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Wikiorientation at Dr.GR Damodaran College of Science
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by
Bhuvana Meenakshi
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published
Dec 23, 2019
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last modified
Jan 18, 2020 08:11 AM
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filed under:
Wikimedia Education,
CIS-A2K,
Open Source,
Access to Knowledge,
Wikipedia Education Program,
women and internet,
Wikipedia gender gap,
teaching
An orientation session on Wikimedia projects was held on 6-7 December 2019 at Dr. GR Damodaran College of Science. This talk was part of the “Hour of Code” event, which is an International event celebrated across the globe to encourage students to develop their knowledge on Computer Science. This event was supported by Open Knowledge movements like Wikimedia, Mozilla, etc.which would help students to share their knowledge in the form of volunteerships and contributions. The highlights of gender gap research and women based projects such as Women in Red were covered as part of a focussed group discussion.
Located in
Access to Knowledge
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Blogs
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Wikiorientation at Dr.GR Damodaran College of Science
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by
Bhuvana Meenakshi
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published
Dec 23, 2019
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last modified
Dec 23, 2019 08:18 AM
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filed under:
Wikimedia Education,
CIS-A2K,
Open Source,
Wikimedia,
women and internet,
Wikipedia gender gap,
teaching
An orientation session on Wikimedia projects was held on 6-7 December 2019 at Dr. GR Damodaran College of Science. This talk was part of the “Hour of Code” event, which is an International event celebrated across the globe to encourage students to develop their knowledge on Computer Science. This event was supported by Open Knowledge movements like Wikimedia, Mozilla, etc.which would help students to share their knowledge in the form of volunteerships and contributions. The highlights of gender gap research and women based projects such as Women in Red were covered as part of a focussed group discussion.
Located in
Access to Knowledge
/
Blogs
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Analysis on the strategies of Mozilla and Wiki communities on gender gap aspects
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by
Bhuvana Meenakshi
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published
Oct 03, 2019
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last modified
Oct 03, 2019 11:56 AM
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filed under:
Wikimedia,
women and internet,
CIS-A2K,
Access to Knowledge
There is a need for research on how Open Source communities are trying to balance the gender ratio and how they provide the safe space environment to its contributors. With this in mind I have come up with this blog as I am an active contributor of Mozilla since 5 years and also got myself recently introduced to Wikimedia and its sister projects, have interacted with few Indian women contributors in both of these communities and came out with a few observations on how I see them in India and what could be improved in both communities.
Located in
Access to Knowledge
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Preliminary research result on Wikipedia gender gap in India
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by
Ting-Yi Chang
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published
May 22, 2017
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last modified
May 23, 2017 11:09 AM
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filed under:
CIS-A2K,
Access to Knowledge,
Gender,
women and internet,
Sexual Harassment,
Wikipedia gender gap,
Research
Since June 2016, Ting-Yi Chang from the University of Toronto has worked with the CIS-A2K team to conduct action research on the Wikipedia gender gap in India. The research aims to improve the understanding of the gender gap (imbalance) issue in the Indian Wikipedia communities while examining local interventions.
Located in
Access to Knowledge
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Blogs
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Privacy, pornography, sexuality (a video)
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by
Namita A. Malhotra
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published
Dec 10, 2009
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last modified
Aug 02, 2011 08:37 AM
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filed under:
Digital subjectivities,
women and internet,
Censorship,
Obscenity
The video is an attempt to use the material collected for purposes of provoking a discussion around privacy, pornography, sexuality and technology. It focuses largely on an Indian context, which most viewers would be familiar with. The video is pegged around the ban of Savita Bhabhi – a pornographic comic toon – but uses that to open up a discussion on various incidents and concepts in relation to pornography and privacy across Asia.
