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Canada @lemmy.ca

Canada’s answer to Tesla showcased at global trade fair in Germany

United Kingdom @feddit.uk

Why solar panels in the UK are inseparable from Chinese slave labour: Experts say Britain should follow other countries and take tougher stance

Canada @lemmy.ca

How a trade war could boost small-scale farming in southwestern Ontario

Canada @lemmy.ca

Three prominent Yale professors leave the U.S., depart for Canadian university, citing Trump fears

  • First They Came for Columbia

    First, Harvard’s failure to speak out discourages other, more vulnerable universities from taking action, which undermines our collective defenses. If Columbia or another university confronts the administration on its own, it will lose. If America’s nearly 6,000 universities and colleges launch a campaign in defense of higher education, odds are that Trump will lose.

    Someone must lead this collective effort. And if Harvard and other leading universities remain in their protective shells, there is a good chance that no one will.

    Second, and crucially, silence cedes the public debate. Public opinion is not formed in a vacuum. The social science research is clear: In the absence of a countervailing message, a one-sided debate will powerfully shape public opinion. As long as he faces no public counter-argument from leaders of higher education, Trump will punish universities and pay no cost in the court of public opinion. If Harvard and other universities make a vigorous defense of higher education and principles of free speech and democracy, much of the public will rally to its side [...]

  • Writer Ben Tarnoff and researcher Dr James Muldoon have been proposing to 'deprivatise' the internet. Dr Muldoon writes a lot on 'digital democracy' and how the 'extractivism' of today's digital world needs to be rethought, very much a the UK's Ada Lovelace Institute.

    Their and other people's ideas are mostly based on cooperatives, which are not new as we know, but barely applied in the technical space.

    There are, however, already first projects in a lot of countries around the globe, and despite in their early stages, many of them appear to be very promising. In the U.S., for example, researcher Trebor Scholz's Platform Cooperativism Constortium is certainly among the most notable. The organization supports communities from cooperatives that then build more or less the same products and services like the centralized, venture capital-backed surveillance technology (Uber, Amazon, video conferencing tools, ...), but are owned on a more collective basis and pursuing a less extractive business model.

    In Europe, the Smart Cooperative was launched as a social economy project by founders from the cultural sector. These visionaries created Smart as an innovative solution for freelance artists and cultural professionals who often work under precarious conditions. Today, the collective has tens of thousands of members, and is active in 7 countries (Belgium, Germany, Sweden, Austria, Italy, Spain, and Portugal).

    In Mexico, Tierra Comun is a similar project and equally successful.

    There are many more across the globe, aiming at solving a huge variety of issues, and they are very promising imho.

  • privacy @lemmy.ca

    Data Broker Brags About Having Highly Detailed Personal Information on Nearly All Internet Users

    United Kingdom @feddit.uk

    UK: Chinese fast-fashion giant Shein wants to list on the London Stock Exchange, but claims of abuse and links to China are causing the Government a headache

    Australia @aussie.zone

    Australia: Anti-Slavery Commissioner reviews local government's electric bus deal with Australian-Chinese manufacturers over alleged forced labor

    United Kingdom @feddit.uk

    Former British ambassadors give warnings over intelligence-sharing with US

    Australia @aussie.zone

    Facebook searches for Cyclone Alfred were blocked for containing content breaching 'community standards'

    United Kingdom @feddit.uk

    UK: Rooftop solar could reduce energy bill for the country's poorest families by almost a quarter, study says

    Australia @aussie.zone

    Mining giant Rio Tinto says wind and solar make economic sense, but LNP stands in way of its plans to save smelters

    United Kingdom @feddit.uk

    200 UK Companies Permanently Move To 4-Day Work Week Without Loss Of Pay