Cryptorave #10 @HEK

As part of the exhibition Swiss Media Art: !Mediengruppe Bitnik, Fragmentin, Lauren Huret – Pax Art Awards 2018 a Cryptorave will take place at HeK; a dance party that combines crypto currencies and live action roleplaying games.

!Mediengruppe Bitnik, Omsk Social Club, Knoth & Renner, Cryptorave #10, 2019

Recently, !Mediengruppe Bitnik – Carmen Weisskopf and Domagoj Smoljo – developed Cryptoraves in collaboration with Omsk Social Club: performative events including live action role-playing games, dance parties and crypto currencies. Visitors are invited to take part in the participative performance by registering on the Cryptorave website and allowing their computer to mine the anonymous crypto currency Monero in order to unlock information about the party and the role to be played. By joining their computing power, the participating community collectively generates value to enable the autonomous dance party experience. Through the online mining process, participants unlock their LARP identity, the Cryptorave reader and finally their entry ticket to the rave.

Mine your ticket and unlock information on the party here: http://0b673cce.xyz

The acts Ven3mo (CH), Primitive Art (IT), Crystallmess (FR) and Suutoo (GB) will play live at the Cryptorave.

Ven’3mo is a Geneva-based multidisciplinary artist, DJ and researcher. She plays with sound in order to explore notions of hybridisation and mutation – looking at music as a vector for transformation and deconstruction. Her sets are not subject to one genre and are filled with different textures and narratives.

Primitive Art is an Italian experimental music band founded in 2011 by the collaboration of Matteo Pit and Jim C. Nedd. Digital soundscapes provide the arena for timbres, melodies, verses and spoken words to crash into one another. Within the haze, the duo winds up its chaotic energy, channeling their intimate songs in strange territories.

Through the medium of DJing, Crystallmess concentrates on the analysis of so-called „subcultures“ and the influence of black diasporas. Through the multiplication of references to dancehall, soca, logobi and hip-hop, Crystallmess manifests the importance of these currents in the formation of new musical territories. Her expressive sets decolonise club culture, inviting us to rethink the future.

Multi-disciplinary artist and musician Suutoo creates soundscapes both harmonious and discordant. Utilising fantasy as a weapon of choice, Suutoo destroys the gods you thought you worshipped and lets you swallow light.

Black Mirror Special on ARTE.TV about crypto raves.

Amnesia Scanner

Rave Culture on Block Chain

!Mediengruppe Bitnik receives Pax Art Award

The exhibition Swiss Media Art: !Mediengruppe Bitnik, Fragmentin, Lauren Huret consists of three solo shows on the respective winners of the Pax Art Awards 2018. In June 2018, two artist groups and one artist from Switzerland were awarded the prize for the first time. The works presented in the exhibition deal with the potential alienation embedded in the stronger intersection of digital technologies and economics. At the same time, they suggest that a more human outcome is possible, inviting the visitors to ask questions and ultimately take control over the instruments that are given to them.

!Mediengruppe Bitnik have established themselves as a major voice in the Swiss media art scene. The duo deals with relevant topics of public interest such as the surveillance of individuals, the commercial use of chat bots or the economy of the darknet. In their most recent works, the artists explore how the digital revolution affects economic dynamics and how these in turn affect our social behaviour. In their work Random Darknet Shopper (2014), !Mediengruppe Bitnik programmed an automated online shopping bot, which randomly purchased items on the darknet and had them delivered to the exhibition space. The question of the responsibility of illegal actions by a bot was raised. The recent work Postal Machine Decision deals with the automation of postal services: !Mediengruppe Bitnik sent twenty-one parcels with two different delivery addresses – one in Halle (Saale) and one in Brussels. The automated post offices, working with the help of barcodes, scanners and programmed instructions, were completely overwhelmed with the parcels and sent them back and forth – which the artist duo tracked and used to study automated logistical systems.

