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“The State of Responsible IoT 2019” report out now!

Download the report

“The State of the Responsible IoT 2019” report is also available in a limited first print edition. If you want a printed to copy, please email us on riot@thingscon.org (for more info on a second print edition, see below). Find all prior years’ issues here.

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. We will print a second edition in early 2020. If you want a printed version send us an email until January 31, 2020 with the amount you would like to order. Cost will be approx. 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

Check out our complete program for 2019

ThingsCon 2019 is just 2 weeks away (12 & 13 December)! We are stoked with how our program is shaping up! The sessions and talks offer a diverse look on responsible IoT and promise to deliver inspiration and actionable knowledge!

Thursday’s program has a new setup with four parallel unconference inspired tracks. Want to actively shape responsible IoT with the makers, thought leaders, and designers of the ThingsCon community? Well, tickets are almost gone so be sure to secure your place if you want to join this participatory program.

Friday promises to be a classic ThingsCon day with mix of inspirational sessions, keynotes and a vibrant expo. Scroll down for more details on our program.

Get your tickets ASAP to join in on Thursday’s activities. And be aware; the early bird deal ends December 1st!

Overview of our program

Keynotes

  • Marleen Stikker, founder of Waag. Publishes a book to celebrate 25 years of Waag on how to fix the Internet.
  • Heather Wiltse, assistant professor at Umea University (Sweden), writer of Changing Things, an insightful book on a new type of product that is established while using as part of the network
  • Alexandra Deschamps-Sonsino, writer of Smarter Homes as a cultural phenomenon, and recognized as one of the most influential women in tech.
  • Tracy Rolling, experience director of international design agency Futurice in Berlin where she mixes emerging technologies and service design. She has been focused on emerging technology, especially the IoT, previously working with Philips and Nokia.
  • Irini Papadimitriou is a curator and cultural manager at the cutting edge of design and technology. She serves as creative director at FutureEverything. Before, she headed the V&A’s Digital Futures program.
  • Klasien van de Zandschulp is a maker and a storyteller of critical digital and physical experiences building installations on several festivals like Dutch Design Week, IDFA and Sundance.
  • Wouter Reeskamp is co-founder of Sophisti, an early maker of connected products.
  • Davide Gomba, started the Casa Jasmina project 5 years ago and will share on its sunsetting and lessons learned.

Unconference (Thursday 12 December 10:30-17:30)

  • How do we shape a responsible society? Curated by Max Krüger and Simon Höher, with introduction by Sophie Bloemen (Vision for a Shared Digital Europe) and workshops by Rob van Kranenburg (NGI Forward) and Theo Veltman (Gemeente Amsterdam), and Virt-EU.
  • How do we shape responsible design practice? Curated and moderated by Dries De Roeck, Arne Berger and Albrecht Kurze, frankensteining IoT design methods in a shared insight into the drivers.
  • How do we shape responsible IoT in successful products? Curated by Lorna Goulden, with talks by Marcel Schouwenaar and Cayla Key, and workshop by STBY (Megan Anderson and Shay Raviv).
  • How do we shape the future? Lily Higgins (ao Changeist)  and Elise Marcus (Mother Earth Network) on the future relationships of humans and non-humans.

Workshops (Friday 13 December 11:00-13:00)

  • (The business of) trust in IoT; Responsible tech and cybernetics – with Peter Bihr, Jens Ewald, Simon Höher, Sarah Kiden
  • Living with the machines – with Iskander Smit, Maria Luce Lupetti, Guus Baggermans, Gijs Huisman, Cristina Zaga, Heather Wiltse
  • Into the mud – workshop deep dive in building IoT products with Yanev Klimet
  • Lora in practice – KPN specialists help you connect your first device
  • Industruino – make workshop with new Arduino device for industrial IoT by Loic De Buck
  • NoT Workshop – build you own network of things with Trammell and Holly Hudson
  • Ideating (Female) Mobility – Lieke Ytsma and Frieda Bellmann (White Octopus) supported by Nikky Lenstra
  • Critical storytelling – with End of Time Band, Edwin Jakobs, Hanna Marckmann, Tijmen Schep, Vera van de Seyp
  • The Hacking City – with Sjoerd ter Borg, Kars Alfrink, Naomi Schiphorst, moderated by Gerd Kortuem

More details and the latest updates via thingscon.org/program

Recap: Unconf19

This was a special one. We’re just coming back from hosting the very first ThingsCon Unconf in Berlin – and just like it’s tag line, it truly was a System Reboot – on many levels.

Pretty much exactly five years after the very first ThingsCon took place in Berlin in 2014, we gathered a small and intimate crowd of friends, practitioners, artists, researchers, and designers to take a step back, and launch a new chapter for ThingsCon. Less conference, more open space; less tech, more systems; less people, more time. And moving on from a hardware and more narrow focus on IoT, this time we broaden our perspective to ask some big, open, and quite ambitious questions: What alternative economic models does contemporary tech make possible? What could alternative futures look like in out homes, cities, and offices? What are the opportunities and challenges that come with these alternative futures? And what does this mean for us, today, in our jobs, for our skills and our roles?

Challenging questions, that led to equally challenging discussions: After a short framing from the ThingsCon Team – and a to-the-point opening talk by Alek Tarkowski on Openness, Regulation and the EU, we spent the day working in smaller groups on a broad range of subjects. Topics included Public IoT and governing urban commons, Trust and Security in IoT, New and alternative economic models, speculative urban spaces and, many more. We explored the potential of silent revolutions (rather than tabula rasa, quick changes) in making business in a more sustainable and responsible way. We looked at how we as tech and design workers can take a stand politically (through trustworthy products, business models, systemic architecture, and professional choices). We collected examples for „Anti-Exploitation Design“, products that fight surveillance and non-consensual practices in the home and the city (including a great Input on GDPR-compliant face recognition by @Tamberg). And we imagined a city full of moving houses as speculative space for „Fluid Living“ (finding out that when it comes to collective decision making for public spaces, Human / Machine / Hybrid processes are extremely challenging to agree on and argue for.

