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. The Announcer ................................................... . a weekly digest of calls . actions . websites . campaigns . etc . . send all announcements and notes to sandra.fauconnier@rug.ac.be . . please don't be late ! delivered every friday . into your inbox . ................................................................... 01 . Damon Holzborn . http://www.zucasa.com/ 02 . Inke Arns . JUNCTION SKOPJE publication 03 . Kristrun Gunnarsdottir . http://this.is/cornucopia 04 . infozone . infozone #1 >update events 05 . Le Monde Diplomatique . October 1998 06 . Australian Network for Art and Technology . ANAT launches 2 major web projects 07 . Secret Writer's Society . SOFTWARE SABOTAGE 08 . Trace . A New trAce Website and a New trAce Community 09 . Peter Lunenfeld . mediawork 13 | Grids & Anti-Grids | February 14 10 . Axel Bruns . Issue three of M/C now available ................................................................... 01 Date: Fri, 9 Oct 1998 14:23:56 -0700 From: Damon Holzborn <damon@zucasa.com> Subject: The Announcer http://www.zucasa.com Zu Casa has been RE-launched as a gallery and performance space for experimental art and music. Zu Casa is accepting submissions of music, video art and netart for exhibition. Our intention is to build a community of musicmakers and artists interested in presenting their work at Zu Casa. As audience interest and artist contributions grow, we will provide a channel for online sales. Radio Free Zu Casa new and improvised music, installations, live webcasts Zu Casa Television experimental video and film Donkey Net internet-based, interactive artwork Hans Fjellestad > hans@zucasa.com Damon Holzborn > damon@zucasa.com to receive announcements of Zu Casa news and events send email to thedonkey@zucasa.com ============================= -The Donkey zu casa ministry of information viva el burro thedonkey@zucasa.com http://www.zucasa.com ============================= ................................................................... 02 Date: Sat, 10 Oct 1998 13:55:43 +0200 From: Inke Arns <inke@berlin.snafu.de> Subject: JUNCTION SKOPJE publication Dear friends, I am sending this announcement to a list of people who I think might be interested in the activities of the V2_East/Syndicate network. The second Syndicate reader (Syndicate Publication Series 002, edited by Inke Arns) was published on the occasion of the Junction/Syndicate Meeting, Skopje/MK (2 - 4 October 1998), held during the Skopje Electronic Arts Fair ‘98 - Communing (2 - 9 October 1998). SEAFair '98 was organized by the Center for Computer Arts which acts within the framework of the Soros Center for Contemporary Arts - Skopje, Macedonia. The JUNCTION SKOPJE reader contains 200 pages (editorial and contents below), and was printed in Skopje, Macedonia. To reserve a copy, just send an e-mail to <inke@berlin.snafu.de>. Best wishes, Inke Arns --- --- --- --- --- --- JUNCTION SKOPJE: The 1997 - 1998 Edition Syndicate Publication Series 002 Editorial by Inke Arns For almost two and half years now the Syndicate mailing list has been the most important means of communication for the members of the V2_East/Syndicate network. V2_East/Syndicate is a translocal network of people and institutions who are involved in media culture and media art in Europe and who want to create an infrastructure for projects and cooperations. In the winter of 1995/96, the Rotterdam-based V2_Organisation launched its 'V2_East' initiative, dedicated to enabling and enhancing contacts and cooperations between people interested in media art and media culture in Europe. The most important result of the V2_East initiative has been the formation of the 'Syndicate' network. The name came from a comment that Vladimir Muzhesky from Kiev made during the initial V2_East meeting at the end of the Next 5 Minutes conference in Rotterdam in January 1996: 'Individually, we are rather weak when it comes to negotiating with funding bodies and governments about support for new media and electronic art projects. However, if we could join up and form something like a syndicate, then we would be able to speak with one voice when it is strategically necessary, and become more powerful than we are now.' Since its first meeting with 30 participants from a dozen east- and west european countries, the V2_East/Syndicate network has been growing continuously. Today, in the autumn of 1998, there are more than 300 participants from 32 European and 7 non-European countries. The network which originally started out as an 'East-West initiative' almost three years ago, has since reached a stage where those symbolically laden terms mean less and less. With its mailing list <syndicate@aec.at>, website <http://www.v2.nl/east/> and regular meetings, the Syndicate is becoming an important tool for fostering ties within the media art community and a platform for discussing the changing role of media culture in the 'new Europe'. Over the past two and half years, we met regularly in the context of festivals and conferences, like at the DEAF festival in Rotterdam (V2_East Meeting on Documentation and Archives of Media Art in Eastern, Central and South-Eastern Europe, September 96), the Video Positive festival in Liverpool (LEAF, April 97), the documenta X in Kassel (Deep_ Europe @ Hybrid WorkSpace, August 97), the ars electronica in Linz (Net.Shop, Septem-ber 97), the ostranenie 97 festival at the Bauhaus in Dessau (November 97), or the Pyramedia meeting in Tirana, Albania (May 98). After the success of the first Syndicate reader (DEEP_EUROPE: The 1996 - 1997 edition, October 1997, 140 pages, completely sold out), which covered the activities of the Syndicate network from January 1996 - October 1997, and which was published on the