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Fork the Internet at Contact Summit

Program or Be Programmed author Douglas Rushkoff proposes that we fork the Internet, and he’s convening a summit on the subject. Contact will be held October 20, 2011 at the Angel Orensanz Center in New York City. From Rushkoff’s description, it sounds like it will be conference/unconference hybrid: there will be scheduled speakers, but attendees will also be able to convene meetings at the event.

We’ve highlighted a few projects that aim to create a create government-less Internet before. This isn’t a new idea for Rushkoff either. In this CNN piece he suggested the creation of a new Internet that would work a bit more like FidoNet.

Here’s Rushkoff’s proposed list of subjects:

TECHNOLOGY

BUSINESS AND ECONOMICS

CULTURE

GOVERNMENT

MEANING

  • Can we build an alternative Internet that can’t be turned off?
  • Alternatives to top-down registries and corporate-controlled access
  • New net-based currencies and transaction networks
  • Net-enabled Local Activism and Job Creation
  • Arts networking initiatives
  • Decentralized social networking platforms
  • Proxy voting to expert friends
  • open source democracy
  • “Filter Bubbles” and how to prevent them
  • What Factors Facilitate Collective Intelligence?
  • The Reclamation of Public Space

“Contact will hope to revive the spirit of optimism and infinite possibility of the early cyber-era, folding the edges of this culture back to the middle,” Rushkoff writes. That sounds a little too utopian and nostalgic, but this is an important event. I also like the slogan: “Content was never king. Contact is.”

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