The assumption that your data may Oil And Gas Email List be tradable. You will get money and participation in return, but you will still sell your data. With the risk that you still have no idea what your data is used for. Van Dijck wants to be able to add Oil And Gas Email List value to the internet, but not just commercial value. Also read: Picture perfect SEO: 8 tips for optimizing images What then? So what could an open, decentralized internet look like? For Oil And Gas Email List this article I will limit myself to a few examples of social media. But of course it goes further than that. You can also think of open alternatives for software and even smartphones.
PubHubs José van Dijck is working with Oil And Gas Email List Bart Jacobs (professor at Radboud University) on a social media alternative: PubHubs . In this network you are in various hubs (such as family, municipality, library and sports club). In each Oil And Gas Email List hub, only a relevant part of your own identity plays a role. The concept reminds me of the Oil And Gas Email List defunct Google+, where you also had several "circles". PubHubs is still under development and should be ready within five years (quite a long time by internet terms). It is part of the coalition of public Oil And Gas Email List organizations called PublicSpaces . Element & Matrix Meanwhile, De Greene Amsterdam and Waag are conducting an.
Experiment on the Element app. There Oil And Gas Email List you can discuss the search for a safe digital public space. Element is similar to WhatsApp: you can send messages and create groups there. It uses the Matrix protocol, which has the advantage Oil And Gas Email List that it enables communication between different apps (read the detailed explanation of De Greene Amsterdam here ). Element breaking away from big tech. I decided to join in and became Oil And Gas Email List a member of the 'room' 'Getting rid of Big Tech' this week. But when you enter a room like that, it's like breaking into a conversation that's been going on for hours (or even days, actually)