occasion of the ostranenie 97 festival at the Bauhaus Dessau in November 1997, we are continuing to work on the Syndicate Publication Series (SPS). The idea for producing a second Syndicate reader came up in May 1998 during the Piramedia Syndicate meeting which took place in Tirana, Albania. JUNCTION SKOPJE. The 1997 - 1998 Edition (Syndicate Publication Series 002) consists of a selection of essays, reports and articles that were posted on the Syndicate mailing list between October 1997 and August 1998, thus documenting Syndicate related activities since the publication of the last reader. In the JUNCTION SKOPJE reader, you will find four sections: SYNDICATE ACTIVITIES, quite obviously, covers activities directly related to the Syndicate network, including exciting documents on Syndicate performance activities during the Shaking Hands & Making Conflicts conference in Stockholm, Sweden (April 1998), reports on the Piramedia Meeting in Tirana, Albania (May 1998), and reflections on related activities like the Crossing Over +++ festival in Novi Sad, Yugoslavia (July 1998) and the Virtual Revolutions workshops, a series of 4 fluid residencies for media artists and writers across Europe (Sofia/BG; Rotterdam/NL, Tornio/FI and Salford/UK). The section MEDIA/ART CRITIQUE, TXT CONTRIBUTIONS includes essays, discussion threads, conference contributions and polemics covering a wide variety of themes such as the Amsterdam Agenda resulting from the P2P conference in Amsterdam/Rotterdam, NL, media cultures in Bulgaria, Poland, the UK, Russia, Croatia, and the Baltic Cyber-Corridor, and in-depth reflections on mutant geographies between Brazil, France, and Slovakia. TRAVEL & CONFERENCE REPORTS comprises personal reflections on media workshops in Ulan Bator, Mongolia, and in Kiev, Ukraine, a conference in Cluj, Romania, the WhoByFire #1 symposium in Dunaújváros, Hungary, a report on major Tasmanian interests in Deep_Europe, on cosmonauts in Ljubljana, Slovenia, and a personal travelogue through the East European media art scene with stop-overs in 1989 (Lodz, PL), 1993 (Bucharest, RO), and 1996 (Sofia, BG). And finally, the fourth section, entitled PEOPLE & ACTIONS, sheds some bright light on people and projects, ranging from Moscow’s notorious Radek crew to the Novi Sad-based Apsolutno association, interviewed on various occasions. The variety of the topics included in JUNCTION SKOPJE does not represent a coherent body, but rather its opposite: the contributions critically reflect a complex and heterogenous terrain, thus pointing to the diversity of the translocal formation called the Syndicate network. Since January 1996, Andreas Broeckmann is producing the V2_East/Syndicate Newsletter on a monthly basis. The Newsletter, which is being distributed via the Syndicate mailing list, contains informations about upcoming events, projects and ideas that are interesting in relation to the Syndicate network. Included here is a condensed version of Andreas’ introductions to the Newsletters from September 1997 - August 1998. Reading the introductions again, I found that they reflect in the best possible way the various activities of the Syndicate network and its various spin-off structures, the development of long term Syndicate projects as well as spontaneous reactions to part-time spamming on the mailing list... What’s new? In this edition, you will also find Notes on Contributors, providing short biographical information about the people who contributed texts to JUNCTION SKOPJE. JUNCTION SKOPJE, as well as DEEP_EUROPE, will shortly be made available online. Watch the V2_East/Syndicate website! Some texts were initially crossposted from Rhizome <www.rhizome.com>, others were originally posted on the Nettime mailing list <www.desk.nl/~nettime>. According to our policy, we have done only minor editing to the texts, correcting typographical mistakes and adding up-dated e-mail and web addresses where we know them. Thanks to Adele Eisenstein, Lisa Haskel and Stephen Kovats for supporting the proofreading. The second Syndicate reader (Syndicate Publication Series 002) is published on the occasion of the Junction/Syndicate Meeting, Skopje/MK (2 - 4 October 1998), held during the Skopje Electronic Arts Fair ‘98 - Communing (2 - 9 October 1998), organized by the Center for Computer Arts which acts within the framework of the Soros Center for Contemporary Arts - Skopje, Macedonia. JUNCTION SKOPJE is produced in Skopje, Macedonia, with kind support from the Soros Center of Contemporary Art - Skopje. A big thanks to Nebojsa Vilic and Melentie Pandilovski! Berlin, 12 September 1998 V2_East/Syndicate <http://www.v2.nl/east> Syndicate Mail Archive <http://www.v2.nl/mail/v2east/> ------------------------------- JUNCTION SKOPJE: The 1997 - 98 edition Syndicate Publication Series 002 TABLE OF CONTENTS Editorial by Inke Arns V2_East/Syndicate Newsletter Compilation (97/09 - 98/07) SYNDICATE ACTIVITIES Andreas Broeckmann, A Translocal Formation: V2_East, the Syndicate, Deep Europe (27 Dec 97) Kathy Rae Huffman, OSTranenie 97, 5 - 9 Nov 1997 (2 Jan 98) Tim Druckrey, Fragmentation and Solidarity: Deep Europe (22 Aug 98) Jan Ĺman, Shaking Hands & Making Conflicts, Stockholm, April 1998 (11 Mar 98) Tapio Mäkelä, report fragment 1 from Stockholm (27 Apr 98) The Stockholm Syndicate, Stockholm fragment 2: The Partnership for Culture Plan TM (26 Apr 98) Oleg Kireev, english mailradek no.1: A few examples that art is more significant than it pretends to be (13 Aug 98) Edi Muka, From Albania (21 Jan 98) Edi Muka, Situation in Albania (23 Jan 98) Edi Muka, Piramedia - Tirana, 28 - 31 May 1998 (24 Feb 98) Andreas Broeckmann, A short Piramedia report (2 Jun 98) Geert Lovink, Culture after the Final Breakdown: A Report from Tirana, Albania (11 Jun 98) Sally Jane Norman, mullings