Gleanings From Mozilla Festival 2017 With Transcriptions Of Screenshotted Text
Here are my gleanings from MozFest. MozFest was born in Barcelona, Spain, in 2010. Originally named “Drumbeat,” the festival convened a community of people dedicated to learning, freedom and the open Web. Each year MozFest centers around a particular theme, and this year’s is the health of the web as a whole, (spoiler alert: It’s not good), and how we as contributors to the web can improve it. Everyone is a contributor to the health of the web, not just the people who make the software that powers it or allows people to access it or allows people to easily create content for it. This year, MozFest consisted of nine floors of talks, workshops and exhibits. Once the speaker talks are available somewhere other than Facebook Live, I’ll share some of those as well, in separate posts.
All of the content I’m sharing is publicly available within the constraints of Twitter or Facebook. I’m sharing it in the order I read it. I’ve also transcribed any screenshots I’ve shared. I’ve shared directly from the social networks, so you have the opportunity to share on your own timelines if you want, without copying and pasting. Enjoy.
Meet this year’s Mozilla Festival speakers.
One of the things funders don't like to give money for is infrastructure and connectivity. #Mozfest
— Owen Blacker (@owenblacker) October 28, 2017
From @WhoseKnowledge, @Anasuyashh + @sikob on digital inclusion #MozFest pic.twitter.com/w375v00e4L
— Mozilla Festival (@mozillafestival) October 28, 2017
Only 20% of the world, primarily white folks, are
editing 80% of Wikipedia’s content—that’s kind of
telling. Together, we realised that most of our
collective understanding of the world is still being
written by a minority.
–SIHO BOUTERSE
The ones to blame are the ones we hate. They have always been my enemy, and from this day, they will be yours. #mozfest
— Voice (@voicemaguk) October 28, 2017
Also, emotional sustainability and burnout are important. That's not something funders are set up to care about #Mozfest
— Owen Blacker (@owenblacker) October 28, 2017
“API’s are not just about getting data out, but also getting them in”, explains @mhawksey. #MozFest
— mnemonicCloud (@mnemonicCloud) October 28, 2017
Words have the ability to replicate themselves, but they create an imperfect copy, and they grow and mutate. #mozfest
— Voice (@voicemaguk) October 28, 2017
An introduction to APIs with google sheets by @mhawksey : https://t.co/SukBLQV9PI #mozfest pic.twitter.com/CDF0yMGCwU
— Ana Lutzky (@anouchka) October 28, 2017
To counter #digitalcolonialism we need to support alternative infrastructure for a more inclusive internet. #MozFest
— Ana Brandusescu (@anabmap) October 28, 2017
One way to improve Internet Health – @MishiChoudhary at #MozFest pic.twitter.com/0yI908Pc8i
— Mozilla (@mozilla) October 28, 2017
What we need are companies that are
not advertising platforms, to make
browsers — the basic tech of the net.
Mishi Choudhary
@geminiimatt discusses online privacy and security at #MozFest pic.twitter.com/b7JUxBbULM
— Mozilla Festival (@mozillafestival) October 28, 2017
Have a security policy. You can think of it like the
things you are already doing to be digitally safe.
Maybe this is where it all begins.
Matt Mitchell
Define yourself by what you do, not what you feel in your heart. Great words by @DyalektRaps, possibly a riff on Batman Begins… #mozfest
— Voice (@voicemaguk) October 28, 2017
On why equal access to the internet is imperative – @alanknottcraig #MozFest pic.twitter.com/gfDl8YpvUz
— Mozilla Festival (@mozillafestival) October 28, 2017
Digital inequality is just as bad
as any inequality.
–Alan Knott-Craig
How to have high levels of online privacy & security as an organisation – @geminiimatt #MozFest pic.twitter.com/Ul86hePhBS
— Mozilla (@mozilla) October 28, 2017
To be digitally safe as an organisation, you need
to think of a checklist. It is a matter of time until
something happens… This checklist saves
people. If anything happens, you know what to
do.
