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18.12.2024
32 Minuten
Your hosts Paula Bialski, Andreas Bischof and Mace Ojala look
back on three seasons of this podcast panel format. How did this
get started, how does it work, and what has been fun so
far?
This episode is a live recording from Hacker Cultures! The
Podcast Panel Season 3 panel organized at the European
Association for the study of Science and Technology and Society
for Social Studies of Science EASST/4S 2024
conference in Amsterdam on 2024-07-16. The hosts are Paula
Bialski, Andreas Bischof and Mace Ojala. Audio production by
Heights Beats at Hotmilk Records, who also produced the theme
track. We are grateful for Chemnitz University of Technology for
funding.
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18.12.2024
19 Minuten
Who is operating the Tor network, and why? Victoria Neumann from
Lancaster University tells us.
Tor (acronym for The Onion Router) is one of the most famous
projects focusing on online privacy and anonymity. Using the Tor
Browser, one can access clear net websites without being tracked
or traced or so-called "onion services (formerly hidden
services)," which can only be accessed via the Tor network.
Nowadays widely known for darknet marketplaces, it is also used
by journalists, human rights and digital activists, spies,
hackers, and ordinary people to circumvent state surveillance,
internet blockades and to stay anonymous.
Originating from military research, the Tor Project is non-profit
and open source after being taken over by hacktivists in the in
the early 00s. Today the network has 6,000+ volunteer-run nodes
called "relays." When the network began, relay operators were
friends, colleagues, and collaborators of the original Tor
developers. Over the years, grown beyond trusted/known
collaborators to thousands of people and organizations, many of
whom the Tor Project does not know. This has led both to a more
diverse and hence resilient network, but it also made it easier
for malicious actors to join.
Who are the volunteers behind the network and what motivates
them? Very little research has been conducted so far focusing on
Tor relay operators. We conducted two surveys and 20 interviews
to find out more about demographics, privacy values, trust,
network health and community.
This episode is a live recording from Hacker Cultures! The
Podcast Panel Season 3 panel organized at the European
Association for the study of Science and Technology and Society
for Social Studies of Science EASST/4S 2024
conference in Amsterdam on 2024-07-16. The hosts are Paula
Bialski, Andreas Bischof and Mace Ojala. Audio production by
Heights Beats at Hotmilk Records, who also produced the theme
track. We are grateful for Chemnitz University of Technology for
funding.
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Episode 3 (2024) Sylvain Besençon: Information security and the care of open cryptography technology
18.12.2024
23 Minuten
We are happy to hear back from Sylvain Besençon from University
of Fribourg, who wraps up research we learned about in 2020 about
caring for open source cryptography.
This paper suggests a shift from information security as a matter
of war to security as matter of care. Based on my 6-year long PhD
research among a community of open source hackers and developers
maintaining a crypto protocol, this paper deconstructs what I
call the “warlike crypto imaginary” that often represents
cryptography as a fascinating totem pole in the form of a blue
lock. This paper tackles the rhetoric of war and violence that
shapes our binary understanding of information security and
proposes the work of making and unmaking security as a question
of care, collaboration and negotiations. In other words, rather
than portraying hackers and security experts as lonely teenagers
wearing hoodies and deemed to break things, brute force
passwords, and penetrate systems, this paper looks at how
security people keep collaborating one with another to fixing
things that never cease to break.
Inspired by the feminist STS field, I look for a “different
voice” (Gilligan, 1982) through an ethnographic case study
focused on the maintenance of an old crypto protocol called
Pretty Good Privacy (PGP). PGP was developed in 1991 by an
antinuclear activist to protect emails from being spied on. Since
then, and despite many controversies, different generations of
coders have been maintaining this piece of technology for more
than three decades. Their persistent, engaged and humble
tinkering let me identify values that steer the community towards
careful and dedicated practices of maintenance, long-term
collaborations, negotiations of compromises, and affective
attachment to the technology.
This episode is a live recording from Hacker Cultures! The
Podcast Panel Season 3 panel organized at the European
Association for the study of Science and Technology and Society
for Social Studies of Science EASST/4S 2024
conference in Amsterdam on 2024-07-16. The hosts are Paula
Bialski, Andreas Bischof and Mace Ojala. Audio production by
Heights Beats at Hotmilk Records, who also produced the theme
track. We are grateful for Chemnitz University of Technology for
funding.
Mehr
18.12.2024
22 Minuten
Janis Lena Meißner from The Vienna University of Technology
shares stories and insights from practical work with people who
are usually not included in the Maker movement.
Despite its promises of technology democratization, the Maker
Movement still lacks diversity. To address this disparity, we
might deliberately turn to „unexpected users“ of maker tools and
reimagine core hacker values for subversive practices together
with them.