and ruminations (12 Jun 98) Saso Vrabic, CO+++, Crossing Over / part 3 (4 Sep 98) Iliyana Nedkova, Post Virtual Revolutions 1.0 (May 98) Andreas Broeckmann, V2_Lab: Virtual Revolutions 2 (22 Aug 98) J Mickela Sonola, VR 3.0 in Tornio (11 Sep 98) Larisa Blazic, vr statement by lb (cyberns experience) (26 Aug 98) MEDIA / ART CRITIQUE, TXT CONTRIBUTIONS Iliyana Nedkova, Geo/Info Territory: From the Point of View of a Nowhere Woman in a Nowhere Land (23 Aug 98) The Dutch Virtual Platform, The Amsterdam Agenda (10 Nov 97) Andreas Broeckmann, Towards a European Media Culture - which Culture, which Media, which Europe? (Jan 98) János Sugár, BULLDOZER: introduction (3 Dec 97) Geert Lovink, BULLDOZER: preface (3 Dec 97) Akos Szilagyi, The 'Raw' and the 'Cooked': Russia's Mediatization (3 Dec 97) Dan Arenzon, South and Culture Lag (22 Dec 97) Iliyana Nedkova, Bulgarian Media Culture (Sept 97) Lisa Haskel, Relative Freedoms: Some Retrospections on "Independent Media" Production in the UK (27 Jan 98) Olia Lialina, cheap.art (31 Jan 98) Raivo Kelomees, Conformism in net.art: Interview with Nelli Rohtvee (13 Feb 98) Tapio Mäkelä, commentary on Conformism in net.art (16 Feb 98) Geert Lovink, Navigating the Normalcy. Review of subREAL - 'Serving Art' - exhibition @ Schloss Solitude, Stuttgart (Germany), 20.02 - 15.03 1998 (4 Mar 98) Sally Jane Norman, Charleville encounters (30 Mar 98) Ryszard W. Kluszczynski, Trans-media Art. On the Art of Ryszard Wasko (5 Apr 98) Ryszard W. Kluszczynski, New Poland - New Video. Some reflections on the Polish video art since 1989 (10 Apr 98) Tania Moguilevskaya, Claude Ravant, Russian Net-art: towards a space of privacy and self-expression (31 May 98) Inke Arns, New Media Cultures in Eastern, Central, and South-Eastern Europe. Editorial for Convergence (4 Jul 98) Eric Kluitenberg, Connectivity, New Freedom, New Marginality: A report from the Baltic cyber-corridor (23 Aug 98) Igor Markovic, Why one evening with Critical Art Ensemble is better then five-days "festival" in Zagreb (8 Sep 98) TRAVEL & CONFERENCE REPORTS Marko Peljhan, Deep Europe Meets Deep Oceania (1 Dec 97) Inke Arns, Who by Fire #1 Symposium at the Institute of Contemporary Art - Dunaújváros / Hungary, Dec 1997 (8 Jan 98) Kathy Rae Huffman, Structures & Strategies in Developing Multimedia: On-line and Off-line in Cluj, Romania, Dec 1997 (12 Jan 98) Stephen Kovats, Addendum to Kathy R Huffmann's report on Cluj (12 Jan 98) Drazen Pantic, Mongolia on line: from Genghis Khan to Bill Gates (3 Mar 98) Calin Dan, Re: Mongolia transport (3 Mar 98) Martha van der Haagen, Ukraine (9 Jul 98) Nina Czegledy, Eyewitness: The Art of Different Media (Lodz / Poland, 1989); Ex Oriente Lux (Bucharest / Romania, 1993); Crossing Over CO+ (Sofia / Bulgaria, 1996) (2 Aug 98) Vesna Manojlovic, Workshops, Conferences, Travels, Friendships (13 Aug 98) Inke Arns, The Place where Symptoms become Real: Cosmonauts, Explosives, and Hand-Made Sausages. Impressions from Ljubljana, Slovenia, 7-12 July 1998 (26 Aug 98) PEOPLE & ACTIONS Vuk Cosic, the cosic test (12 Nov 97) Tapio Mäkelä, Pavlov (13 Nov 97) Micz Flor, cosic test - extended (19 Dec 97) Jennifer de Felice, time to protest (14 Nov 97) Geert Lovink, Intermedia: The Dirty Digital Bauhaus. An e-mail exchange with János Sugár (Budapest) (3 Mar 98) Michiel van der Haagen, Interview with Vuk Cosic (7 Mar 98) Gordana Novakovic, „A Short History of Electronic Art, Part One", April ‘98, Cinema Rex, Belgrade (14 / 30 April 98) N-GCC/press-service, Moscow, barricade, 23 May (25 May 98) Maria Vassileva, apsolutno (5 Jun 98) John Nicholas Moulden, MS Stubnitz in Stockholm (17 Jun 98) Josephine Bosma, Interview with Kathy Rae Huffman (7 Aug 98) Igor Stromajer, Libreto: the story about net.art (13 Aug 98) Anatoly Osmolovsky, Oleg Kireev, mailradek no.2: Policy of exclusion (21 Aug 98) Larisa Blazic, a story from little l. (26 Aug 98) Notes on Contributors ................................................................... 03 Date: Sun, 11 Oct 1998 19:01:05 +0000 From: Kristrún Gunnarsdóttir <kristrun@hi.is> http://this.is/cornucopia The Corner of my Eye at http://this.is/cornucopia ................................................................... 04 Date: Mon, 12 Oct 1998 08:47:14 +0100 From: infozone <infozone@ensba.fr> Subject: infozone #1 >update events ___ __ /'___\ /\_\ ___ /\ \__/ ___ ____ ___ ___ __ \/\ \ /' _ `\ \ ,__\/ __`\/\_ ,`\ / __`\ /' _ `\ /'__`\ \ \ \/\ \/\ \ \ \_/\ \L\ \/_/ /_/\ \L\ \/\ \/\ \/\ __/ \ \_\ \_\ \_\ \_\\ \____/ /\____\ \____/\ \_\ \_\ \____\ \/_/\/_/\/_/\/_/ \/___/ \/____/\/___/ \/_/\/_/\/____/ infozone a temporary workspace in Paris The poject infozone shows up in a space in the center of Paris, as an open mixed-media-studio has creating, collecting, selecting, linking, resuming and distributing of information and contents as a goal. Article are predominantly social, political and cultural questions. In infozone should be the possibility for the comment, interview, discussion and for the presentation of the different users. infozone is ambient space and file, pin wall and global newspaper, represented locally by the workspace and world-wide by Internet. From this diversity the project can be started, planned however nevertheless improvised as laboratory, is connecting old and new media, which presents itself in a dynamic system openly and closed, privately and publicly. infozone mixes old and new media, a crossover of different disciplines, which in its structure, spontaneous re-organizations are to develop. This is to be operated by discourses, presentations, seminars, events, and many guests in this infozone. It is a place of critical thinking and productive conflict, a social space, in the consent is manufactured and disagreement in course set. A place at the distribution, accommodation and production compress themselves and extend. In the social context the relationship between senders and recipients, let the things develop. Meanwhile will the traditional mass media such as radio, television and magazines to technical metaphors around information " on the network ". infozone however energize a direct public and a co-operation with producers, groups and other forums and makes available the space for a easy and direct way to produce alive contents. The distribution outside of the workspace infozone is achieved over Internet and printed media. A publication planned afterwards will document the flow of information and contents during the three months to made it further accessible. for futher information: http://campus.ensba.fr/infozone e-mail: infozone@ensba.fr best jens gebhart ................................................................... 