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OEB 2015 - Opening Plenary - Cory Doctorow

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    (Cory Doctorow) Thank you very much
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    So I'd like to start with something of a
    benediction or permission.
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    I am one of nature's fast talkers
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    and many of you are not
    native English speakers, or
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    maybe not accustomed
    to my harsh Canadian accent
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    in addition I've just come in
    from Australia
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    and so like many of you I am horribly
    jetlagged and have drunkenough coffee
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    this morning to kill a rhino.
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    When I used to be at the United Nations
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    I was known as the scourge of the
    simultaneous translation core
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    I would stand up and speak
    as slowly as I could
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    and turn around, and there they
    would be in their boots doing this
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    (laughter)
    When I start to speak too fast,
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    this is the universal symbol --
    my wife invented it --
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    for "Cory, you are talking too fast".
    Please, don't be shy.
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    So, I'm a parent , like many of you
    and I'm like I'm sure all of you
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    who are parents, parenting takes my ass
    all the time.
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    And there are many regrets I have
    about the mere seven and half years
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    that I've been a parent
    but none ares so keenly felt
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    as my regrets over what's happened
    when I've been wandering
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    around the house and seen my
    daughter working on something
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    that was beyond her abilities, that was
    right at the edge of what she could do
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    and where she was doing something
    that she didn't have competence in yet
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    and you know it's that amazing thing
    to see that frowning concentration,
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    tongue stuck out: as a parent, your
    heart swells with pride
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    and you can't help but go over
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    and sort of peer over their shoulder
    what they are doing
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    and those of you who are parents know
    what happens when you look too closely
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    at someone who is working
    beyond the age of their competence.
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    They go back to doing something
    they're already good at.
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    You interrupt a moment
    of genuine learning
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    and you replace it with
    a kind of embarrassment
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    about what you're good at
    and what you're not.
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    So, it matters a lot that our schools are
    increasingly surveilled environments,
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    environments in which everything that
    our kids do is watched and recorded.
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    Because when you do that, you interfere
    with those moments of real learning.
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    Our ability to do things that we are not
    good at yet, that we are not proud of yet,
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    is negatively impacted
    by that kind of scrutiny.
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    And that scrutiny comes
    from a strange place.
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    We have decided that there are
    some programmatic means
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    by which we can find all the web page
    children shouldn't look at
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    and we will filter our networks
    to be sure that they don't see them.
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    Anyone who has ever paid attention
    knows that this doesn't work.
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    There are more web pages
    that kids shouldn't look at
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    than can ever be cataloged,
    and any attempt to catalog them
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    will always catch pages that kids
    must be looking at.
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    Any of you who have ever taught
    a unit on reproductive health
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    know the frustration of trying
    to get round a school network.
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    Now, this is done in the name of
    digital protection
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    but it flies in the face of digital
    literacy and of real learning.
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    Because the only way to stop kids
    from looking at web pages
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    they shouldn't be looking at
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    is to take all of the clicks that they
    make, all of the messages that they send,
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    all of their online activity
    and offshore it to a firm
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    that has some nonsensically arrived at
    list of the bad pages.
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    And so, what we are doing is that we're
    exfiltrating all of our students' data
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    to unknown third parties.
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    Now, most of these firms,
    their primary business is
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    in serving the education sector.
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    Most of them service
    the government sector.
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    The primarily service governments in
    repressive autocratic regimes.
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    They help them make sure that
    their citizens aren't looking at
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    Amnesty International web pages.
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    They repackage those tools
    and sell them to our educators.
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    So we are offshoring our children's clicks
    to war criminals.
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    And what our kids do, we know,
    is they just get around it,
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    because it's not hard to get around it.
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    You know, never underestimate the power
    of a kid who is time-rich and cash-poor
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    to get around our
    technological blockades.
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    But when they do this, they don't acquire
    the kind of digital literacy
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    that we want them to do, they don't
    acquire real digital agency
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    and moreover, they risk exclusion
    and in extreme cases,
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    they risk criminal prosecution.
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    So what if instead, those of us who are
    trapped in this system of teaching kids
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    where we're required to subject them
    to this kind of surveillance
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    that flies in the face
    of their real learning,
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    what if instead, we invented
    curricular units
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    that made them real first class
    digital citizens,
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    in charge of trying to influence
    real digital problems?
