Outreach
Februrary 2023
Exhibited at the Amsterdam public library (center location), December 2022 – March 2023.
Together with Berlin-based art collective weise7 we organized an exhibit called ‘antennas and us’ in the Amsterdam public library to show the invisible workings of telecommunications networks, and beam-forming in particular. the exhibition ran from November 2022 until march 2023.
The exposition is meant to make specific less-known mechanisms part of the 5G standard more explicit, students subsequently interviewed library visitors for additional data collection and public engagement.
September 2022
The Infrastructure Walk Berlin was carried out by Niels Ten Oever, Jeroen de Vos and Maxigas, and started at the Technische Universität Berlin.
Hear much more about the infrastructure walk in this podcast!
May 2022
Workshop Data Streams in the City
April 2022
IN-SIGHT.it kick-off event: Citizenship and standard-setting in digital networks.
On April 12th 2022, the IN-SIGHT.it project held its kick-off event at the offices of its institional partners, the Dutch Institute for Norm Development, NEN. They day consisted of an interactive workshop that highlighted the interdisciplinary nature of the project. The day was started by a keynote by Dr. Olia Kanevskaia of Utrecht University on the Futureproofing of Standardization and Standards Development Bodies. Dr. Kanevskaia highlighted the increased interest in standardization, including its role in aligning technology with the public interest and fundamental values, as highlighted in the European Union’s (EU) standardization strategy. She offered several ways in which standardization processes, that are currently mostly aligned with the World Trade Organization’s (WTO) Technical Barriers to Trade (TBT) Agreement could be improved to better reflect the public interest.
The presentation was followed by the chair of the largest and most central standards body for standardization on the Internet, the Internet Engineering Task Force. The presentation outlined the working of private standard setting, and exemplified its impact by showing the standardization of the new transport protocol QUIC, and the large impact it has on internet traffic. This provided an interesting contrast between public standard setting, as it happens in national, regional and international standards bodies, and private standard setting, as it happens for the internet and the web.
The final two presentations were done by two members of the research team, Niels ten Oever and Paul Groth. Both showed preliminary findings of the research in its first twenty months. Ten Oever showcased an analysis of the role of standardization in the EU’s draft AI law and its shortcomings vis-a-vis the public interest, and an analysis of how lawful intercept, or surveillance for government agencies, is being standardized in 5G. Groth showed the role potential of analyzing standards documents and discussions in their development process, with artificial intelligence.
Particpation in the workshop was very diverse, there were representatives from industry, policy, and civil society, which spoke to the interdisciplinary nature of standards themselves as well as the project team.
March 2022
5G infrastructure walk at Bijlmer ArenA Blog post report
December 2021
Show me the numbers: Workshop on Analyzing IETF Data (AID), 2021
September 2021
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The metagovernance of Internet governance - Presentation in panel on Power and Authority in Internet Governance: What Role for the State? - 20th Käte Hamburger Dialogue
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The Making of International Communication Standards - 11th International Conference on Standardisation and Innovation in Information Technology - Presentation at Standardisation and Innovation in Information Technology (SIIT 2021)
May 2021
- The quantum state of topological infrastructure reconfigurations: the case of 5G - Invited talk at Digital Democracy Institute at Simon Fraser University
April 2021
- Two emerging communication governance regimes - Invited lecture at the University of Amsterdam Institute for Information Law