05 Date: Mon, 12 Oct 1998 15:02:27 -0400 From: Le Monde diplomatique <dispatch@london.monde-diplomatique.fr> Subject: October 1998 LE MONDE DIPLOMATIQUE _________________________________________________________________ Le Monde diplomatique english edition October 1998 edited by Wendy Kristianasen LEADER Japan in danger * by Ignacio Ramonet There is little sign in the streets of Japan's major cities of the seriousness of the country's economic crisis. Japan is, after all, the world's second largest economic power. But its people have now lost confidence both in the economy and in the politicians who are having little success in getting the country out of its rut. http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/en/1998/10/01leader.html Translated by Ed Emery FROM MARKET MADNESS TO RECESSION Liberal dogma shipwrecked * by Serge Halimi Asian capitalism is paying the price of over-regulation. That was the reaction last year when the Asian-Pacific region plunged into recession. But the collapse of the Russian economy and the Latin American crisis are provoking a painful reappraisal. US Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan has now admitted the obvious. In an era of financial and commercial globalisation, no region of the world can remain an "oasis of prosperity". The extent of the danger is seriously discrediting the economic dogmas zealously applied throughout the world for the last twenty years. Deregulation of capital flows and monetary fanaticism were the first to be challenged, but privatisation and free trade itself may well be next in line. http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/en/1998/10/02halimi.html Translated by Barry Smerin The custodians of monetary order by Frédéric Lebaron With the stock markets reeling under new shock waves every week, or almost every week, since the summer of 1997, everyone is again looking to the heads of the central banks who are perceived, rightly or wrongly, as the ultimate custodians of monetary order, even of global prosperity. But will they display enough wisdom and experience to stop the global economy straying from the narrow path of balanced growth they are supposed to keep it to? Translated by Barbara Wilson HAZY OUTLINES OF AN ISLAMIST INTERNATIONAL Fundamentalists without a common cause by Olivier Roy The Western-sponsored efforts to end the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan in the 1980s left an enduring legacy in the training camps now used by a variety of Islamists from different countries. Most of the attacks on Western interests can be traced to a network of radical Sunni movements based in the Pakistan-Afghanistan borderlands. What is striking about these new movements, of which the Taliban are the prototype, is the contrast between their political radicalism and their ideological conservatism. Their sole point of reference is the sharia, and their outlook is uncompromisingly conservative and profoundly Sunni in character. Translated by Barry Smerin SAUDI ARABIA PUTS ITS NATIONALS FIRST Where foreigners know their place by Nicolas Bombacci Saudi Arabia has already suffered the effects of falling oil prices. Now the kingdom is entering a period of uncertainty surrounding the succession to King Fahd who has been seriously ill for several years. The country's prosperity during the 1970s and 1980s was based on immigrant labour that makes up over 80% of its workforce, though it has long been subjected to petty controls and social segregation. These migrant workers can now be sure to bear the brunt of the coming economic downturn. Translated by Ed Emery WESTERN DEVELOPMENT HAS FAILED Looking to a new Africa by Jean-Marc Ela Economically, Africa is considered a poor and marginalised continent. And since the end of the cold war it has no longer been of any strategic or diplomatic importance to the great powers. Except when there are emergencies requiring humanitarian aid, no-one is really interested in the fate of the continent's 700 million men and women. Is it the failure of development? Or backwardness? Or is it rather a sign of strength that African societies are refusing to fall into the neo-liberal trap, instead creating alternatives to the Western model of development? Translated by Malcolm Greenwood MILLIONS LEFT SCARRED BY FEMALE MUTILATION Putting a stop to excision in Burkina Faso * by Joelle Stolz Two years ago the government of Burkina Faso made a firm commitment to stop the practice of excision. After many years of campaigning, this has ceased to be a taboo subject and attitudes are starting to change - if slowly. Sixty-six per cent of women are still circumcised, compared with 70 per cent 20 years ago. But nowadays families have their daughters operated on in secret and at an earlier age - and accidents are put down to "witchcraft". But it will take time to eradicate a custom that links the community to its ancestors and is closely bound up with sexual