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    Like what if we said to them:
    "We want you to catalog the web pages
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    that this vendor lets through
    that you shouldn't be seeing.
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    We want you to catalog those pages that
    you should be seeing, that are blocked.
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    We want you to go and interview
    every teacher in the school
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    about all those lesson plans that were
    carefully laid out before lunch
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    with a video and a web page,
    and over lunch,
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    the unaccountable distance center
    blocked these critical resources
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    and left them handing out photographed
    worksheets in the afternoon
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    instead of the unit they prepared.
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    We want you to learn how to do the Freedom
    of Information Act's requests
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    and find out what your
    school authority is spending
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    to censor your internet access
    and surveil your activity.
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    We want you to learn to use the internet
    to research these companies and
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    we want you to present this
    to your parent-teacher association,
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    to your school authority,
    to your local newspaper."
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    Because that's the kind
    of digital literacy
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    that makes kids into first-class
    digital citizens,
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    that prepares them for a future
    in which they can participate fully
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    in a world that's changing.
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    Kids are the beta-testers
    of the surveillance state.
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    The path of surveillance technology
    starts with prisoners,
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    moves to asylum seekers,
    people in mental institutions
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    and then to its first non-incarcerated
    population: children
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    and then moves to blue-collar workers,
    government workers
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    and white-collar workers.
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    And so, what we do to kids today
    is what we did to prisoners yesterday
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    and what we're going to be doing
    to you tomorrow.
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    And so it matters, what we teach our kids.
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    If you want to see where this goes, this
    is a kid named Blake Robbins
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    and he attended Lower Merion High School
    in Lower Merion Pennsylvania
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    outside f Philadelphia.
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    It's the most affluent school district
    in America, so affluent
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    that all the kids were issued Macbooks
    at the start of the year
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    and they had to do their homework on
    their Macbooks,
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    they had to bring them to school every day
    and bring them home every night.
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    And the Macbooks had been fitted with
    Laptop Theft Recovery Software,
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    which is fancy word for a rootkit, that
    let the school administration
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    scovertly (check) operate the cameras
    and microphones on these computers
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    and harvest files off
    of their hard drives
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    view all their clicks, and so on.
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    Now Blake Robbins found out
    that the software existed
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    and how it was being used
    because he and the head teacher
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    had been knocking heads for years,
    since he first got into the school,
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    and one day, the head teacher
    summoned him to his office
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    and said: "Blake, I've got you now."
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    and handed him a print-out of Blake
    in his bedroom the night before,
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    taking what looked like a pill,
    and said: "You're taking drugs."
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    And Blake Robbins said: "That's a candy,
    it's a Mike and Ike candy, I take them --
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    I eat them when I'm studying.
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    How did you get a picture
    of me in my bedroom?"
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    This head teacher had taken
    over 6000 photos of Blake Robbins:
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    awake and asleep, dressed and undressed,
    in the presence of his family.
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    And in the ensuing lawsuit, the school
    settled for a large amount of money
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    and promised that
    they wouldn't do it again
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    without informing the students
    that it was going on.
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    And increasingly, the practice is now
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    that school administrations hand out
    laptops, because they're getting cheaper,
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    with exactly the same kind of software,
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    but they let the students know and t
    hey find that that works even better
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    at curbing the students' behavior,
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    because the students know that
    they're always on camera.
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    Now, the surveillance state is moving
    from kids to the rest of the world.
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    It's metastasizing.
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    Our devices are increasingly designed
    to treat us as attackers,
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    as suspicious parties
    who can't be trusted
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    because our devices' job is to do things
    that we don't want them to do.
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    Now that's not because the vendors
    who make our technology
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    want to spy on us necessarily,
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    but they want to take
    the ink-jet printer business model
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    and bring it into every other realm
    of the world.
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    So the ink-jet printer business model
    is where you sell someone a device
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    and then you get a continuing
    revenue stream from that device
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    by making sure that competitors can't make
    consumables or parts
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    or additional features
    or plugins for that device,
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    without paying rent
    to the original manufacturer.
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    And that allows you to maintain
    monopoly margins on your devices.
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    Now, in 1998, the American government
    passed a law called
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    the Digital Millennium Copyright Act,
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    in 2001 the European Union
    introduced its own version,
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    the European Union Copyright Directive.
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    And these two laws, along with laws
    all around the world,
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    in Australia, Canada and elsewhere.
