[spectre] Fwd: Conf. 'Open Knowledge, Free Culture' Phnom Penh

Andreas Broeckmann ab at mikro.in-berlin.de
Mon Dec 21 16:33:45 CET 2009


Date: Mon, 21 Dec 2009 22:05:34 +0700
From: tilman baumgärtel <mail at tilmanbaumgaertel.net>
Subject: CONFERENCE “OPEN KNOWLEDGE, FREE 
CULTURE" at Royal University of Phnom Penh, 
Department of Media and Communication

“OPEN KNOWLEDGE, FREE CULTURE"
A Conference on the Sharing of Knowledge


The conference is sponsored by Deutscher 
Akademischer Austauschdienst (German Academic 
Exchange Service, DAAD).


I. TOPIC OF THE CONFERENCE

The rise of "free software" in the last couple of 
years is one of the most significant paradigm 
shifts of the "information society" in the early 
21st century. Instead of guarding their 
intellectual property rights, the developers of 
open source software freely share and distribute 
their creations, and have even developed business 
models out of it.

They are part of a larger "culture of sharing" 
that extends beyond the realm of computer 
software. Taking advantage of the capability to 
digital media to share information 
internationally and for negligible costs, this 
kind of "free culture" has given developing 
countries like Cambodia access to tremendous 
sources of information and "free culture".

This conference will discuss the cultural and 
political implication of the "Open-Source"-model 
from the point of view of a developing country. 
It will question the effectiveness of the 
international regime of Intellectual Property 
Rights (IPR) and Copyright, that often interferes 
with the free proliferation of knowledge and look 
at alternatives to the current status quo in 
terms of IPR.

The event brings together scholars and experts 
from Cambodia, Indonesia, Germany and the 
Philippines to look at a number of cultural 
practices that are based on the free sharing of 
information in such different fields as music, 
computer software, and different online media.

Please see the attached program for details.



II. CONFERENCE PROGRAM

Location: Royal University of Phnom Penh, 
Institute of Foreign Languages, Meeting Hall, IFL 
campus, Russian Blvd, Toul Kork Phnom Penh 
Cambodia
Date: January 8th, 2010, 8:00 AM - 12:00 NN
Admission is free


7:30 - 8:00 AM
Registration


8:00 - 8:15 AM
Welcoming Remarks from Hannelore Bossmann, 
Deutscher Akademischer Austauschdienst, 
Ho-Chi-Minh-City
Dr. Tilman Baumgärtel (DAAD), lecturer, 
Department of Media and Communication, Royal 
University Phnom Penh


8:15 - 10:00 AM

PANEL I

Moderator: Dr. Tilman Baumgärtel (DAAD), 
Department of Media and Communication, Royal 
University Phnom Penh

Roberto Verzola, University of the Philippines
Under-mining Abundance in the Information Sector (Keynote)

Norbert Klein, The Open Institute, Phnom Penh
Open Source and Open Knowledge

Tharum Bun, blogger, contributor to Global Voices 
Online, Asian Correspondent and the Phnom Penh 
Post
Blogging in Cambodia


10:00 AM - 10:20 AM

Coffee Break


10:20 AM - 12:00 NN

PANEL II

Moderator: Tieng Sopheak Vichea, Acting Head, 
Department of Media and Communication, Royal 
University Phnom Penh

Maria Mangahas, PhD., Associate Professor, 
Department of Anthropology, University of the 
Philippines
The case of 'Hello Garci' and other digitized 
'scandals!': ICT and video anarchy in the 
Philippine context

Yuka Narendra, Independent Researcher and Musician, Jakarta
Tales from the Phonographic Oceans: The Story of 
"Yess Records", 1977-1988, Bandung, Indonesia

Dr. Lilawati Kurnia, Faculty of Humanities, Universitas Indonesia
Can We Own Music? Technology and Inequalities in 
Case of Dangdut Music in Indonesia



Contact:
Dr. Tilman Baumgärtel (DAAD)
Department of Media and Communication
Royal University of Phnom Penh
Russian Federation Boulevard,
Tel/Fax: 855-23-884 408
Toul Kork, Phnom Penh, Cambodia
mail at tilmanbaumgaertel.net


--
Dr. Tilman Baumgärtel
Check out my blog:
THE INSTITUTE OF SOUTHEAST ASIAN FILM STUDIES
The Cinema of the Philippines, Thailand, 
Indonesia, Singapore, Malaysia, Vietnam, Cambodia 
et al
http://southeastasiancinema.wordpress.com




“OPEN KNOWLEDGE, FREE CULTURE"
A Conference on the Sharing of Knowledge

Contact:
Dr. Tilman Baumgärtel (DAAD)
Department of Media and Communication
Royal University of Phnom Penh
Russian Federation Boulevard,
Tel/Fax: 855-23-884 408
Toul Kork, Phnom Penh, Cambodia
mail at tilmanbaumgaertel.net

The conference is sponsored by Deutscher 
Akademischer Austauschdienst (German Academic 
Exchange Service, DAAD).


