 Νομίζω ότι το μητέρα μου είναι κάποιο σώμα από το πριονό χρόνο της Δευρουμίας. Είσαι εδώ τελευταία χρόνια. Είσαι στην συμφωνία για τη συμφωνία κοινωνικής και εξαιρετικής σύμφωνας. Θέλω να συμφωνήσω αυτή τη συμφωνία. Θέλω να κάνω ένα πολύ σύμφωνο αγγημό, ότι η σύμφωνα και η δυσσεντραλική δυσσεντινέτρα, νομίζω να πω ότι όλα αυτά τα δυσσσεντραλική δυσσσεντινέτρα, είναι αρκετά σε παιδίες, που αφήνουν σύμφωνας της δυσσεντραλικής και εξαιρετικής συμφωνίας. Και αυτή δεν έρχεται μετά από όχι πίσω. Αυτό θα προσπαθώ να συμφωνήσω. Θα προσπαθώ να κάνω ένα μικρό δαιμό, να συμφωνήσω πώς αυτό μπορεί να μπορεί να είναι κάνει, με όλα τα άλλα πράγματα που είναι δημιουργείς στην Ιντενέτρα. Έτσι, η ΕΙάλικη Βέ kemm система πριν είναι πάλι από νομισ repositυρ Nighthood, και then we tried to bring some sort of diversity in the discussion, and then we focus on localities, and then we try to combine learning, design, research and action around different type of common activities that have all some sort of local element. So to speak, people can come face-to-face to discuss what their initiatives are doing που κάνουν, στους οικονομικές, εξοπλονετικές, φάρτες, κοινωνικής παιδιάς και τεχνόνι. Στην αυτό το context we work with two European projects on the CAPS framework, that was the first time that somehow these grassroots ideas entered into the European... ...talking. And this project focuses on big community networks like the ones discussed last year, and brings in the issue of diversity, highlighting that all these networks are different, and we need also different ways to approach them and help them flourish. So perhaps you know this is Fryfunk, it's a network that has a viral model and advocates for free access internet to all. It does not depend on funding, but in very clever grassroots and horizontal... ...process. Guifi, it's a Catalan network that has a different approach for them. Internet infrastructure is a commons, so they do have some sort of rules. They have governance and they have achieved to cover a big part of Catalonia with very good internet access for very low price. This is another area in my country, in Sarantaporo, that used European funding to build an access network for more than 14 villages for next to all in Postmountain, which is there. And all these are different and I try to make a graph, it's wrong. I mean, it's very difficult to classify Guifi for example of Fryfunk, since these are more than 100 federated networks. But whoever wants to understand community networks should understand that some are built around local services. So the network creates actually the border of the applications, while others are built to give internet access. Sometimes it happens that also those that are for local services, as the one mentioned above, end up giving internet access because people care just for Facebook. And another important dimension is that some are introvert, the community of the community network is the people that build the network. And in this sense it could be even seen as a club because to be part of the builders of the network you have to put an antenna on your roof, you have to know, I mean, there is an entrance fee, let's say, for these type of communities. On the other hand there are others that are built exactly to engage people around. And the pirate box perhaps is the, you know the pirate box. I'm happy it's the first time in my talk I would not have to explain what it's a Raspberry Pi. And so yes, these are the type of small networks that are designed and imagined to operate outside, let's say the internet. This is from the Kipai movement, and this is an ugly prototype of the pirate box. And this leads me to our second European project that it's called MAZI, MAZI means together in Greek. And our idea in this project is to try this small, let's say one node community networks with a server on them. Because when I was always discussing about such networks and the question I was always receiving is why. Why somebody would like to communicate only people in proximity. And actually we try to answer these why questions, trying this type of a local offline, let's say network in four different communities. One is the princess in a garden and we are very happy that these people, as Helikin said before, do get money for being part of our pilots. We don't just go there and put our technologies. So it's princess in a garden in Berlin. There are the young housing cooperatives in Zuri. What you see there is the, it's called Calc Brighter. It's SPC, it's the neighborhood of one of the first community networks in Europe and in the world. And the nomadic group called the monastery that works now in the rural areas in Greece like in Sarantapur and in Ioannina. So I felt here that it's a good opportunity for me to show things instead of giving my talk. You can find online, I have a lot of material. So I will give you a small set, a demo of the, but I don't know how to do it with a microphone. I saw, anyway, so, okay, no, it's worse. It gets me stressed. Okay, I will try. So this is, I will try to say it very fast. I mean, this is like the pirate box, but with you know host, let's say. I mean, it's a pirate box that you don't, it does not offer you a specific service like file sharing, but offers you a suite of services. Here is a screenshot of an example of the portal with an etherpad in the next cloud, for example. Plus a WordPress interface, assuming that this thing would get to the hands of somebody