    These laws prohibit removing digital laws
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    that are used to restrict
    access to copyrighted works
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    and they were original envisioned as a way
    of making sure that Europeans didn't
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    bring cheap DVDs in from America,
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    or making sure that Australians didn't
    mport cheap DVDs from China.
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    And so you have a digital work, a DVD,
    and it has a lock on it and to unlock it,
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    you have to buy an authorized player
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    and the player checks to make sure
    you are in region
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    and making your own player
    that doesn't make that check
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    is illegal because you'd have
    to remove the digital lock.
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    And that was the original intent,
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    it was to allow high rates to be
    maintained on removable media,
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    DVDs and other entertainment content.
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    But it very quickly spread
    into new rounds.
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    So, for example, auto manufacturers now
    lock up all of their cars' telemetry
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    with digital locks.
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    If you're a mechanic
    and want to fix a car,
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    you have to get a reader
    from the manufacturer
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    to make sure that you can
    see the telemetry
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    and know what parts to order
    and how to fix it.
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    And in order to get this reader,
    you have to promise the manufacturer
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    that you will only buy parts
    from that manufacturer
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    and not from third parties.
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    So the manufacturers can keep
    the repair costs high
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    and get a secondary revenue stream
    out of the cars.
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    This year, the Chrysler corporation filed
    comments with the US Copyright Office,
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    to say that they believed that
    this was the right way to do it
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    and that it should be a felony,
    punishable by 5 years in prison
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    and a $500'000 fine,
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    to change the locks on a car that you own,
    so that you can choose who fixes it.
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    It turned out that when they advertised
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    -- well, where is my slide here?
    Oh, there we go --
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    when they advertised that
    it wasn't your father's Oldsmobile,
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    they weren't speaking metaphorically,
    they really meant
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    that even though your father
    bought the Oldsmobile,
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    it remained their property in perpetuity.
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    And it's not just cars,
    it's every kind of device,
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    because every kind of device today
    has a computer in it.
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    The John Deer Company, the world's leading seller of heavy equipment
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    and agricultural equipment technologies,
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    they now view their tractors as
    information gathering platforms
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    and they view the people who use them
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    as the kind of inconvenient gut flora
    of their ecosystem.
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    So if you are a farmer
    and you own a John Deer tractor,
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    when you drive it around your fields,
    the torque centers on the wheels
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    conduct a centimeter-accurate soil
    density survey of your agricultural land.
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    That would be extremely useful to you
    when you're planting your seeds
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    but that data is not available to you
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    unless unless you remove the digital lock
    from your John Deer tractor
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    which again, is against the law
    everywhere in the world.
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    Instead, in order to get that data
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    you have to buy a bundle with seeds
    from Monsanto,
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    who are John Deer's seed partners.
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    John Deer then takes this data that they
    aggregate across whole regions
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    and they use it to gain insight
    into regional crop yields
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    That they use to play the futures market.
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    John Deer's tractors are really just
    a way of gathering information
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    and the farmers are secondary to it.
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    Just because you own it
    doesn't mean it's yours.
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    And it's not just the computers
    that we put our bodies into
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    that have this business model.
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    It's the computers that we put
    inside of our bodies.
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    If you're someone who is diabetic
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    and you're fitted with a continuous
    glucose-measuring insulin pump,
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    that insulin pump is designed
    with a digital log
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    that makes sure that your doctor
    can only use the manufacturer's software
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    to read the data coming off of it
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    and that software is resold
    on a rolling annual license
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    and it can't be just bought outright.
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    And the digital locks are also
    used to make sure
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    that you only buy the insulin
    that vendors approved
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    and not generic insulin
    that might be cheaper.
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    We've literally turned human beings
    into ink-jet printers.
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    Now, this has really deep implications
    beyond the economic implications.
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    Because the rules that prohibit
    breaking these digital locks
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    also prohibit telling people
    about flaws that programmers made
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    because if you know about a flaw
    that a programmer made,
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    you can use it to break the digital lock.
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    And that means that the errors,
    the vulnerabilities,
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    the mistakes in our devices, they fester
    in them, they go on and on and on
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    and our devices become these longlife
    reservoirs of digital pathogens.
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    And we've seen how that plays out.
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    One of the reasons that Volkswagen
    was able to get away
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    with their Diesel cheating for so long
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    is because no one could independently
    alter their firmware.