identity. http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/en/1998/10/07burkina.html Translated by Lorna Dale BRAZIL'S NEW EXPERIMENT Participative democracy in Porto Alegre by Bernard Cassen Anatomy of an experiment in people's power On 4 October Brazil Fernando Henrique Cardoso won Brazil's presidential elections. One of the key issues in the campaign of his opponent, Labour Party leader Lula da Silva, was Porto Alegre's ten-year experiment with participative democracy. The town has set up a parallel organisation operating alongside the municipal council, enabling local inhabitants to take real decisions for their city. And it works. Especially for the least well-off for whom it offers a way to stake a claim on public funds normally spent on the more prosperous areas of the city. Translated by Barbara Wilson AT THE HEART OF ANY POLITICAL BATTLE On male domination by Pierre Bourdieu Male domination is so rooted in our collective unconscious that we no longer even see it. It is so in tune with our expectations that it becomes hard to challenge it. Now, more than ever, it is crucial that we work to dissolve the apparently obvious and explore the symbolic structures of the androcentric unconscious that still exists in men and women alike. What are the mechanisms and institutions which make possible the continued reproduction of this age-old domination by men? And is it possible to neutralise them in order to liberate the forces for change which they are instrumental in blocking? Translated by Ed Emery TEARING UP THE EUROPEAN RULEBOOK The unemployed loosen the noose by Catherine Lévy and Christophe Aguiton Since the 1970s, unemployment has been part of the social landscape. Yet the unemployed themselves remained in some way invisible, their voices never directly heard. However, a few months ago they erupted on to the social and political scene in France, Germany, Italy and other European countries. The movement which they have started has been greeted with sympathy by the public at large. And it has inspired other new organisations determined to agitate for different economic and social priorities. Translated by Donald Hounam IN THE ARCHIPELAGO OF CHANCE Japan's craze for pachinko by Thierry Ribault A secular miracle The recession in Japan has made people blame the party in power. Witness the resignation of Prime Minister Ryutaro Hashimoto on 13 July following the Liberal-Democratic Party defeat in the upper house elections. It has also made them turn to easy pastimes such as "pachinko". There is nothing new about seeking one's lucky star but here the search has been accentuated by the crisis in public confidence in the economy and the country's political leadership. Translated by Barbara Wilson HOLOCAUST BOOK SPARKS FRESH CONTROVERSY From "Mein Kampf" to Auschwitz * by Dominique Vidal Fifty years on, there can be no let-up in the struggle against those who deny the holocaust. At the same time, the debate among historians is becomingly increasingly heated. Daniel Jonah Goldhagen's attempts to silence the most virulent critics of his best-seller, Hitler's Willing Executioners, have sparked bitter controversy. Ultimately at stake is the interpretation of the Jewish genocide, with its historical and universal implications. http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/en/1998/10/14vidal.html Translated by Barry Smerin THE THREAT TO BIODIVERSITY Emptying the gene pool by Alain Zecchini With the growing exploitation of nature, is there any future for the earth's plant resources? Fragmentation and genetic erosion are gradually turning the world into small islands of impoverished land, surrounded by a sea of humanity. Most countries refuse to recognise the urgency of the problem, preferring to pursue short-term policies and focus on other priorities. But if they do not protect the inheritance of future generations, who will? Translated by Lorna Dale (*) Star-marked articles are available to every reader. Other articles are available to paid subscribers only. Yearly subscription fee: 24 US $ (Institutions 48 US $). ERRATUM We would like to draw your attention to a small error that crept into Serge Halimi's article, Myopic and Cheapskate Journalism, In the paragraph starting "CNN prides itself on the fact that"... it should read as "In October 1997 the TV news broadcasts of the three major networks, over four consecutive evenings, devoted a total of only 7 minutes 20 seconds to Bill Clinton's first visit to South America". ALL RIGHTS RESERVED - Le Monde diplomatique ______________________________________________________________ For more information on our English edition, please visit http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/en/ To subscribe to our free "dispatch" mailing-list, send an (empty) e-mail to: dispatch-on@london.monde-diplomatique.fr To unsubscribe from this list, send an (empty) e-mail to: dispatch-off@london.monde-diplomatique.fr ................................................................... 