Difference between revisions of "FSCONS 2010 Themes/Divide and Re-conquer"

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At last, someone comes up with the "right" ansewr!
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= Speakers =
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{{:FSCONS 2010 Speakers Table}}
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{{:FSCONS 2010 Themes/Distributed Systems/Speakers}}
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|}
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There's room in this for 2x30 and 3x45.
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== Ideas ==
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=== History of the Internet  ~30m ===
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In the beginning the internet was a distributed peer to peer network. The usenet, e-mail, and other services were build to work decentralised. What can we learn from the past?
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=== The change to centralisation  ~30m ===
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How did centralisation happen, in which fields is it happening and why? Why is this bad for Free Software and what can we do?
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=== Alternatives ===
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Probably 3 talks, perhaps bundled in the topics. I'll contact some people and than decide which talk we will take.
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==== Distributed search engines: Search engines under our control. Example of Yacy (and others?) ~45m ====
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http://yacy.net
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==== Distributed files: GNUnet, the torrent "cloud" ~45m ====
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* http://fi.wikipedia.org/wiki/BitTorrent#DHT
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* http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Distributed_hash_table
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(There will be either Messages and Social networks or we will put them together in once communication talk. ~45m)
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==== Sending messages ====
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* Distributed Messaging: E-Mail systems are not dead. Why the Free Software solution kolab is an alternative to centralised web mailers.
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* Microbloging: Statusnet as solution for decentralised microblogging.
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*  Instant messaging: Jabber as successful example.
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==== Social Networks ====
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* Despora: Under development. Will contact them. http://www.joindiaspora.com
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* Peerscape: developed by the Finnish research institute HIIT (http://www.hiit.fi/). According to Otto it is a stable and solid app, based on Python and the Firefox extensions is just the interface bit. http://www.peerscape.org/
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* GNU Social: The GNU project for building a social network. http://groups.fsf.org/wiki/Group:GNU_Social
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[[Category:FSCONS_2010]]

Latest revision as of 10:40, 30 March 2012

Description

More and more people use centralised services for their daily tasks. To send each other messages they use centralised social networks. Most people only use a few providers for publishing videos and pictures. When we are searching for information there is a small amount of different search engine providers. In democratic societies power is divided and distributed. The topic of this track is why we need more decentralised Free Software services and which solutions already exist.


Responsibility

The responsibility is defined generally for all themes in the FSCONS 2010 Themes page.


Speakers

Travel details
Name Contact person Title Abstract Biography Arrival Departure Accommodation Budget Scheduling Status
- - - - - - - - - - -

There's room in this for 2x30 and 3x45.

Ideas

History of the Internet ~30m

In the beginning the internet was a distributed peer to peer network. The usenet, e-mail, and other services were build to work decentralised. What can we learn from the past?


The change to centralisation ~30m

How did centralisation happen, in which fields is it happening and why? Why is this bad for Free Software and what can we do?


Alternatives

Probably 3 talks, perhaps bundled in the topics. I'll contact some people and than decide which talk we will take.

Distributed search engines: Search engines under our control. Example of Yacy (and others?) ~45m

http://yacy.net

Distributed files: GNUnet, the torrent "cloud" ~45m

(There will be either Messages and Social networks or we will put them together in once communication talk. ~45m)

Sending messages

  • Distributed Messaging: E-Mail systems are not dead. Why the Free Software solution kolab is an alternative to centralised web mailers.
  • Microbloging: Statusnet as solution for decentralised microblogging.
  • Instant messaging: Jabber as successful example.

Social Networks