I. TOPIC OF THE CONFERENCE

The rise of "free software" in the last couple of 
years is one of the most significant paradigm 
shifts of the "information society" in the early 
21st century. Instead of guarding their 
intellectual property rights, the developers of 
open source software freely share and distribute 
their creations, and have even developed business 
models out of it.

They are part of a larger "culture of sharing" 
that extends beyond the realm of computer 
software. Taking advantage of the capability to 
digital media to share information 
internationally and for negligible costs, this 
kind of "free culture" has given developing 
countries like Cambodia access to tremendous 
sources of information and "free culture".

This conference will discuss the cultural and 
political implication of the "Open-Source"-model 
from the point of view of a developing country. 
It will question the effectiveness of the 
international regime of Intellectual Property 
Rights (IPR) and Copyright, that often interferes 
with the free proliferation of knowledge and look 
at alternatives to the current status quo in 
terms of IPR.

The event brings together scholars and experts 
from Cambodia, Indonesia, Germany and the 
Philippines to look at a number of cultural 
practices that are based on the free sharing of 
information in such different fields as music, 
computer software, and different online media.


II. CONFERENCE PROGRAM

Location: Royal University of Phnom Penh, 
Institute of Foreign Languages, Meeting Hall, IFL 
campus, Russian Blvd, Toul Kork Phnom Penh 
Cambodia
Date: January 8th, 2010, 8:00 AM - 12:00 NN
Admission is free


7:30 - 8:00 AM
Registration


8:00 - 8:15 AM
Welcoming Remarks from Hannelore Bossmann, 
Deutscher Akademischer Austauschdienst, 
Ho-Chi-Minh-City
Dr. Tilman Baumgärtel (DAAD), lecturer, 
Department of Media and Communication, Royal 
University Phnom Penh


8:15 - 10:00 AM

PANEL I

Moderator: Dr. Tilman Baumgärtel (DAAD), 
Department of Media and Communication, Royal 
University Phnom Penh

Roberto Verzola, University of the Philippines
Under-mining Abundance in the Information Sector (Keynote)

Norbert Klein, The Open Institute, Phnom Penh
Open Source and Open Knowledge

Tharum Bun, blogger, contributor to Global Voices 
Online, Asian Correspondent and the Phnom Penh 
Post
Blogging in Cambodia


10:00 AM - 10:20 AM

Coffee Break


10:20 AM - 12:00 NN

PANEL II

Moderator: Tieng Sopheak Vichea, Acting Head, 
Department of Media and Communication, Royal 
University Phnom Penh

Maria Mangahas, PhD., Associate Professor, 
Department of Anthropology, University of the 
Philippines
The case of 'Hello Garci' and other digitized 
'scandals!': ICT and video anarchy in the 
Philippine context

Yuka Narendra, Independent Researcher and Musician, Jakarta
Tales from the Phonographic Oceans: The Story of 
"Yess Records", 1977-1988, Bandung, Indonesia

Dr. Lilawati Kurnia, Faculty of Humanities, Universitas Indonesia
Can We Own Music? Technology and Inequalities in 
Case of Dangdut Music in Indonesia


III. ABSTRACTS

Under-mining Abundance in the Information Sector (Keynote)
Roberto Verzola, University of the Philippines

Roberto Verzola will present a framework for 
analysis that encompasses his extensive 
experience in information technology, 
agriculture, and environment advocacies. He will 
suggest that the emergence of the information 
economy has raised awareness
about the phenomenon of abundance in information 
and information services. He will further claim 
that abundance may also be observed in 
agriculture, natural resources and the 
environment. He will discuss several situations 
where abundance is actually
being undermined to create artificial scarcity. 
Finally, he will propose a new approach to 
economic studies that take both abundance and 
scarcity into account.


Open Source and Open Knowledge
Norbert Klein, The Open Institute, Phnom Penh

In my presentation I will talk about the start of 
my involvement in Open Source and Open Knowledge 
in my attempts to open the door for a Cambodian 
colleague to get access to an international 
scholarship that required access to e-mail. At 
that time, e-mail was not yet available in 
Cambodia - so I created the first Internet 
Service Provider in Cambodia in 1994.  Though 
there was then e-mail, but not yet in Khmer. It 
was then that I discovered Unicode, an open 
standard in computer research and in the computer 
industry that was to allow computers to represent 
and manipulate text expressed in more and more of 
the world's writing systems consistently. I will 
describe the codification of the Khmer script in 
Unicode, and the subsequent development of Khmer 
software and the introduction to Open Source 
software in Cambodia, and will eventually argue 
in favor of keeping standards and protocols in 
computer communication open.