The big take away from this day, however, was not mainly the insights from those sessions – which given how complex the questions were set, too often scratch the surface still, of the complexity they entail. The take away was the chance and the time to meet new people, form new alliances, re-establish there is a great, diverse, and incredibly dedicated community out there that continues the hard work of re-thinking the (tech) world we are all working in, and aiming to take a stand toward a more human future. And while the Unconf marked the continuation of this work – there’s still a lot to do for all of us. It turned out that once again, the challenges is really in framing and understanding the problem in all its messiness, before we dive into solutions. And that while tech and the IoT are powerful tools to move ahead, deciding where to go and why is the real task for all of us. Or, as Cedric Price put it:

Technology is the answer, but what was the Question?

This event was the partner event to ThingsCon Nairobi in 2017. Both events were supported by Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ).

ThingsCon Salon Berlin: Presentations

Our ThingsCon Salon Berlin for May is a wrap. Below, you’ll find the presentations by Ester Fritsch, Dr. Isabel Ordoñez and Chris Adams. The topics covered range from IoT design ethics to sustainability, circular economy, and green energy for digital services. Enjoy!

A big thank you to our speakers as well as Mozilla Berlin for kindly hosting us and recording the talks.

Salon Berlin: Ethics and the Life Cycles of IoT

Join us for a ThingsCon Salon in Berlin on May 6th to explore two of the more tricky aspects of IoT: The ethics of how to make better products, and the lifecycle of these electronic products.

Together with three experts in their fields we’ll tackle two of the more tricky aspects of IoT: The ethics involved in making connected products, and the lifecycle of these electronic products.

The speakers:

Ester Fritsch is a PhD Fellow at the VIRT-EU research project. Based on her PhD research she will explore what ethics mean in relation to IoT development. Ester holds an M.A. in Anthropology from The University of Copenhagen. Her research engages with complex ethical configurations that embrace laws, policy, humans, plants, technologies, data and other influences. She is curious towards how ethics emerges through relational practices unfolding in such hazy intertwinements indicating that ethics might not solely be a human affair, but a more than human matter. For the past five years Ester has explored this through empirical and conceptual inquiries into climate change, energy and agriculture in Denmark and Italy. As a PhD fellow in VIRT-EU she now seeks to understand how ethics is cultivated and circulated in European IoT ecologies and delves into how ethics is enacted among IoT developers as ethical subjects in continuous becoming.  

Dr. Isabel Ordonez & Chris Adams will be digging into some juicy issues of the circular economy and look at the life cycle from a material and industrial design point of view. Follow Isabel and Chris on Twitter.

>>> Doors open 6:00 with drinks & time for mingling, program kicks off at 6:30. Should you get lost, ping us on Twitter (@thingscon). We’ll wrap up by around 8pm.<<<

Sign up here.

Resurrecting IoT darlings

What happens when the digital service that powers your favourite smart product stops working? You are often left with a beautiful but lifeless pobject. But in special cases communities form that bring your smart darling back to life. In this Thingscon Salon on May 16th we want to learn from these IoT voodoo-masters. LEARN MORE

An Unconf with peers

ThingsCon Unconf Berlin 2019

You might have followed the journey of ThingsCon over the past five years: from a two-day conference on hardware entrepreneurship in 2014, to a series of community-driven events all over the globe, from a small group of friends in Berlin to a broad and global community of peers that work toward ethical and connected technologies. This year we would like to take this a step further.

We believe this is a special point in time, where we have the chance to peek at the future impact not only of connected technologies – but also of platforms, business models, and urban spaces, and help shape it for the better.

We believe there are is a new economic model that contemporary technologies makes possible. And we feel it’s essential to take a stand on where we would like to see things evolving.

To do so, we would like to try something new:

On May 24, we’re hosting a small, intimate, invitation-only forum of peers, thought leaders, innovators, and researchers from the ThingsCon community and beyond.

Think an unconference-style one-day event with a few high-level lightning talks, inspiring workshops and prototyping sessions – and lots of time to dive deep. A day by peers, of peers, for peers. Specifically, we’re interested in comparing notes about some of the opportunities and tensions that exist when developing new types of economic models in the IoT – as well as hands-on discussions around specific projects and ideas in cities and homes, in Europe and the US and in emerging markets.

Since this is a trusted community event our space is quite limited. Our focus is on bringing people together with interesting takes on this topic to develop their own network, perspectives, and projects. That being said, we would warmly welcome application to join in! We set up a little form that you are welcome to fill out.Alternatively, fell free to shoot us an email and share why you’d like to be part of this. We would love to hear from you!

ThingsCon Unconf19 is taking place May 24 in Berlin. A fee of 50 EUR (net plus VAT) helps us cover food, venue, coffee – everything else is a community effort.

Program

Our Two-day program

This is the full ThingsCon 2019 program overview. Student are welcome to join the general program but maybe you want join our special student program.

Continue reading “Program”

Speakers & hosts

Our speakers & hosts

We are happy to announce our keynote speakers and hosts for sessions and workshops. These include:

Marleen Stikker
Tracy Rolling
Heather Wiltse
Alexandra Deschamps-Sonsino
Klasien van de Zandschulp
Mirena Papadimitriou
Davide Gomba
Wouter Reeskamp

But wait, there are many more:

Continue reading “Speakers & hosts”

ThingsCon 2019

Our sixth annual conference took place 12 & 13 December 2019. Come shape the responsible IoT with us and dive into…

Look back at Thingscon 2019!

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