–Matt Mitchell
Overheard at #Mozfest – @msurman on Internet Health pic.twitter.com/unGKpsVTvb
— Mozilla Festival (@mozillafestival) October 28, 2017
Making a healthy
Internet is not a spectator
sport
–Mark Surman
"Act as a citizen first" when dealing with electronics, to convince manufacturers and designers that products should last longer #MozFest
— Aude Charillon (@Audesome) October 28, 2017
Speaker @ugomatic on the discrepancy between software updates and warranties at #MozFest: pic.twitter.com/AwJKUJ6cSZ
— Mozilla Festival (@mozillafestival) October 28, 2017
More products include software inside them to be
updated over time, but practically the support to these
products ends a lot sooner than the companies are
willing to provide a warranty for the product—which is
probably insane.
–Ugo Vallauri
“Open Source built expectation into the Web”—the expectation we can see the code and learn from it is powerful, with effects IRL #Mozfest
— Owen Blacker (@owenblacker) October 28, 2017
“The things we make that are valuable to the world don’t necessarily speak for themselves” @ryanmerkley #TheBigOpen #Mozfest
— ?Kelsey Merkley ? (@bella_velo) October 28, 2017
Trump is a prime example where equality, inclusion and freedom of speech is at odds. #mozfest
— Voice (@voicemaguk) October 28, 2017
CEO of Creative Commons, @ryanmerkley, discusses the instability of the web at #MozFest pic.twitter.com/DMRLs0NY7m
— Mozilla Festival (@mozillafestival) October 28, 2017
“I think all of us are feeling [an] urgency….You have
instability—I have been thinking about the need for
knowledge, the need for inclusion, the need for the
power and potential of the movement.
–Ryan Merkley
Speaker @ashleyn1cole on #NetNeutrality #MozFest pic.twitter.com/GAVBE8dfmv
— Mozilla Festival (@mozillafestival) October 28, 2017
The Trump Administration thinks that letting some
telecom companies treating some content more
favourably than others is a good thing. Think about
how these companies treat it already. It could not be
any worse
–Ashley Black
Being at #Mozfest makes me believe there's an army of people willing to fight for things that matter.
— Wael (@weskandar) October 28, 2017
The importance of accessibility at #mozfest with Ben pic.twitter.com/6QWmDV2gPX
— Brian Linuxing (@BrianLinuxing) October 29, 2016
"We need to build a movement that is much more diverse…with anyone who touches the Internet" –@msurman #MozFest
— Mozilla Festival (@mozillafestival) October 28, 2017
These days all institution that believes in public good need to radically commit to equity & inclusivity and deconstruct privilege #mozfest
— saber khan (@ed_saber) October 28, 2017
I love these Data Detox steps from the #mozfest #glassroom Worth dropping by https://t.co/ZQSrftmRYh in London this week. pic.twitter.com/Kg9ooN8o0h
— Sareh (@Sareh88) October 28, 2017
You’ll now detox one of the browsers you use on your computer (you’ll clean up your mobile browsers
later, on Day 5). By the end of todays detox, you should be blocking a lot more information from trackers, and this in turn should make your browser less unique – since there’s less information to form a
“fingerprint”,
The devil’s in the default “Privacy Settings”
No browser’s default privacy settings are actually private by default: most store cookies, as well as
your browsing history, webform entries and other information-which can then get shared.
But Chrome, Firefox and Safari all offer a special “Private” or “Incognito” browsing mode, set to
automatically delete your browsing history, cookies, temporary files and webform entries every
time you close the browser. Note: your bookmarks and downloads are not deleted.
Try it out:
1. Open your browser (Firefox, Chrome or Safari) and go to File -• New Private/incognito Window
(depending on the browser).
2. To set Private Browsing permanently in Firefox or Safari, go to:
Firefox: menu>Preferences>Privacy>settings for history
Note on this transcribed screenshot: The last bit of text at the end is too garbled for me to make out and correct, but the steps listed above are still useful. There will be an online version of the data detox kit coming soon, and as soon as that’s available I’ll link to that instead.
https://twitter.com/hennazb/status/924229826617147392
If content is limited then it isn't the internet. #NetNeutrality
Data caps are acceptable. #mozfest https://t.co/kFUbOiUfAa— Nikhil Pahwa (@nixxin) October 28, 2017
https://twitter.com/Audesome/status/924265970516090885
Respond