Located in
RAW
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Blogs
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Porn: Law, Video & Technology
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Alternatives? From situated knowledges to standpoint epistemology
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by
Asha Achuthan
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published
Jul 29, 2009
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last modified
Aug 03, 2011 09:42 AM
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filed under:
histories of internet in India,
rewiring bodies,
women and internet,
mathemes and medicine
The previous post explored, in detail, responses to science and technology in feminist and gender work in India. The idea was, more than anything else, to present an 'attitude' to technology, whether manifested in dams or obstetric technologies, that sees technology as a handmaiden of development, as instrument - good or evil, and as discrete from 'man'. Feminist and gender work in India has thereafter articulated approximately four responses to technology across state and civil society positions - presence, access, inclusion, resistance. The demand for presence of women as agents of technological change, the demand for improved access for women to the fruits of technology, the demand for inclusion of women as a constituency that must be specially provided for by technological amendments, and a need for recognition of technology’s ills particularly for women, and the consequent need for resistance to technology on the same count. Bearing in mind that women’s lived experiences have served as the vantage point for all four of the responses to technology in the Indian context, I will now suggest the need to revisit the idea of such experience itself, and the ways in which it might be made critical, rather than valorizing it as an official counterpoint to scientific knowledge, and by extension to technology. This post, while not addressing the 'technology question' in any direct sense, is an effort to begin that exploration.
Located in
RAW
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Blogs
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Re:Wiring Bodies
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Rewiring Bodies: Methodologies of Critique - Responses to technology in feminist and gender work in India
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by
Asha Achuthan
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published
Jul 20, 2009
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last modified
Aug 03, 2011 09:44 AM
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filed under:
histories of internet in India,
rewiring bodies,
women and internet,
mathemes and medicine
In this post, part of her CIS-RAW 'Rewiring Bodies' project, Asha Achuthan records the arguments within feminism and gender work that critique the use of technology in the Indian context, and attempts to show continuities between these arguments and postcolonial formulations. Overall, the post also records notions of the 'political' that inform the contour of these critiques.
Located in
RAW
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Blogs
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Re:Wiring Bodies
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Pleasure and Pornography: Impassioned Objects
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by
Namita A. Malhotra
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published
May 11, 2009
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last modified
Aug 02, 2011 08:35 AM
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filed under:
histories of internet in India,
Cyberspace,
internet and society,
Obscenity,
women and internet,
YouTube,
Cyborgs,
Cybercultures,
Digital subjectivities
In this post, a third in the series documenting her CIS-RAW project, Pleasure and Pornography, Namita Malhotra explores the idea of fetish as examined by Anne McClintock (i) . This detour is an exploration of the notion of fetish, its histories and meanings, and how it might relate to the story of Indian porn.
Located in
RAW
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Blogs
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Porn: Law, Video & Technology
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Postcolonial Hybridity and the ‘Terrors of Technology’ Argument
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by
Asha Achuthan
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published
Apr 15, 2009
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last modified
Aug 03, 2011 09:45 AM
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filed under:
histories of internet in India,
rewiring bodies,
women and internet,
mathemes and medicine
In the last couple of posts, Asha Achuthan has been building towards an understanding of how the anti-technology arguments in India have been posed, in the nationalist and Marxist positions. She goes on, in this sixth post documenting her project, to look at the arguments put out by the postcolonial school, their appropriation of Marxist terminology, their stances against Marxism in responding to science and technology in general, and the implications of these arguments for other fields of inquiry.
Located in
RAW
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Blogs
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Re:Wiring Bodies
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Pleasure and Pornography: Pornography and the Blindfolded Gaze of the Law
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by
Namita A. Malhotra
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published
Apr 02, 2009
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last modified
Aug 02, 2011 08:37 AM
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filed under:
histories of internet in India,
Obscenity,
internet and society,
Art,
cybercultures,
women and internet,
YouTube,
Cybercultures,
cyberspaces,
Digital subjectivities,
History
In the legal discourse, pornography as a category is absent, except as an aggravated form of obscenity. Does this missing descriptive category assist in the rampant circulation of pornography, either online or offline? Rather than ask that question, Namita Malhotra, in this second post documenting her CIS-RAW project, explores certain judgments that indeed deal with pornographic texts and uncovers the squeamishness that ensures that pornography as an object keeps disappearing before the law.
Located in
RAW
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Blogs
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Porn: Law, Video & Technology