that it's not expert. So the idea is to create a WordPress of networks. So as WordPress helps everybody to build their own website, we're going to build a WordPress interface that would allow people that can buy such a small service. So we need a server to configure it and offer a local service as they feel it. And so if I, did you see, okay. So I put a password because last time I presented it, somebody hacked it, so. And here is very dangerous. I will first show the demo and then I will open it for you to play. So the idea is that we offer this standard image as a pirate box. Anyway, so yes, and then you have a interface to choose applications, which one of the applications you want to be visible in the portal. The standard was like etherpad next cloud from a date. You can have a WordPress and you can configure the portal page to be the WordPress. This is how it looks, for example. So whoever connects to this local network, it's been redirected or I could choose a URL that fits the situation for them to go and use some services that are only local. Yes, this is how. So for example, if I go here and I go to the etherpad when I was playing before, now this goes to the main page. But for example, here I created a page with all the talks and I would go here to the etherpad entry and put the URL of my etherpad that I created. Sorry. Which then if I go to the portal page and click here, yes. So for example, people that enter in the network without knowing a specific address can be directed to a page where they can do this type of collaborative writing. When I open the password, you can go and write notes for the different things. This is a local service, self-organized, etc. So you understand all these things. I don't want to go into more details. What I will just say is that we have created also some customized apps that we imagine are suitable for such environments. That's what we call the guest book. It's a very simple app that you just add your opinion about a space and event and this appears as cards below. Or for example, what we call the Internet, the interview archive. Sorry. For example, you can add interviews or the interviews of people in a very simple interface. I was playing now when people were talking. So yes, you don't hear that. So I move now from this. This type of application, for example, was built through a participatory design process in Precision and Garden in Berlin. The idea is that people there have urban space where many activists gather and the people that host them cannot handle all this knowledge that they get access to. So they thought to use this type of small network as a digital overlay of their urban space where people that visit are being interviewed in a structured way. And all these interviews are uploaded literally on the garden and people can access to them only when they are there. A big advantage of this type of services that are only accessible on site is that people have to go there. The network can also break, so we can talk also. It's a more, let's say, hybrid experience. I have a lot to say about this. I mean, this is what I have been talking the last eight years, but for now I continue. Another pilot that we do is in Zurich in Kraftwerk. Kraftwerk is a very interesting cooperative housing project. Do people know the Bolo Bolo? It was the decentralization of the housing era. So yes, all these cooperative housing projects were inspired by Bolo Bolo and there is also a new generation that is called NENA. And we try to build such local networks inside these spaces because people are already like-minded and they can understand the values of owning your infrastructure. And here it's not seen very well. We created a photo exhibition in the community space with how this thing began because many people that live here don't even know that their project has started like this. They went just to get cheap housing. And we try to engage them into a dynamic community art project through this type of local networks. And this brings me to Openki, which is a completely different thing that I've engaged the last years. So, I don't know, you must have realized also somebody said about diversity and talking to different people. Learning, understanding is perhaps the biggest challenge we have to face. And Openki, it's a completely independent project focusing on popular education, on the values of the way he leads and all these people, the idea of creating learning as an everyday activity. And the platform is some sort of a matching service where people can propose courses. This is a proposal, for example. Or really, and after, you can propose different learning topics and people join into your course and you organize. Somebody can provide a space. Somebody can provide an idea. So it's some sort of a collective creation of learning processes. And all these boxes hopefully become real courses with people going to real spaces. And for me, this was a very interesting concept because I imagined, first of all, we need learning and we need to understand how this technology works. But also such a platform could be some sort of aggregator of all these local networks that personally imagine in all these different urban spaces that can somehow expose some sort of their local contact on this platform. Which gives you some hints of what type of digital activity happens in these spaces and then you have to go there to participate. Very simply, this guest book that I showed you, here it