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Decolonizing the Internet’s Languages 2019 - From Conversations to Actions
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by
Puthiya Purayil Sneha
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published
Oct 21, 2019
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last modified
Nov 01, 2019 05:53 PM
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filed under:
Language,
Decolonizing the Internet's Languages,
Research,
Digital Knowledge,
Researchers at Work
Whose Knowledge? is organising the Decolonizing the Internet's Languages 2019 gathering in London on October 23-24 — with a specific focus on building an agenda for action to decolonize the internet’s languages. Puthiya Purayil Sneha is participating in this meeting with scholars, linguists, archivists, technologists and community activists, to share the initial findings towards the State of the Internet’s Language Report (to be published in 2020) being developed by Whose Knowledge?, Oxford Internet Institute, and the CIS.
Located in
RAW
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Call for Contributions and Reflections: Your experiences in Decolonizing the Internet’s Languages!
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by
Puthiya Purayil Sneha
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published
Aug 07, 2019
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last modified
Aug 07, 2019 12:29 PM
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filed under:
Language,
Research,
Researchers at Work,
Digital Knowledge,
Decolonizing the Internet's Languages,
Featured,
State of the Internet's Languages,
Digital Humanities,
Homepage
Whose Knowledge?, the Oxford Internet Institute, and the Centre for Internet and Society are creating a State of the Internet’s Languages report, as baseline research with both numbers and stories, to demonstrate how far we are from making the internet multilingual. We also hope to offer some possibilities for doing more to create the multilingual internet we want. This research needs the experiences and expertise of people who think about these issues of language online from different perspectives. Read the Call here and share your submission by September 2, 2019.
Located in
RAW
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State of the Internet's Languages 2020: Announcing selected contributions!
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by
Puthiya Purayil Sneha
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published
Nov 01, 2019
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last modified
Nov 01, 2019 06:12 PM
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filed under:
Language,
Digital Knowledge,
Research,
Featured,
State of the Internet's Languages,
Digital Humanities,
Researchers at Work,
Decolonizing the Internet's Languages
In response to our call for contributions and reflections on ‘Decolonising the Internet’s Languages’ in August, we are delighted to announce that we received 50 submissions, in over 38 languages! We are so overwhelmed and grateful for the interest and support of our many communities around the world; it demonstrates how critical this effort is for all of us. From all these extraordinary offerings, we have selected nine that we will invite and support the contributors to expand further.
Located in
RAW
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User Experiences of Digital Financial Risks and Harms
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by
Amrita Sengupta, Chiara Furtado, Garima Agrawal, Nishkala Sekhar, Puthiya Purayil Sneha, and Yesha Tshering Paul
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published
Dec 15, 2023
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last modified
Dec 22, 2023 04:05 PM
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filed under:
Financial Technology,
Financial Platforms,
Digital Financial Harms,
Researchers at Work,
Featured,
RAW Blog,
Accessibility,
Digital Lending,
RAW Research,
Research,
Homepage
The reach and use of digital financial services has risen in recent years without a commensurate increase in digital literacy and access. Through this project, supported by a grant from Google(.)org, we will examine the landscape of potential risks and harms posed by digital financial services, and the disproportionate risk that information asymmetry and barriers to access pose for users, especially certain marginalised communities.
Located in
RAW
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Unpacking Algorithmic Infrastructures: Mapping the Data Supply Chain in the Healthcare Industry in India
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by
Amrita Sengupta, Chetna V. M., Pallavi Bedi, Puthiya Purayil Sneha, Shweta Mohandas and Yatharth
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published
Dec 22, 2023
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last modified
Jan 05, 2024 02:38 AM
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filed under:
Health Tech,
RAW Blog,
Research,
Data Protection,
Healthcare,
Researchers at Work,
Artificial Intelligence
The Unpacking Algorithmic Infrastructures project, supported by a grant from the Notre Dame-IBM Tech Ethics Lab, aims to study the Al data supply chain infrastructure in healthcare in India, and aims to critically analyse auditing frameworks that are utilised to develop and deploy AI systems in healthcare. It will map the prevalence of Al auditing practices within the sector to arrive at an understanding of frameworks that may be developed to check for ethical considerations - such as algorithmic bias and harm within healthcare systems, especially against marginalised and vulnerable populations.
Located in
RAW
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India’s proposed new internet bill is as repressive as the worst of Chinese laws
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by
Nishant Shah
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published
Feb 04, 2019
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filed under:
Researchers at Work
The proposed new internet bill is as repressive as the worst of Chinese restrictions. The new intermediaries liability and content monitoring act that will become a law in February, unquestioningly expand the remit of the government.
Located in
RAW
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January 2019 Newsletter
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by
Prasad Krishna
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published
Jan 31, 2019
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last modified
Mar 03, 2019 04:34 PM
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filed under:
Researchers at Work,
Internet Governance,
Access to Knowledge
The Centre for Internet & Society (CIS) welcomes you to the first issue of its e-Newsletter for 2019.
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About Us
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Newsletters
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Manuel Beltrán - Institute of Human Obsolescence - Cartographies of Dispossession
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by
Sumandro Chattapadhyay
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published
Apr 01, 2019
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last modified
Apr 01, 2019 08:00 AM
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filed under:
Practice,
Art,
RAW Events,
Digital Labour,
Researchers at Work,
Event
Join us at the Delhi office of CIS on Thursday, April 4, at 5 pm for a talk by Manuel Beltrán, founder of the Institute of Human Obsolescence (IoHO), which explores the future of labour and the changing relationship between humans and machine. Cartographies of Dispossession (CoD), their current project at IoHO, explores the forms of systematic data dispossession that different humans are subject to, and investigates how data becomes both the means of production as much as the means of governance.
Located in
RAW
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Presentation at Global Digital Humanities Symposium
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by
Puthiya Purayil Sneha
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published
Mar 22, 2019
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last modified
May 03, 2019 09:41 AM
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filed under:
Researchers at Work
P.P. Sneha gave a virtual presentation of her work on digital cultural archives at the Global Digital Humanities Symposium organised by Michigan State University on March 21-22, 2019.
Located in
RAW
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Locating the Mobile: An Ethnographic Investigation into Locative Media in Melbourne, Bangalore and Shanghai
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by
Larissa Hjorth and Genevieve Bell
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published
Mar 23, 2012
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last modified
Oct 24, 2015 01:41 PM
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filed under:
Net Cultures,
Researchers at Work,
Research
From Google maps, geoweb, GPS (Global Positioning System), geotagging, Foursquare and Jie Pang, locative media is becoming an integral part of the smartphone (and shanzhai or copy) phenomenon. For a growing generation of users, locative media is already an everyday practice.
Located in
RAW
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Blogs
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Locating the Mobile