From 5bc4d82f43a5b06ee4891e2b1ae244e8c62afe14 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: ccl Date: Mon, 12 Feb 2024 13:54:32 +0100 Subject: [PATCH] Update 'content/2024/infra-resistance-0224-EN.md' --- content/2024/infra-resistance-0224-EN.md | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/content/2024/infra-resistance-0224-EN.md b/content/2024/infra-resistance-0224-EN.md index 2c65f807..1cb81f3b 100644 --- a/content/2024/infra-resistance-0224-EN.md +++ b/content/2024/infra-resistance-0224-EN.md @@ -23,7 +23,7 @@ Cloud infrastructures are deeply involved in military and oppressive operations **Constant** is a non-profit organization based in Brussels since 1997 and active in the fields of art, media, and technology. -**Digital Discomfort Working Group** undertakes mundane but attentive experiments to collectively study non-Eurocentric/white origins of computational paradigms and to propose instead trans★feminist infrastructural entanglements, anti-extractivist connecting cultures, and intersectional notions of hosting and hostility in the online structures we inhabit. +**Digital Discomfort Working Group** learns, dialogues, and experiments with ways to refuse compliance with that which could be referred to as “totalitarian innovation.” From within and beyond specific (infra)structures, Digital Discomfort Working Group's drive is to operate as an agitator of disobedient, practice-based, para-academic research on, across, and despite the techno-colonial establishment of Big Tech. Digital Discomfort Working Group undertakes mundane but attentive experiments to collectively study computational paradigms and to propose instead trans*feminist infrastructural entanglements, anti-extractivist connecting cultures, and intersectional notions of hosting and hostility in the online structures we inhabit. **TITiPI** is a trans-practice gathering of activists, artists, engineers and theorists initiated by Miriyam Aouragh, Seda Gürses, Helen Pritchard and Femke Snelting. TITiPI convene communities to articulate, activate and re-imagine together what computational technologies in the “public interest” might be when “public interest” is always in-the-making.