients of <[email protected]> Subject: ann! ... for the weekender AfroFuturism | List april nineteen ninety-nine guest moderator | ron eglash this month mad professor, dr. ron eglash mixes an alchemy of scientific practice and culture production. he asks: are these fields of knowledge strange bedfellows? what kind of interface can we create that will bond imagination with action? ron eglash holds a bs in cybernetics and a ms in systems engineering, both from ucla. following a year as human factors engineer at national semiconductor, he returned to school for a doctorate in cultural studies of science and technology through the ucsc history of consciousness program. he received a fulbright grant for his work on ethnomathematics, which included sites in senegal, gambia, mali, burkina-faso, cameroon, benin, and ghana. the resulting book, _African Fractals: Modern Computing and Indigenous Design_ will be available this month from rutgers university press; software will be sold with it that shows how to create fractal simulations for african designs. for more on ron see: http://www.cohums.ohio-state.edu/comp/eglash.htm check it at [email protected] <leave headings and body of email blank> or go to www.simonsays.org <AfroFuturism is an Apogee Project> --- # distributed via nettime-l : no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a closed moderated mailinglist for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: [email protected] and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: [email protected]