17.692 ALLC/ACH Workshops; Internet Commons Congress

From: Humanist Discussion Group (by way of Willard McCarty willard.mccarty@kcl.ac.uk)
Date: Tue Mar 09 2004 - 03:21:43 EST


<x-flowed>
               Humanist Discussion Group, Vol. 17, No. 692.
       Centre for Computing in the Humanities, King's College London
                   www.kcl.ac.uk/humanities/cch/humanist/
                        www.princeton.edu/humanist/
                     Submit to: humanist@princeton.edu

   [1] From: "Susan Schreibman" <sschreib@umd.edu> (39)
         Subject: ALLC/ACH Pre-Conference Workshops

   [2] From: Seth Johnson (119)
                 <seth.johnson@REALMEASURES.DYNDNS.ORG>
         Subject: Call to Assembly: Internet Commons Congress 2004

--[1]------------------------------------------------------------------
         Date: Tue, 09 Mar 2004 08:17:48 +0000
         From: "Susan Schreibman" <sschreib@umd.edu>
         Subject: ALLC/ACH Pre-Conference Workshops

ACH/ALLC 2004 XML/XSLT Workshops
Center for Humanities Computing
Göteborg University
Göteborg, Sweden
9-11 June 2004
http://www.mith.umd.edu/outreach/ach2004/index.html

Please distribute. Apologies for cross posting

Maryland Institute for Technology in the Humanities (MITH) is pleased to
offer XML/XSLT workshops as a pre-conference activity of the 2004 Joint
International Conference of the Association for Literary and Linguistic
Computing and the Association for Computers and the Humanities.

The workshops are aimed at people in the humanities, libraries, museums, and
archives who wish to learn how to create digital archives using eXtensible
Markup Language (XML), and its sister technology, eXtensible stylesheet
language (XSLT) used for transforming XML documents to HTML, PDF, or other
XML documents.

The first day of the workshop will introduce students to the theory and
practice of text encoding using eXtensible Markup Language (XML). We will be
focusing on encoding through the scheme most humanities projects utilize,
the Text Encoding Initiative (TEI), one of the oldest and most robust text
encoding schemes available. The second workshop (one and one half days) will
introduce students to the practicalities of transforming XML documents
through eXtensible Stylesheet Language (XSLT).

Students may register separately for Introduction to XML and the TEI (9
June), or the Introduction to XSLT (10-11 June). There are a limited number
of student discounts available on a first-come-first-served basis. Please
see the registration form for more details. Early registration is advised as
there are limited places available.

Workshop details can be found at
http://www.mith.umd.edu/outreach/ach2004/index.html

For further information, please contact Susan Schreibman <sschreib@umd.edu>

Dr Susan Schreibman
Assistant Director
Maryland Institute for Technology in the Humanities (MITH)
McKeldin Library
University of Maryland
College Park, MD 20742
ph: 301 405 8505
fax: 301 314 7111
e-mail: sschreib@umd.edu

--[2]------------------------------------------------------------------
         Date: Tue, 09 Mar 2004 08:18:43 +0000
         From: Seth Johnson <seth.johnson@REALMEASURES.DYNDNS.ORG>
         Subject: Call to Assembly: Internet Commons Congress 2004

New Yorkers for Fair Use Call to General Assembly
-------------------------------------------------

Internet Commons Congress 2004

March 24-25, 2004, Outside Washington, DC
Scheduled Sessions/Participants:
http://www.internationalunity.org/schedule.html

http://www.internationalunity.org
http://www.nyfairuse.org/icc

Please forward this call to any other concerned parties you might know.
Please visit the above links to register to attend and join in the fight to
preserve the Internet commons.

Today our commons is under attack.

The attack is wide and pervasive. Even our right to own and use computers
inside our homes and offices, is under attack.

The time has come to assemble and declare our rights. We call upon
advocates and organizers, authors and cow-orkers, readers and singers,
politicians and students, grandmothers and children of all ages, and all who
support the right of free human beings to the free dissemination and use of
information rendered to the commons for the benefit of the public, to join
us at the Internet Commons Congress outside Washington DC on March 24 and
25, 2004.

We live in a time of vibrant prospects and shameful travesties, brought on
as we confront the implications of a new and broader and greater empowerment
in furtherance of our common wealth and in engagement in our common
governance.