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    It's happening all over the place.
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    You may have seen --
    you may have seen this summer
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    that Chrysler had to recall
    1.4 million jeeps
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    because it turned out that they could be
    remotely controlled over the internet
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    while driving down a motorway
    and have their brakes and steering
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    commandeered by anyone, anywhere
    in the world, over the internet.
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    We only have one methodology
    for determining whether security works
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    and that's to submit it
    to public scrutiny,
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    to allow for other people to see
    what assumptions you've made.
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    Anyone can design a security system
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    that he himself can think
    of a way of breaking,
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    but all that means is that you've
    designed a security system
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    that works against people
    who are stupider than you.
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    And in this regard, security
    is no different
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    from any other kind of knowledge creation.
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    You know, before we had
    contemporary science and scholarship,
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    we had something that looked
    a lot like it, called alchemy.
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    And for 500 years, alchemists kept
    what they thought they knew a secret.
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    And that meant that every alchemist
    was capable of falling prey
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    to that most urgent of human frailties,
    which is our ability to fool ourselves.
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    And so, every alchemist discovered
    for himself in the hardest way possible
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    that drinking mercury was a bad idea.
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    We call that 500-year period the Dark Ages
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    and we call the moment at which
    they started publishing
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    and submitting themselves
    to adversarial peer review,
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    which is when your friends tell you
    about the mistakes that you've made
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    and your enemies call you an idiot
    for having made them,
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    we call that moment the Enlightenment.
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    Now, this has profound implications.
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    The restriction of our ability to alter
    the security of our devices
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    for our own surveillance society,
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    for our ability to be free people
    in society.
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    At the height of the GDR, in 1989,
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    the STASI had one snitch for every
    60 people in East Germany,
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    in order to surveil the entire country.
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    A couple of decades later, we found out
    through Edward Snowden
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    that the NSA was spying
    on everybody in the world.
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    And the ratio of people who work
    at the NSA to people they are spying on
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    is more like 1 in 10'000.
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    They've achieved a two and a half
    order of magnitude
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    productivity gain in surveillance.
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    And the way that they got there
    is in part by the fact that
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    we use devices that
    we're not allowed to alter,
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    that are designed to treat us as attackers
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    and that gather an enormous
    amount of information on us.
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    If the government told you that you're
    required to carry on
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    a small electronic rectangle that
    recorded all of your social relationships,
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    all of your movements,
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    all of your transient thoughts that
    you made known or ever looked up,
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    and would make that
    available to the state,
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    and you would have to pay for it,
    you would revolt.
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    But the phone companies have
    managed to convince us,
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    along with the mobile phone vendors,
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    that we should foot the bill
    for our own surveillance.
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    It's a bit like during
    the Cultural Revolution,
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    where, after your family members
    were executed,
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    they sent you a bill for the bullet.
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    So, this has big implications, as I said,
    for where we go as a society.
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    Because just as our kids have
    a hard time functioning
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    in the presence of surveillance,
    and learning,
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    and advancing their own knowledge,
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    we as a society have a hard time
    progressing
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    in the presence of surveillance.
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    In our own living memory, people who are
    today though of as normal and right
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    were doing something that
    a generation ago
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    would have been illegal
    and landed them in jail.
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    For example, you probably know someone
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    who's married to a partner
    of the same sex.
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    If you live in America, you may know
    someone who takes medical marijuana,
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    or if you live in the Netherlands.
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    And not that long ago, people
    who undertook these activities
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    could have gone to jail for them,
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    could have faced enormous
    social exclusion for them.
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    The way that we got from there to here
    was by having a private zone,
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    a place where people weren't surveilled,
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    in which they could advance
    their interest ideas,
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    do things that were thought of as
    socially unacceptable
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    and slowly change our social attitudes.
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    And in ........ (check) few things
    that in 50 years,
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    your grandchildren will sit around
    the Christmas table, in 2065, and say:
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    "How was it, grandma,
    how was it, grandpa,
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    that in 2015, you got it all right,
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    and we haven't had
    any social changes since then?"
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    Then you have to ask yourself
    how in a world,
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    in which we are all
    under continuous surveillance,
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    we are going to find a way
    to improve this.
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    So, our kids need ICT literacy,
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    but ICT literacy isn't just typing skills
    or learning how to use PowerPoing.