06 Date: Wed, 14 Oct 1998 11:19:07 +0930 From: Australian Network for Art and Technology <anat@anat.org.au> Subject: ANAT launches 2 major web projects The Australian Network for Art and Technology announces the launch of: *** deep immersion: creative collaborations *** and stage 2 of *** www.screenarts.net.au *** Friday 23 October, 5pm (Central Australian Standard Time) Mercury Cinema, MRC, Lion Arts Centre, Adelaide and online http://www.screenarts.net.au The second stage of Australia's first and only national online directory for digital screen art will be launched in Adelaide. screenarts, which has been developed by the Australian Network for Art and Technology (ANAT) in association with the Media Resource Centre and dLux media arts, will be exclusively previewed at the Mercury Cinema. screenarts provides a central point of access to the outstanding digital art which Australians are producing online. The first stage of screenarts launched in December 1997 takes the web tourist to a host of important exhibition sites. This second stage of screenarts will also include links to conferences and fora in Australia, dealing with online screen based art, thus critically and culturally contextualising this fast expanding area of art practice in Australia. screenarts utilises an exciting new online database the Virtual Community Engine or VCE, developed by Adelaide based internet designers, Virtual Artists. This innovative new software enables users to seek out their favourite artist or exhibition, organisations or practitioners. The addition of conferences into the database will also ensure that this work is able to be contextualised by some of Australia's most critically astute writers and thinkers. Resolutely contemporary, screenarts is constantly being updated as new art and writing becomes available on the web. Providing an insight into the innovative applications of the web for Australian digital screen artists, screenarts is both easy to use and flexible in the hands of even the most inexperienced user. As screenarts continues to evolve, the site will archive exhibitions and conferences no longer online, allowing the directory to become a more complete and functional resource of historical as well as current Australian digital screen art on the Web. http://www.anat.org.au/projects/dicc Prior to the launch of screenarts , ANAT will be profiling the unique new 'virtual residency' project, deep immersion: creative collaborations. With support from the New Media Arts Fund of the Australia Council, ANAT has developed a series of online residencies, which have forged links between a number of Australian artists and a diverse range of net smart cultural sites. The intention was to provide artists with opportunities to come together remotely, to germinate and hothouse ideas, test hypotheses, develop new processes and create new works. One of the four artists in residence, Adelaide based new media artist, elendil will be speaking at this special presentation. elendil will be demonstrating his work, Glyph, an iconographic vocabulary collaboratively constructed in an online workspace. Glyph, developed with support from Sydney based art server, SystemX http:sysx.apana.org.au, and Vienna beased farmersmanual http://www.farmersmanual.co.at, experiments with meaning and its portrayal, attempting to break down rational language structures. Also to be featured at the launch will be, please press play, a project by Brisbane based low key operations + nude productions (aka Michael Hogg and Claire McGrogan), developed whilst the artists were in residence with US based writing server, AltX http://www.altx.com. please press play addresses the interaction between text and sound, experimenting with the electronic and the organic aspects of audio and text. Earlier collaborations in this series of residencies will also be available for viewing, including TeriAnn White's residency with UK writing server, trAce http://trace.ntu.ac.uk, and Keith Netto's sonicform site developed whilst in residence with Australian electronic media server, <EMG> http://www.dirtymouse.net. Come and browse these unique web projects on Friday 23 October at the Mercury Cinema at 5pm. Light snacks and beverages provided. screenartshas been supported by the Australian Film Commission http://www.afc.gov.au For further information or interviews, please contact: Amanda McDonald Crowley or Honor Harger ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ FROM THE DESK OF THE AUSTRALIAN NETWORK FOR ART AND TECHNOLOGY anat@anat.org.au postal address: PO Box 8029 Hindley Street, Adelaide, SA 5000, Australia web address: http://www.anat.org.au/ telephone: +61 (0)8-8231-9037 fax: +61 (0)8-8211-7323 Director: Amanda McDonald Crowley (tel: 0419 829 313) Administration and Information Officer: Honor Harger Web and Technical Officer: Martin Thompson Memberships: $A12 (unwaged), $A25 (waged), $A50 (institutions) ANAT receives support from The Australia Council, http://www.ozco.gov.au the Federal Government's arts funding and advisory body ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- ................................................................... 07 Date: Tue, 13 Oct 1998 23:58:14 -0700 (PDT) From: "Secret Writer's Society" <announce@rtmark.com> Subject: SOFTWARE SABOTAGE FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact: mailto:press@rtmark.com See also http://www.wired.com/news/news/culture/story/15533.html To order a VNR or introductory video, see note at end. OBSCENITY HACKER COMES OUT "Computers are revolutionizing education, sometimes in surprising ways. Now there's software that can teach kids how to cuss like a drunken stevedore," writes Robert Cwiklik of the Wall Street Journal. (See http://rtmark.com/faq.html for full press reports.) The software, a Panasonic Interactive Media (http://www.panakids.com/) product called "Secret Writer's Society," is meant to help seven to nine-year-olds learn to write by reciting their compositions back to them in a computer-generated voice. Instead, the program spews obscenities at very predictable times, according to Andrew Maisel, the editor in chief of SuperKids (http://www.superkids.com/aweb/pages/reviews/writing/1/sws/merge.shtml), a website that evaluates educational software. He says that all that is required to trigger the foul-mouth feature is for a typed passage to be at least several sentences long and followed by a double-click, rather than a single-click. Panasonic Interactive claimed that a "bug" in a "filter" caused the problem. But now a rogue contract programmer has stepped forward to claim