Networks and technology are millennia-old concepts that have been developed by society, introducing new inventions, creating collective knowledge, transmitting between and within cultures. Internet technology, as some will understand it as a “revolution”, is an important form of network that greatly improves communication between individuals and communities within this vast history of humanity.
These networks and technologies have always been biased by it’s purpose and property, while the beginnings of Internet decentralization, communication and de-monopolization was envigiased, we see that in reality has developed very differently.
We must make a distinction between the tools of control (direct or indirect) and the capacity of creation that we can see today in technological developments. While software (open source, free software) has shown great resistance to monopolization, it has not been able to create democratic networks. Meanwhile, the digital media, and big companies have had a process of monopolization and opacity on its processes that is clear today.
In these times, issues such as privacy and data control are under great question, even for a large part of the population such realizations are not a concern. With the logic of monopolization, states and private companies have gained the majority of control over the Internet, even extracting the knowledge of professionals through open source collaboration and generally from society from Data.
We, the democratic forces, have made great efforts to counter these developments, creating tools, sharing knowledge and building networks to support movements, individuals and to pursue (from the knowledge gained) a different vision of the use of technology and the Internet.
Nevertheless, a common critique is the masculinization of the sector, where women have been invisible and neglected, so we need to answer the question of how to develop feminist and democratic processes for autonomy on the Internet.
There’s a lot of diversity in how these networks are built, from local committees and projects to international networks working together for the same goal. However, we should ask ourselves how these networks and spaces, such as projects, hacklabs, hackerspaces, clouds, chats, are a pool of individuals rather than an organized force to realize the goal of creating a democratic Internet.
In order to develop paradigms of empowerment through decentralization beyond liberal individualism and to create a digital democratic society, we need to establish a common understanding.
For this, we should come together from different fields of knowledge to discuss how to build self-sovereign technical capacities, how to create secure open hardware capacities, tools to defend security and anonymity against nation-state surveillance, and share knowledge on mesh networking (different layers).
The digitalization of life, with the explosion of the AI, creates a big challenge in front of all revolutionary movements, how it is used as an attack on our mindset, how to protect digital rights, how it has changed the special warfare in all it’s levels, must bring an answer from our side, negation or counter-position is not enough, we want to bring forward strategic perspective to continue the struggle in this regard.
Many of the popular uprisings in the last two decades have been enabled by the use of the internet and social media. The Arab spring and the uprisings of the 2020’s have shown us that the digital is a place of empowerment for the peoples to create and claim their own visions of the future. At the same time digital technologies enabled the rise of the new right, fuel inequalities by embedding structural inequalities in software systems, and enables mass surveillance on a never precedented scale. While cyberspace started off as an egalitarian space, enabling free exchange of ideas for everyone in the 90s, it has successively been monopolized and monetized in the last decades. At the same time more than ever democratic forces require key technologies like anonymity, secure communication, and platforms for sharing information in order to organize against the monopolists, and various attempts to build democratic alternatives to platforms provided by big-tech have been launched. As any other technologies, digital ones are tools, and who uses them and what they are being used for determines their impacts on society.
We thus want to unite the efforts of various democratic technology initiatives with the wider political process of internationalism. The technology working group aims to build visions on how technology can be used in order to overcome capitalist and move towards democratic modernity. We want to connect groups, collectives and individuals working with or on technology, educating each other, building a shared vision and find tactics how the use and developement of technology can be moved towards serving the people instead of the interests of capital.
We intend to organically connect and collectivise efforts among these projects based on the following dimensions:
1. Share knowledge and other resources.
2. Strengthening networks by collaborations among different groups.
3. Create a common theoretical understanding of the political issues around technology, and thereby opening way for common projects.
4. Supporting the projects and groups within the Peoples’ Platform.
5. Develop projects in connection with wider society and its needs.