!Mediengruppe Bitnik developed Cryptoraves in collaboration with OMSK Social Club and Knoth & Renner. Utopian events involving live action role-play (LARP) to open up a thinking space around topics related to cryptocurrencies, blockchain technology and DAO. To attend the Cryptorave, participants need to mine the  anonymous cryptocurrency Monero through a dedicated Cryptorave website. By joining their computing power together, the participating community collectively generates value to enable the autonomous dance party experience. Through the online mining process, participants unlock their LARP identity, the Cryptorave reader and finally their entry ticket to the rave. In March, the tenth edition of Cryptorave will take place at HeK. In the exhibition space, a projection displays the Cryptorave website, revealing the process of collective cryptocurrency mining to unlock the LARP dance experience.

Fragmentin, consisting of Laura Perrenoud, Marc Dubois and David Colombini, works at the intersection of art and design. The studio explores the boundaries between the digital and physical environment and examines the impact of technology on our everyday lives. Displuvium, the most recent work realised by Fragmentin in collaboration with designer Renaud Defrancesco for the exhibition at HeK, deals with the controversial topic of geo-engineering and cloud seeding in particular – a practice that was developed to influence and change weather developments and has been applied by many countries since the 1940s. In addition to other works, HeK also presents an updated version of the work 2199, a virtual reality installation that prompts users to follow certain instructions, resulting in a kind of involuntary choreography. With this work, the artists question forms of control and authority through popular media and the willingness of the population to follow them.

Lauren Huret’s work investigates how digital media increasingly influence our social behaviour. The artist uses tools from popular smartphone applications to tell personal stories. In Deep Blue Dream IV, Huret presents herself trapped in a flat screen; her body slowly moves beneath the transparent surface and is pressed against the translucent screen. This work is on the one hand a self-portrait and on the other hand a representation of the complicated relationship between humans and screens in which people get lost more and more. In her most recent video work Praying for my Haters, Huret presents her research on so-called content moderators in Manila who remove offensive content from social networks. Her video shows the difficulties and suffering of these unknown and underpaid workers. For the exhibition at HeK, Huret will develop a new ongoing work, Executive Realness, which will show a livestream resulting from the artist’s research on high-frequency trading algorithms used in the stock market.

Art Foundation Pax is an independent foundation promoting digital and media-based art in Switzerland and is financially supported by Pax. With the Pax Art Awards, ground-breaking prizes for digital art, the Art Foundation Pax in collaboration with HeK, honours and supports media-specific practices of Swiss artists whose works use media technologies or reflect on their effects.

OFFSHORE TOUR OPERATOR

We organised a remote walk through Victoria, Gozo.

The Great Offshore (Le Grand Large) is a documentary artwork, that invites us to a journey into the depth of the offshore industry.

The work gathers together documents, narratives, photographs and objects, collected during several trips in some of the most notorious tax havens : Dublin, the City of London, Zürich and Pfäffikon, Switzerland, Vaduz, Liechtenstein, the Channel Islands, Jersey & Guernsey, Wilmington Delaware, the Bahamas, the Cayman Islands, Malta, Cyprus, Amsterdam, Luxembourg.

The various documents brought back from those exploratory travels are agenced like an encyclopedia, that seeks to index and underlign the infrastructural aspects of the tax evasion industry, that is lying at the heart of the neoliberal machinery.

boattr.uk @IS&T International Symposium on Electronic Imaging

Adnan presented the boattr project during the EI 2019 conference.

Founded in 1947, the Society for Imaging Science and Technology (imaging.org) is a professional international organization dedicated to keeping members and others apprised of the latest scientific and technological developments in the field of imaging through conferences, educational programs, publications, and its website.

IS&T encompasses all aspects of imaging science, with particular emphasis on digital printing, electronic imaging, color science, image preservation, photofinishing, pre-press technologies, hybrid imaging systems, and silver halide research.

History

In 1947 a group of 81 researchers from the National Archives, US Navy, National Bureau of Standards, Signal Corp Engineering Laboratory, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Georgetown University, Bell & Howell Co., and Eastman Kodak Co.—to name a few—worked together to form the Society of Photographic Engineers. The goal was to establish a society to concentrate on publishing scientific papers in the area of photographic engineering. Before this, papers where published in a multitude of publications mixed with other papers of various non-related material. The membership more then doubled before 1950. The first issue of “Photographic Engineering” was published in January 1950.