responsibility for the hack. "Choosing to have a child constitutes a commitment to give that child the very best that you can," said the programmer, who spoke on condition of anonymity. "Letting a third-rate piece of software take over for you is wrong because it violates that contract, which is more important than any legal one." Educators, security specialists and others condemned the hack. "He definitely could have done something better", said educational software specialist David Goldberg, who agreed, however, with some of the sentiments expressed by the programmer. According to Goldberg, the programmer's anger is not entirely misplaced. "The company has an idea, and they get that idea out there. And that idea is to teach kids how to write better--knowing full well that at the level of technology we have now, they can't do it." Rhizome, a group of Internet analysts and educators who manage RTMARK's Net Fund, which included this project, concurred. "Educational technologies like these are meant to replace contact with adults.... It's only natural that those on the inside should fight back." The programmer has been awarded the $1000 collected by RTMARK from an anonymous donor for the project. (Any project, regardless of quality, is eligible for RTMARK funding so long as it is an attack against corporate power and does not cause bodily injury.) Ray Thomas, an RTMARK spokesperson, summed up RTMARK's position: "In essence, these allegedly educational programs are already barraging children with obscenities; this just puts it on the table." "What I did isn't a crime," the programmer said. "The crime is letting profits get in the way of education. It's time to stop turning children into products of products, and to start getting them in touch with values that really count." Television and radio broadcasters can order a broadcast-quality Video News Release (http://rtmark.com/rtmarkSWS.ram) about this action, along with an introductory video about RTMARK (http://rtmark.com/rtmark1a.ram), by writing mailto:press@rtmark.com and including their station identifier, address, and courier number. (The introductory video is also available for other forms of distribution.) RTMARK was established in 1991 to further anti-corporate activism by channelling funds from donors to workers for sabotage of corporate products. Recent and upcoming acts of RTMARK-aided subversion are documented on RTMARK's web site, http://rtmark.com/. ................................................................... 08 From: Trace <trace@ntu.ac.uk> Subject: A New trAce Website and a New trAce Community Date: Wed, 14 Oct 1998 15:25:05 +0100 The trAce site has been enlarged and redesigned, and our online community is now open. Take a look at http://trace.ntu.ac.uk or check out the following special pages: The new trAce Community is now open. http://trace.ntu.ac.uk/portal2.htm Just a few days before the first anniversary of the opening of the trAce Mailbase list we are pleased to announce our new Online Community. Now, instead of a single conversation, we offer a variety of online conferences plus your own homepage and a host of other features. There are four conferences with more to be added as time goes on. We invite you to join and participate in the new expanded community where there is room for every point of view. Map added to Noon Quilt http://trace.ntu.ac.uk/quilt/map/index.html There is now a Noon Quilt Map showing the locations of all contributions. After two weeks online and contributions from 18 countries the Quilt is almost full. Interest has been intense and submissions are still coming in steadily from everywhere. It closes on 23rd October so there is still time to contribute, but will we be forced to stitch another to fit everyone in? Decisions must be made! Calling Small Presses trAce is putting together a list of small presses from around the world. If you would like to be featured as part of this resource list, contact Carolyn Bamborough (carolyn.bamborough@ntu.ac.uk). We will link to your url, or create a basic page of information for you to display online. Writers & the Internet Conference 16 October 1998 http://trace.ntu.ac.uk/eastm/conf.htm Just a few days left until the first trAce Day Conference featuring an international line-up of guests including Dale Spender and Mark Amerika. The conference takes place on Friday 16 October 1998 at the Broadway Media Centre, Nottingham, England. __________________________________________________ >trAce international online writing community >http://trace.ntu.ac.uk trace@ntu.ac.uk >Faculty of Humanities, Nottingham Trent University, Clifton Lane, >Nottingham NG11 8NS UK >phone: ++ 44 (0)115 948 6360 fax: ++ 44 (0)115 948 6364 ................................................................... 09 Date: Wed, 14 Oct 1998 09:45:54 -0800 From: Peter Lunenfeld <peterl@artcenter.edu> Subject: mediawork 13 | Grids & Anti-Grids | February 14 mediawork 13 | Grids & Anti-Grids Saturday | February 14 | 1-6 PM | LAT Media Center mediawork: The Southern California New Media Working Group invites you to mediawork 13: Grids & Anti-Grids. mediawork 13 is loosely structured around an investigation of the grid and its antinomies. Featured will be media theorist/activist Phil Agre, photographer and digital artist Robbert Flick, interactive media designer Laura Robin, and painter Adam Ross. Please join us from 1-6 at the LAT Media center at Art Center College of Design, 1700 Lida Street, Pasadena. Please RSVP by email or call 626.568.4710. Presentations: Phil Agre is a scholar of the transformation wrought by digital communications technology and author of Computation and Human Experience (Cambridge University Press, 1997). He recently moved north from UCSD to UCLA. Robbert Flick's investigations of the urban landscape have made