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    It's learning how to think critically
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    about how they relate
    to the means of information,
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    about whether they are its masters
    or servants.
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    Our networks are not
    the most important issue that we have.
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    There are much more important issues
    in society and in the world today.
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    The future of the internet is
    way less important
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    than the future of our climate,
    the future of gender equity,
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    the future of racial equity,
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    the future of the wage gap
    and the wealth gap in the world,
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    but everyone of those fights is going
    to be fought and won or lost
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    on the internet:
    it's our most foundational fight
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    So weakened (check) computers
    can make us more free
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    or they can take away our freedom.
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    It all comes down to how we regulate them
    and how we use them.
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    And it's our job, as people who are
    training the next generation,
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    and whose next generation
    is beta-testing
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    the surveillance technology
    that will be coming to us,
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    it's our job to teach them to seize
    the means of information,
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    to make themselves self-determinant
    in the way that they use their networks
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    and to find ways to show them
    how to be critical and how to be smart
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    and how to be, above all, subversive
    and how to use the technology around them.
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    Thank you. (18:49)
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    (Applause)
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    (Moderator) Cory, thank you very much
    indeed.
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    (Doctorow) Thank you
    (Moderator) And I've got a bundle
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    of points which you've stimulated
    from many in the audience, which sent --
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    (Doctorow) I'm shocked to hear that
    that was at all controversial,
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    but go on.
    (Moderator) I didn't say "controversial",
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    you stimulated thinking, which is great.
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    But a lot of them resonate around
    violation of secrecy and security.
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    And this, for example,
    from Anneke Burgess (check)
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    "Is there a way for students
    to protect themselves
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    from privacy violations by institutions
    they are supposed to trust."
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    I think this is probably a question
    William Golding (check) as well,
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    someone who is a senior figure
    in a major university, but
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    this issue of privacy violations and trust.
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    (Doctorow) Well, I think that computers
    have a curious dual nature.
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    So on the one hand, they do expose us
    to an enormous amount of scrutiny,
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    depending on how they are configured.
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    But on the other hand, computers
    have brought new powers to us
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    that are literally new
    on the face of the world, right?
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    We have never had a reality in which
    normal people could have secrets
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    from powerful people.
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    But with the computer in your pocket,
    with that,
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    you can encrypt a message so thoroughly
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    that if every hydrogen atom in the
    universe were turned into a computer
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    and it did nothing until
    the heat death of the universe,
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    but try to guess what your key was,
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    we would run out of universe
    before we ran out of possible keys.
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    So, computers do give us
    the power to have secrets.
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    The problem is that institutions
    prohibit the use of technology
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    that allow you to take back
    your own privacy.
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    It's funny, right? Because we take kids
    and we say to them:
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    "Your privacy is like your virginity:
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    once you've lost it,
    you'll never get it back.
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    Watch out what you're
    putting on Facebook"
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    -- and I think they should watch
    what they're putting on Facebook,
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    I'm a Facebook vegan, I don't even --
    I don't use it, but we say:
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    "Watch what you're putting on Facebook,
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    don't send out dirty pictures
    of yourself on SnapChat."
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    All good advice.
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    But we do it while we are taking away
    all the private information
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    that they have, all of their privacy
    and all of their agency.
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    You know, if a parent says to a kid:
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    "You mustn't smoke
    because you'll get sick"
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    and the parent says it
    while lighting a new cigarette
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    off the one that she's just put down
    in the ashtray,
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    the kid knows that what you're doing
    matters more than what you're saying.
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    (Moderator) The point is deficit of trust.
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    It builds in the kind of work that
    David has been doing as well,
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    this deficit of trust and privacy.
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    And there is another point here:
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    "Is the battle for privacy already lost?
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    Are we already too comfortable
    with giving away our data?"
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    (Doctorow) No, I don't think so at all.
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    In fact, I think that if anything,
    we've reached
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    peak indifference to surveillance, right? (21:25)
Title:
OEB 2015 - Opening Plenary - Cory Doctorow
Description:

Cory Doctorow - Writer, Blogger, Activist - USA

The Opening Plenary session of OEB 2015 looked at the challenges of modernity and identify how people, organisations, institutions and societies can make technology and knowledge work together to accelerate the shift to a new age of opportunity.

More info: http://bit.ly/1lugQWX

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Captions Requested
Duration:
29:46

English subtitles

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