As a result of “Photographic Engineering”, the newly formed Society was able to bring in 18 corporate members, including Bell & Howell Co., Eastman Kodak Co., Bausch & Lomb Optical, Graflex Inc., and Kollmorgan Optical. By the end of 1950 the Society had 33 corporate and more than 270 individual members.

The Society of Photographic Engineers changed it’s name in April 1957 to the Society of Photographic Scientists and Engineers (SPSE). Shortly thereafter the first issue of the “Journal of Photographic Scientists and Engineers” was published. On Jan. 29, 1992, the name of the Society was changed to the Society for Imaging Science and Technology (IS&T).

Fourtoni: An AR Sculpture

Fourtoni is an Augmented Reality sculpture that makes use of audience eye tracking data in order to recreate a fourth Triton from the existing three tritons in Vincent Apap’s Triton Fountain located in Triton Square, Valletta.

The virtual sculpture was launched on an Android platform on 28 September 2018 as part of the Science in the City Festival 2018. Fourtoni is a collaboration between Matthew Attard and Matthew Galea from the Department of Digital Arts, together with Dr Vanessa Camilleri from the Department of Artificial Intelligence.

The virtual sculpture’s content was driven by research concerning the combination of the cortical homunculus representation of our body in our brain, and eye-tracking results involving free gazing. This aspect of the project was discussed with Prof. Ian Thornton from the Department of Cognitive Sciences.

Cryptorave #8 @TM

Mediengruppe Bitnik

!Mediengruppe Bitnik

!Mediengruppe Bitnik (read: the not mediengruppe bitnik) are contemporary artists working on, and with, the Internet. Using Hacking as an artistic strategy, their works re-contextualise the familiar to allow for new readings of established structures and mechanisms. Their practice expands from the digital to physical spaces, often intentionally applying loss of control.

They have been known to intervene into Londons surveillance space by hijacking CCTV cameras and replacing the video images with an invitation to play chess. In 2014 Bitnik connected the darknet directly with the gallery space through a shopping bot. With a weekly budget of $100 in Bitcoins, Random Darknet Shopper went shopping on the deep web where it randomly bought items like cigarettes, keys, trousers or a scan of a Hungarian passport and had the items sent directly to exhibition spaces in Switzerland, the UK and Slovenia. In a more recent series of works !Mediengruppe Bitnik use the hacked online dating site Ashley Madison as a case study to talk about the current relationship between human and machine, Internet intimacy and the use of virtual platforms to disrupt and defraud.

!Mediengruppe Bitnik are Carmen Weisskopf and Domagoj Smoljo. They are currently based in Berlin. Their accomplices are the filmmaker and
researcher Adnan Hadzi and the reporter Daniel Ryser.

http://wwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwww.bitnik.org/

35c3 highlights

“Das ist unser Haus!” from SEELAND Medienkooperative on Vimeo.

The 25C3 highlights:

Lecture: Opening Event
Lecture: Locked up science & Projekt Deal
Open Infrastructure Orbit Vortrags-Arena & OIO social
Lecture: Mind the Trap: Die Netzpolitik der AfD im Bundestag
Lecture: Frontex: Der europäische Grenzgeheimdienst
Lecture: Updates von der europäischen Außengrenze
Lecture: Censored Planet: a Global Censorship Observatory
Lecture: How does the Internet work?
Lecture: Scuttlebutt
Lecture: Introduction to Deep Learning
Lecture: Digital Airwaves
Lecture: Citzens or subjects? The battle to control our bodies, speech and communications
Lecture: Transmission Control Protocol
Lecture: Afroroutes: Africa Elsewhere
Theater/performance: A la recherche de l’information perdue
Lecture: Tactical Embodiment
Lecture: It Always Feels Like the Five Eyes Are Watching You
Lecture: Hacking Ecology
Lecture: Inside the Fake Science Factories
Lecture: C2X: The television will not be revolutionized
Lecture: The Urban Organism
Lecture: Reality Check! Basel/Lagos?? In virtual reality?
Lecture: The Surveillance State limited by acts of courage and conscience
Lecture: Theater und Quantenzeitalter
Lecture: Wind: Off-Grid Services for Everyday People
Lecture: Smart Home – Smart Hack
Lecture: How to teach programming to your loved ones
Lecture: The good, the strange and the ugly in 2018 art &tech
Theater/performance: Never Forgetti
Lecture: The Enemy
Lecture: Computer, die über Asyl (mit)entscheiden
Lecture: Analyze the Facebook algorithm and reclaim data sovereignty
Lecture: Attacking end-to-end email encryption
Lecture: Schweiz: Netzpolitik zwischen Bodensee und Matterhorn
Lecture: The Ghost in the Machine
Lecture: The Layman’s Guide to Zero-Day Engineering
Lecture: DISNOVATION.ORG & tracery & movim
Lecture: Die EU und ihre Institutionen
Lecture: What is Good Technology?
Theater/performance: Mondnacht
Lecture: Meine Abenteuer im EU-Parlament
Film: All Creatures Welcome & All Creatures Welcome
Generative Art with Paper.js
Wie aus einer Wette ein Kiosk System für den Raspi wurde
Programmieren mit der Maus
Exploiting PS4 Video Apps
Neusprech Crashkurs
Lecture: From Zero to Zero Day
Lecture: Internet, the Business Side
Lecture: Transhuman Expression
Lecture: Best of Informationsfreiheit
Lecture: The Critical Making Movement
Lecture: MicroPython – Python for Microcontrollers
Lecture: Planes and Ships and Saving Lives
Lecture: Archäologische Studien im Datenmüll
Lecture: Matrix, the current status and year to date
Lecture: Domain Name System
Lecture: Die Häuser denen, die darin wohnen & das ist unser haus
Lecture: Web-based Cryptojacking in the Wild
Lecture: Mehr schlecht als Recht: Grauzone Sicherheitsforschung
Lecture: Freedom needs fighters!
Lecture: A Blockchain Picture Book
Lecture: Butterbrotdosen-Smartphone
Theater/performance: A WebPage in Three Acts
Lecture: Media Disruption Led By The Blind
Lecture: Desinformation und Fake News – Bekämpfung und Verifizierung leicht gemacht
Lecture: Internet of Dongs
Lecture: Circumventing video identification using augmented reality
Lecture: The foodsaving grassroots movement
Lecture: #afdwegbassen: Protest, (Club-)Kultur und antifaschistischer Widerstand
Lecture: Repair-Cafés
Lecture: Hebocon
Other: Chaos Communication Slam
Lecture: Hacking how we see
Lecture: Are machines feminine?
Lecture: Radical Digital Painting
Lecture: Microtargeting und Manipulation
Lecture: Court in the Akten
Lecture: Dissecting Broadcom Bluetooth
Lecture: Cat & Mouse: Evading the Censors in 2018
Lecture: Augmented Reality: Bridging the gap between the physical and the digital world
Lecture: Kickstart the Chaos: Hackerspace gründen für Anfänger

Celebration of International Migrants Day

The International Organization for Migration (IOM) is planning to celebrate World Migrants Day by organising a one-day interactive event on Tuesday 18 December 2018 from 9:00 to 20:30.

Starting from the Global Compact for safe, orderly and regular migration (GCM), we will be discussing some of its objectives in a pragmatic way and hopefully productive way.

The workshops are open to a variety of stakeholders including Civil Society Organisations, Institutions and migrants themselves. We will be discussing the following GCM objectives:

Objective no. 10: Prevent, combat and eradicate trafficking in persons in the context of international migration.

Objective no. 16: Empower migrants and societies to realize full inclusion and social cohesion.

Objective no. 17: Eliminate all forms of discrimination and promote evidence-based public discourse to shape perceptions of migration.

