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Cost for the printed edition is €12,- plus shipping.
The ThingsCon report The State of Responsible IoT is an annual collection of essays by experts from the ThingsCon community. You can find all other year’s issues in our publications section.
The State of the Responsible IoT – Small Escapes from Surveillance Capitalism
2019 is the year where the term “Surveillance Capitalism” really took root. In its essence, it describes the current economic model of technology companies that make revenue by surveilling our online lives, gathering data that is processed and transformed to result in targeted advertising packages. The better the data, the more likely it is that we do what is expected of us: buy what we are shown. Surveillance Capitalism is therefore not only an economic model, it is a form of control over our behaviour. The Internet of Things plays a crucial role, as it enables to not only track our behaviour in realm of browsers and apps, but in the physical world through tangible connected devices that we invite into our lives.
With ThingsCon we have devoted ourselves to working towards a “responsible IoT”. But what does that look like in the light of Surveillance Capitalism? With this years “Responsible IoT Report – RioT for short – we wanted to find out.
We have asked friends and collaborators, new and old, to reflect on this, and showcase how we can resist Surveillance Capitalism today. In the report we present a wide variety of contributions: from reflections Trustable Technology for cities, on the power and responsibility of Design to escape surveillance, to descriptions of projects that point the way and help us find out: in which direction is the responsible IoT?
Get the report
“The State of the Responsible IoT 2019” report is available online and in a limited print edition. You can download it here. If you want a printed version send us an email with the amount you would like to order. Cost is €12,- plus shipping. The primary release is on thingscon.org and a secondary, later release on medium.com
Articles and authors include:
Editorial by Andrea Krajewski and Max Krüger
Whose Interest Should Technology Serve? by Kasia Odrozek
Ushahidi: Responsibility for Human Rights by Eriol Fox
Balancing Urban Innovation with a Responsible Approach to the Internet of Things: The Case of Limerick by Helena Fitzgerald, Gerard Walsh, Gabriela Avram, Stephen Kinsella, Javier Buron Garcia
YOU by Elina Faber, Sarah Lerch, Jan Meininghaus, Domenika Tomasovic
Zuversicht – Challenging the Narrative by Philipp Kaltofen, Julia Metzmaier, Anne Schneider
Design Me a Pause Button, Graceful and Dignified by Irina Shklovski
Sex and Magic in Service of Surveillance Capitalism by Namrata Primlani
The Alienating Consequences of Things That Predict by Iskander Smit
Surveillance (Alternatives), by Design by Heather Wiltse
Trusted Technology, from your Living Room to your City by Peter Bihr
Civil Hack Back: Hack, Tweak, Delete Your Digital CV! by Timo Jakobi