This episode is about hacking the ways in which Making is usually
imagined to be performed. It offers reflections on the
“Empowering Hacks” project, my long-term collaboration with two
men with disabilities on fabricating their own ideas. Our project
began with the mission “to produce disabled tools at a cheaper
rate but with a more customisable outcome” and so we collaborated
on designing, modelling and 3D-printing “wheelchair golfballs”
and other assistive gadgets. Externally, “Empowering Hacks” was
motivated by creating positive change for others. Internally, our
processes of mentoring and production were configured around the
interests and social roles of my collaborators. Disability was
not perceived as an impediment but as an opportunity to
reimagining Making practices.
My reflections are rooted in a key distinction between “Hacking”
and “Making”. While Making encompasses a wide range of practices
using digital fabrication tools, Hacking denotes self-directed
technological action for chosen purposes. In “Empowering Hacks”,
my collaborators did not identify as makers, however as
makers-in-the-making they had freedom to figure out their own
ways to make. Their hacking became a performative and material
challenge to ableist assumptions about disabled people not being
able to be designers or creators. The dialectic podcast is an
opportunity to further unpack the subversive capacities of
reimagining making through hacking.
This episode is a live recording from Hacker Cultures! The
Podcast Panel Season 3 panel organized at the European
Association for the study of Science and Technology and Society
for Social Studies of Science EASST/4S 2024
conference in Amsterdam on 2024-07-16. The hosts are Paula
Bialski, Andreas Bischof and Mace Ojala. Audio production by
Heights Beats at Hotmilk Records, who also produced the theme
track. We are grateful for Chemnitz University of Technology for
funding.
Mehr
18.12.2024
20 Minuten
In this episode we hear Charles Berret from Linköping University
characterize the cunning and craftiness via a concept from
ancient Greek.
The concept of 'metis' offers an especially effective means of
characterizing the intelligence and technical practice of
hackers. Metis, for the ancient Greeks, denoted the
improvisational craftiness of a figure like Odysseus, whose
intuitive understanding of the regularities in a particular
system or situation facilitates acts of subversive cleverness.
After all, it was Odysseus who devised the Trojan Horse, perhaps
the first hack recorded in Western literature, and later the
namesake of an actual variety of malware. This is a revealing
affinity, and the connections between metis and hacking run deep.
Metis is an especially useful concept for understanding hackers
because it is a form of practical knowledge distinct from
episteme and techne. Whereas episteme denotes the pursuit of
factual regularities in the natural world, and techne implies the
application of episteme for engineering, craft, and material
production, both episteme and techne are inherently systematic.
In contrast, the essential characteristic of metis is its
subversion of systems and regularities, finding surprising
sources of flexibility where others see only patterns and
rigidity. To view hackers through the lens of metis also helps
explain why hacking thrives in settings characterized by what
James C. Scott calls "seeing like a state," that is, where an
excessively schematic reduction of a system's natural complexity
leads to the concealment of idiosyncrasies that become ideal
sites for a hacker's exploitation. Developing an account of metis
offers a new framework to explain why hackers thrive in
infrapolitical practices that are inherently opposed to seeing
like a state.
This episode is a live recording from Hacker Cultures! The
Podcast Panel Season 3 panel organized at the European
Association for the study of Science and Technology and Society
for Social Studies of Science EASST/4S 2024
conference in Amsterdam on 2024-07-16. The hosts are Paula
Bialski, Andreas Bischof and Mace Ojala. Audio production by
Heights Beats at Hotmilk Records, who also produced the theme
track. We are grateful for Chemnitz University of Technology for
funding.
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Über diesen Podcast
As Covid-19 turned most conferences virtual, so to combat
Zoom-fatigue, at 4S/EASST 2020 we decided to try another format
and turn a conference session into a podcast. Among hundreds of
panels, papers and sessions, our panels rounded up all sorts of
researchers who study what it is to be a hacker, and what
hacking, programming, tinkering and working with computers is all
about. We have continued biennally for full three seasons.
The newest season comes to you from the 2024 join Society for
Social Studies of Science/European Association for the Study of
Science and Technology conference (4S/EASST) in Amsterdam, titled
"Making and Doing Transformations".
The second series was from EASST 2022 titled "The Politics of
Technoscientific Futures" held in Madrid in July 2022. Our panel
was titled "Hacking Everything. The cultures and politics of
hackers and software workers". The first series was from 4S/EASST
in "virtual Prague" in August 2020, titled "Locating and Timing
Matters: Significance and agency of STS in emerging
worlds".
We the hosts are Paula Bialski, who is an Associate Professor at
the University of St. Gallen, Andreas Bischof who is a Research
Group Leader at Chemnitz University of Technology, and Mace
Ojala, a PhD scholar at Ruhr-University Bochum. Audio production
by Heights Beats at Hotmilk Records. The theme track of first
series is "Rocky" by Paula & Karol. Heights Beats produced
the theme track of the second series. Funding for the editing of
this first series comes from University of St. Gallen, the second
from Chemnitz University of Technology.
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