Objective no. 23: Strengthen international cooperation and global partnerships for safe, orderly and regular migration.

After our sessions are finished The IOM Global Migration Film Festival will be hosting the film screening of “Deltas Back to Shores”

Forensics and rescue in Mediterranean humanitarianism

The EGS seminar this year will continue to pursue the question of refugees, rights, and representation. The struggle for rights and recognition occurs on a battlefield of representations, among other things, and some of the chief actors on that field are humanitarians.  “Refugee” is a category for both humanitarian and human rights discourses, and the tension between the two representations of this condition has given rise to a robust critical literature. To claim rights is not the same thing to ask for help; the demand for justice can be very different than the plea for aid.  Both discourses, though, make reference to the concept of ‘humanity,’ and both practices increasingly rely on forensic or evidentiary strategies. We will explore critical accounts of humanitarian action and ask about their significance in light of the ongoing criminalization not only of migrants in the Mediterranean and elsewhere, but also of the humanitarians who seek to aid them. Is a new sort of politics of humanitarian action emerging in response to this targeting? We will continue to work with the investigators of Forensic Oceanography (this year Charles Heller will join us) , and we will also meet with humanitarian activists based in Malta.

SESSION 1: EXPELLED FROM HUMANTY ALTOGETHER
Hannah Arendt, “The Decline of the Nation-State and the End of the Rights of Man,” in The Origins of Totalitarianism, World Publishing (1958), 267-302
Jacques Rancière, “Who is the Subject of the Rights of Man?,” South Atlantic Quarterly 103:2-3 (Spring-Summer 2004), 297-310

SESSION 2: CRITIQUE OF HUMANITARIAN REASON
Didier Fassin, “Truth Ordeal” and “Conclusion,”  in Humanitarian Reason, U Cal P (2011), 109-129, 243-257
Miriam Ticktin, “The Illness Clause,” in Casualties of Care , U Cal P (2011), 89-127

SESSION 3: FORENSIC OCEANOGRAPHY  1: FROM NON-ASSISTANCE TO DEATH BY RESCUE
Charles Heller and Lorenzo Pezzani,  “Case: Left-to-Die Boat” and “Liquid Traces,”  in Forensis, Sternberg (2014) , 638-655, 657-684
Heller and Pezzani, “Ebbing and Flowing,” Near Futures Online 1, March 2016
Forensic Oceanography, The Left-to-Die Boat Case (2012): http://www.forensic-architecture.org/case/left-die-boat/
Forensic Oceanography, Death By Rescue (2016): https://deathbyrescue.org/report/narrative/

SESSION 4: FORENSIC OCEANOGRAPHY 2: CRIMINALIZING RESCUE
Amnesty International, Between the Devil and the Deep Blue Sea (2018)
Forensic Oceanography, Blaming the Rescuers (2018):
https://blamingtherescuers.org/
Valentina Zagaria, “When rescue at sea becomes a crime,” Open Democracy (15 September 2018)
https://www.opendemocracy.net/can-europe-make-it/valentina-zagaria/when-rescue-at-sea-becomes-crime-who-tunisian-fishermen-arrested-in-italy-really-a
Giulia Bertoluzzi, “Tunisian fishermen on the front line of migrant tragedy,” Middle East Eye (31 October 2017)
https://www.middleeasteye.net/in-depth/features/fishermen-zarzis-1153799343

SESSION 5: SEMINAR WITH MALTA HUMANITARIAN ACTIVISTS

SESSION 6: RESCUE AS DEPOLITICIZING OR REPOLITICIZING?
Sophie Hinger, “Transformative Trajectories” (interview with Heller and Pezzani), Movements 4, no. 1 (2018), 193-208
Heller and Pezzani, “The Perils of Migration” (October 2018), draft  – no circulation
Paolo Cuttitta, “Repoliticization through Search and Rescue”,” Geopolitics 23, no. 3 (July -September 2018), 632-660
Paolo Cuttitta, “Pushing Migrants Back to Libya, Persecuting Rescue NGOs,” Border Criminologies blog (18 April 2018), Parts I and II

IF WE HAVE TIME
Joe Sacco, “The Unwanted,” in Journalism, Jonathan Cape (2012), 107-157
https://www.vqronline.org/vqr-gallery/unwanted-part-1
https://www.vqronline.org/vqr-gallery/unwanted-part-2

Cultural Mapping Conference

The annual Valletta 2018 international conference on Cultural Relations in Europe and the Mediterranean returns with its second conference, titled “Cultural Mapping: Debating Spaces and Places” on the 22nd and 23rd October at the Mediterranean Conference Centre in Valletta.