Today we possess:

    - The Internet: the means to disseminate and make use of published
information flexibly and powerfully, on a worldwide scale

    - Computers: tools to process, select, combine, analyze and synthesize
information at the digital and logical level, and

    - Logical Freedom: the power to devise means of applying these tools
through the free use and expression of logic in code

But today we also confront:

    - attempts to create irrational and wildly artificial legal and regulatory
trammels on new conventions, such as VoIP, in order to keep control of the
world's communication channels in the hands of old oligopolies, monopolies,
and tyrannical governments

    - an intransigent U.S. Federal Communications Commission, arrogating to
itself an unprecedented authority to declare exclusive rights policy and to
regulate the design of digital devices on that basis

    - consolidated mass media and entrenched communications monopolies that
subvert principles of the public interest with the willing concurrence of
complaisant regulators and legislators

    - elected representatives who have made plain their intention to enact a
new exclusive right to factual information in databases

    - forceful attempts in Europe to subvert the law banning patents on
software, by patent establishment professionals and the large companies they
serve

    - specious arguments by public servants and privileged contractors for the
supposed reliability of "new voting technology"

    - attempts by the Bio-Medical Cartel and others to seize the fruits of
logical, biological, medical, and pharmaceutical researches carried out at
publically financed institutions of science and learning

    - an already well advanced and well funded plan to impose a redesign of
home computer hardware so that running software that you choose would be
made impractical, and analyzing and processing information in the manner you
choose would be made impossible; the new design, backed by laws such as the
DMCA, would result in the emplacement of wiretap and remote control hardware
and supporting software in every new low cost home computer sold in 2006

    - massive ongoing and systematic violations of contract law and antitrust
law and consumer protection law by Microsoft and its partners, by means of
which most home users are left with no choice but to run Microsoft operating
systems: most people are not offered any choice of operating system at point
of sale of the hardware, and are therefore induced to employ systems that
are difficult to use and easily parasitized, systems that are indeed so bad
because Microsoft need not compete

    - a hundred million dollar campaign of barratry and red-baiting conducted
by SCO, acting as agent for the convicted monopolist Microsoft, to induce
businesses and individuals to steer away from exercising free control of
their logic devices, away in particular from GNU/Linux operating systems;
the assault led by SCO is only one of many of similar scale

All these issues and more are part of a broad struggle by all the people, we
who treasure our freedom and who wish to remain free to use our Net and our
computers in all the ways that are both fit and just.

We call all ready advocates and concerned constituencies to assemble at the
Internet Commons Congress this March 24 and 25, 2004. Here we will forge a
bond in our common cause of information freedom, detail our missions and
callings and summon each other to join in common cause.

Please click here for details regarding venue, schedule, logistics:
http://www.nyfairuse.org/icc/
Registration for attendance is free: http://www.nyfairuse.org/icc/reg.xhtml

Those in attendance will issue calls for action, as shall we. We call all
free citizens to join the struggle against englobulation of our Commons and
our computers by the loose association and alliance of cartels, oligopolies,
monopolies, and parts of governments, that seek to keep or take control of
all the communications systems of the world.

At the moment New Yorkers for Fair Use knows of a few efforts which we will
forward at the Congress:

    - Continued Actions for Refunds: We hope to prepare materials to move the
FTC, Congress of the USA folk, the Federal antitrust team, and the judge in
the Microsoft case to consider effective action on the basis of gross
violations of both the 1994/1995 consent decree, and the recent conviction
of Microsoft. This effort needs several score affidavits dealing with
anti-competitive practices at point of sale of low cost computer hardware.

    - Education of Regulators and Legislators and Attorneys about Home
Computer Hardware: We will explain and demonstrate the boot process today on
untrammeled hardware and what the boot process would be like on Palladiated
hardware, that is, hardware with hard DRM.

    - Procurement Policy Education and Action: We seek to collect and analyze
the grossly inequitable policies and procedures by which vendors of source
secret softwares keep their special privileged position in the machine rooms
and desktops of government agencies.

    - Education of Regulators and Legislators and Judges about the Net: We
will explain the fundamental principles which, for more than thirty years,
have supported the psychic and moral and legal and engineering foundations
of our Net. A popularly reported on issue directly connected with these
principles is the "issue of Voice Over Internet Protocol".

These four actions have been mentioned because organizations, tribes, and
individuals from New York City have recently been working on these four
efforts. We know that other efforts will also be carried forward at the
Internet Commons Congress. Come and help!

--

New Yorkers for Fair Use http://www.nyfairuse.org

[CC] Counter-copyright: http://realmeasures.dyndns.org/cc

I reserve no rights restricting copying, modification or distribution of this incidentally recorded communication. Original authorship should be attributed reasonably, but only so far as such an expectation might hold for usual practice in ordinary social discourse to which one holds no claim of exclusive rights. </x-flowed>



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