could be readable. You can see the guest book of the spaces but you have to go to the space to write to the guest book. It's a very interesting team behind. They are doing very good work with very little resources. And we were all very happy because there is a new project in the art space in Zurich called The Church. The artist asks what we do in churches after religion is over and the answer is we learn things. And Openki now grows into the Zurich space. The idea is to become this type of distributed applications like Mastodon where you can have in different regions, in different spaces, your own learning platforms that then can share information. So you have questions. This is my demo, let's say. I don't know if I could go. I give you one minute to think of questions. In the meantime I changed the password here. I put it without password to see if you can. And then I go online to see if I can show you also a demo for Openki. Okay, if you don't have questions I could go to some more slides that I have about language. Lately I'm very happy with an analogy that I developed with industrial and organic agriculture. And I think many people have clear feelings about these two images, no? I mean even people that are not very political or something like that, I mean our societies feel more good feelings for organic than industrial agriculture. But we have not realized the connection of industrial, agricultural, industrial, let's say digital. And so I try to develop this analogy because I think it's very important to use language that people understand because it is also a fight of marketing. And maybe we have even signaling someday that in this type of big platforms there are signs that they may contain algorithmically modified data. And the question is if this analogy holds how the organic version of the internet, yes? So the question is if we have organic internet how we make it work actually over time and correct? Yes. Yes, I mean it's a process. I don't have the right answer. For me it's the most important and in my talks I always say about complementary things. We don't have to make the whole world being organic but we need a society option and we need diversity and I also call it net diversity like biodiversity. So the urban gardens will not solve the fooding problem of the world but they are critical for creating awareness for bringing people together so it's not like a big solution for everything. But I think it's very important to have this option to understand what it means with its problems. The networks I presented here can connect people locally. They will not solve your problem of staying in touch with your child or your mother that lives in another continent. We cannot have single solutions and the same with blockchain. So yes I will go just very fast to show that in this tree of social software we need to build also infrastructure and very importantly have democracy. I want to say this point that whatever decentralization we do if we cannot meet in person and decide about things it will be always one actor, a group of people that will decide for everybody. And the only way to decide together is to meet and the only way to meet is to have spaces that could host such discussions and they could be hybrid spaces both decentralized in the digital and in the physical domain. So yes this is just an example of this type of spaces that could have their own local networks which can then connect at regional level with networks like Wifi or complementary currencies like Sardex. I finished. We just created an API that this, sorry, yes the question is if we try to connect the different spaces where they would develop the local networks. And we're creating an API that optionally these local networks could expose some of their data to a server that would be also self-hosted so it's not an external server but an internal server. But this is a process. Our focus on this project is what we can do things locally so we are not in a hurry to connect things because then we lose the locality. At the end you will need everything but we want to push a little bit ourselves to the limit of saying okay what we can do only here, what an offline network could be useful for and why. So yes it will be possible soon technically but it's not our main priority in this project. Yes I mean this is the big question they don't use. So the question is sorry. The question is if people are using and how they are using them. So right now the people that use them are our friends. I mean this idea of connecting to a local network it's not well understood. So yes the answer is that it's not, we don't know that these things exist. People don't understand them. They come to us and say what is this? I mean how is it possible? I mean they cannot imagine the idea of a local web service running in their room. And when they live through the room they cannot connect anymore. So it's a very challenging communication process and this is why I think it's important to use the right language but they are very interested. They are very interested because they understand this analogies, they understand ownership and control but in terms of use we are let's say in our circles of friends. So for example some people upload their photos in this exhibition. We start printing them and change the exhibition according what people upload. We want to make assemblies to choose photos physically and not just by clicking like. So we are, yes it's not easy. Yes.