The conference is being organised following last April’s launch of the online map www.culturemapmalta.com – which exhibits the data collected during the first phase of the Cultural Mapping project, led by the Valletta 2018 Foundation. Bringing together a number of international academics, researchers, cultural practitioners and artists, the conference will explore various exercises of cultural mapping taking place across the world. With the subject being relatively new to Malta, speakers will be discussing the role of cultural mapping within the fields of cultural policy, artistic practice, heritage and cultural identity, amongst others.

Speakers include experts, academics, researchers and activists within the fields of tangible and intangible heritage, sustainable development, and cultural policy, both across Europe and the Mediterranean. Keynote speeches will be delivered by Prof. Pier Luigi Sacco, a cultural economist who will be presenting examples of cultural mapping taking place in Italy and Sweden, and Dr Aadel Essaadani, the Chairperson of the Arterial Network, a Morocco-based organisation that brings together art and culture practitioners across the African continent.

The conference will also feature a series of parallel sessions, allowing researchers from across the globe to present examples of cultural mapping taking place in various European and non-European contexts. Parallel sessions will explore a broad range of issues, including the use of innovative digital technology within cultural mapping, the role of cultural mapping in participatory community-based work, and cultural mapping as a tool within artistic practice. Highlights include presentations of cultural mapping exercises taking place in Palestine, New York and Hong Kong, as well as in Malta and across Europe and the Mediterranean. The conference will be complemented by a site-specific installation by artist Trevor Borg and a series of short film screenings developed by conference presenters.

The first conference in this series, titled “Dialogue in the Med: exploring identity through networks” was held in September 2014, and brought together academics, researchers and cultural operators from across the Mediterranean to debate issues related to cultural mobility and networking. Proceedings from this conference will be published in due course.

‘Cultural Mapping: Debating Spaces & Places” was the second conference within this series. This conference was held on the 22nd & 23rd October 2015 at the Mediterranean Conference Centre in Valletta.

The conference included two plenary sessions, a speed networking session, to further increase networking opportunities, eight parallel sessions, and various other complementary events, including a site-specific installation and two short film screenings.

The full conference programme can be downloaded here: Cultural Mapping Debating Spaces & Places programme

The conference outcomes can be accessed here: Cultural Mapping – Debating Spaces & Places – Outcomes

Subjective Maps is about people designing their own map of the town they live and work in. People come together in a workshop setting to draw maps, tell their stories and meet each other. The project then produces maps that can be used by others to visit and navigate the town.

Subjective Maps will be collected from six different localities in Malta and Gozo, including Valletta, St Paul’s Bay, Ħamrun, Birżebbuġa, Gżira, Victoria (Gozo).

The earliest maps were ‘story’ maps. Cartographers were artists who mingled knowledge with supposition, memory and fears. Their maps described both landscape and the events, which had taken place within it, enabling travelers to plot a route as well as to experience
a story. – Rory MacLean

The project aims to:

1. Promote the successful integration of minority and non-Maltese nationals in Maltese community.
2. Identify the diversity in place-people relations and to map those relationships people have with the place where they live and where they call ‘home’.
3. Capture visual narratives of residents’ about their towns and communities.
4. Valorise visions of the community as share-able capital.
5. Provide a new representation of the town/village/community that is free of ‘cultural’ branding that valorises the touristic and heritage value of a place over the individual residents’ narratives and routes.
6. Provide a platform where community members meet and discuss their public spaces.