Blogging in Cambodia
Tharum Bun, blogger, contributor to Global Voices 
Online, Asian Correspondent and the Phnom Penh 
Post
Abstract to follow


The case of 'Hello Garci' and other digitized 
'scandals!': ICT and video anarchy in the 
Philippine context
Maria Mangahas, PhD., Associate Professor, 
Department of Anthropology, University of the 
Philippines

The phenomenon of 'scandals' as digital objects 
that are 'made', copied, shared, bought and sold, 
and 'pirated' has become quite prominent in the 
Philippine context in the last 5 years. Digitized 
'scandals' are being made out of various forms of 
candid recordings, and scandalous materials are 
being creatively remixed and turned into spoofs. 
This is happening within the context of thousands 
of conversations, communication exchanges, blogs 
and broadcasts among networks of Filipinos, now 
made possible by diverse ICTechnologies, and 
whose circulation (both locally and globally) is 
near impossible to regulate and control. This 
paper focuses on 'scandals' as a unique genre of 
digital product that has gained presence in 
everyday life among Filipinos. It will discuss 
especially those 'scandals' which may feature 
persons in positions of authority or high social 
status apparently engaged in improper or 
inappropriate behavior. The 'Hello Garci' case 
involved the highest official in the land, and 
allowed people to explore further the potential 
of ICT in creative political action, with 
continuity to the evolving political tradition of 
'people power'.  We can view the 'scandal' 
phenomenon participated in by Filipinos as both 
commentary and action, playing no small part in 
the reproduction of the national imaginary.


Tales from the Phonographic Oceans: The Story of 
"Yess Records", 1977-1988, Bandung, Indonesia
Yuka Narendra, Faculty of Communication, University of Mercu Buana, Jakarta

Cassette is the most common medium used in 
Indonesian music industry since the seventies 
until now. The growth of the production of 
cassette in Indonesia was started since the local 
record companies initiated the reproduction (and 
duplication) of non-Indonesian vinyl albums to 
cassettes and released them in the music market 
in the early seventies. Each one of those record 
companies then confined themselves in specific 
genres. One of those companies was "Yess," which 
was founded by three young vinyl-collectors in 
Bandung, West Java. After a few years of 
operation, Yess took its mark as an unpopular and 
non-commercial subgenres in rock, such as 
progressive rock, experimental rock and new age. 
Through such non-mainstream musical knowledge and 
cassette consumption, the consumers of Yess 
collectively imagined a particular condition of 
Indonesian modernity. This imagination of 
modernity was a paradox to what was being 
narrated by global capitalism and the state at 
that time. Therefore, as a pirate of foreign 
vinyl records, we need to reconsider on Yess' 
position and reconfigure the meaning of music 
piracy in a more multidimensional manner. It 
could not be valued and regarded normatively as 
immoral pirates who stole other's intellectual 
property rights. Conversely, Yess played a 
significant role in constructing Indonesian 
youth's intellectuality and furthermore, produced 
a great deal of "Indonesian newborn 
intellectuals."


Can We Own Music?
Technology and Inequalities in Case of Dangdut Music in Indonesia
Dr. Lilawati Kurnia
Faculty of Humanities, Universitas Indonesia, Jakarta

Science and technology are instrumental to the 
creation and maintenance of inequality within and 
between societies . Science and technology do not 
merely cause or alleviate inequality but are more 
profoundly implicated in social relations to 
distribution and access. The term distribution is 
used in its dynamic meaning which refers to the 
process of producing and re-producing 
inequalities . Inequality is the unequal 
distribution of something people value, such as 
income, health, entertainment and power. The 
average person would regard going into a store 
and pocketing a tangible piece of physical 
property is as something essentially different 
from copy piracy. The human mind finds the 
concept of intellectual property much more 
abstract, slippery, and nebulous than the concept 
of physical property. When most consumers buy a 
book or CD recording, their  perception is of 
having purchased a physical item more than the 
concept of its intellectual content. Of course, a 
CD, the cost of the physical medium represents a 
small fraction of the purchase price, but the 
perception is still that property is something 
one can see and touch and keep, even for people 
who intellectually know better. With the example 
of the Dang-Dut  (pronounced dunk-doot) I will 
show that the music itself is a construction of 
many cultural elements and has been used and 
reused by so many people with different cultural 
backgound for ages. It is the technology that has 
made music to be “owned" by some and in that so 
created inequalities in the society of the world.





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