him one of the most significant photographers in Southern California. He recently participated in a much lauded two person show at the Getty Study Center, an outgrowth of his residency there. Laura Robin is a Technical Specialist with the Advanced Communcations group at DESIGNWORKS/USA. An MIT Media Lab graduate, she works on experimental interface designs and information systems. She is an advisor for Art Center's Communications & New Media Design graduate program. Adam Ross's recent solo show at Shoshana Wayne Gallery of otherworldly landscapes surmounted by ghostly interfaces demonstrated that his paintings are as much about the notion of technological imaginary as they are about the painterly. Directions: >From Downtown LA -- North on the 110 Freeway to Pasadena, approximately three miles past Dodger Stadium to Orange Grove Boulevard exit [L], go two miles to Holly Street Signal [L], to Linda Vista [R] (you will be entering a residential area); continue for two miles to Lida Street signal [L]. Continue on Lida Street to the top of the hill; you will see the see the Art Center sign on your left. Follow the drive and enter the Student Parking Lot and walk down the outside steps, enter the building, go down the stairs and you'll find yourself right at the entrance to the LA Times Media Center. >From Hollywood -- Take the 101 East to the 134 East to Pasadena. Get off at the Linda Vista exit, take a right at the top of the ramp, and then a quick left, go under the Colorado Bridge and past the first stoplight, which is Holly. Continue on Linda Vista (you will be in a residential area); continue for two miles to Lida Street signal [L]. Continue on Lida Street to the top of the hill; you will see the see the Art Center sign on your left. Follow the drive and enter the Student Parking Lot and walk down the outside steps, enter the building, go down the stairs and you'll find yourself right at the entrance to the LA Times Media Center. n.b. -- Art Center's main switchboard is 626.396.2200 if all else fails. ................................................................... 10 Date: 15 Oct 98 10:32:14 +1000 From: "Axel Bruns" <mc@mailbox.uq.edu.au> Subject: Issue three of M/C now available The Media and Cultural Studies Centre at the University of Queensland is proud to present issue three of the award-winning M/C - A Journal of Media and Culture http://www.uq.edu.au/mc/ M/C is an award-winning journal that crosses over between the popular and the academic. It is attempting to engage with the 'popular', and integrate the work of 'scholarship' in media and cultural studies into our critical work. We take seriously the need to move ideas outward, so that our cultural debates may have some resonance with wider political and cultural interests. Issue three of M/C is concerned with the idea of identity -- a concept that is increasingly being reconsidered in our age of globalisation, as the links of identity with space and time are gradually loosening. It includes the following articles: "Tackling Identity with Constructionist Concepts" M/C guest writer Jonathan Lillie uses constructionist thought to describe the role of the individual in the interpretation of experiences and the integration of cultural encounters into identities, behaviors and belief systems. "Did You See the Way I Just Kicked You in the Head?: Identity and Ethereal Violence in Computer Fighting Games" Adam Dodd explores the relationship between players and characters of computer fighting games and how language fuses the two, intiating a less sombre understanding of computer game violence. "Videor Ergo Sum: The Online Search for Disembodied Identity" Axel Bruns describes how the technological nature of computer-mediated communication forces users to seek feedback from their peers to realise their electronic identity, leaving behind the Cartesian premise of 'I think, therefore I am'. "Confession and Identity" P. David Marshall analyses the value and place of confession in the formation of identity and points to the shifting line between the public and private self in contemporary culture, moving through Clinton's increasingly graphic admissions to the contemporary talkshow, and finishing with a flourish on a particularly close relationship to Patrick Rafter. "'The Full Monty': Academics, Identity and the 'Personal Mode'" Heather Wolffram explores the use of personal identity in academic discourse, uncovering the motivations behind potentially controversial confessions. "Computer Emulation: A Digital Masquerade" Nick Caldwell observes that with the advent of sufficient processor power, many computer users are now using their machines to take on the look and feel of older home computers, suggesting that this shows a desire for computers with an identity beyond the slick and soulless design of Windows. "Being (R)evolutionary: The Adolescent Nature of Zines" Kirsty Leishman reviews the adolescent nature of zines, finding that they are both revolutionary in their questioning of institutional publishing industry wisdom, and evolutionary in their aim to develop the zine medium as well as the individual identities of their creators -- qualities which are also at the very heart of the adolescent quest for personal identity. --------------------------------------------------------------------------- Issue three of M/C is now on the Web, at <http://www.uq.edu.au/mc/>. Previous M/C issues on 'new' and 'memory' are also still available online. --------------------------------------------------------------------------- --- # distributed via nettime-l : no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a closed moderated mailinglist for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@desk.nl and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: nettime-owner@desk.nl