Skip to the main content

The Intention Economy: When Customers Take Charge; Who can Learn Online, And How?

Berkman Events Newsletter Template
Upcoming Events / Digital Media
June 7th, 2012

Remember to load images if you have trouble seeing parts of this email. Or click here to view the web version of this newsletter. Below you will find upcoming Berkman Center events, interesting digital media we have produced, and other events of note.

special event

The Intention Economy: When Customers Take Charge

Monday, June 11, 6:00pm ET, Harvard Law School, Cambridge, MA. Free and open to the public.

berkman

Whether your interest is in preserving Internet freedom and opportunity, changing the economic power structure, new challenges for cyberlaw, or just turning the tables on privacy-violating business models and practices, there will be plenty to hear and discuss at Doc Searls' talk, "The Intention Economy: When Customers Take Charge" — also the title of his new book from Harvard Business Review Press. The book reports on progress by dozens of companies and development projects fostered by ProjectVRM, which Doc launched at the Berkman Center in 2006. Doc will share progress toward a near future where individuals can— * Control the flow and use of personal data * Build their own loyalty programs * Dictate their own terms of service * Tell whole markets what they want, how they want it, where and when they should be able to get it, and how much they are willing to pay — without yielding their own privacy, and outside of any one system's silo. Doc Searls served as a Berkman Fellow from 2006 to 2010, during which he launched and led ProjectVRM, which encourages the development of new tools by which individuals create and control their relationships with companies and other organizations. RSVP Required. more information on our website>

berkman luncheon series

Who can Learn Online, And How?

Tuesday, June 19, 12:30pm ET, Berkman Center for Internet & Society, 23 Everett St, Cambridge, MA. This event will be webcast live.

berkman

The selection of free online higher learning experiences--as distinguished from merely raw learning materials, like MIT's Open Courseware --- has expanded greatly in the past six months. Udemy, Coursera, the Minerva Project, Udacity, and edx all offer courses created by faculty at top universities in the Massively Open Online Course (MOOC) format, each with some combination of video lectures, exercises, a social component (chat rooms, wikis, Facebook groups) and even a form of certification for your learning. And many of them are offering these courses for free. Much of the conversation around this new wave of education startups has focused on what they mean for the incumbent institutions, from for-profit online universities to the traditional Ivy League. But what about what they mean for learners? Who is currently succeeding in open learning contexts? What are the missing pieces of the ecosystem--from discovery, to peer support, to mentoring, to assessment--that will allow the most severely underserved learners to succeed in this new learning environment? Anya Kamenetz is a senior writer at Fast Company Magazine. She's the author of two books and two ebooks about the future of education. Generation Debt (Riverhead, 2006), dealt with student loans, generational economics and politics, and DIY U: Edupunks, Edupreneurs, and the Coming Transformation of Higher Education, (Chelsea Green, 2010) investigated the roots of the cost, access, and quality crises in higher education as well as innovations to address these crises. RSVP Required. more information on our website>

video/audio

Urs Gasser and John Palfrey on Interop: The Promise and Perils of Highly Interconnected Systems

berkman

The practice of standardization has been facilitating innovation and economic growth for centuries. The standardization of the railroad gauge revolutionized the flow of commodities, the standardization of money revolutionized debt markets and simplified trade, and the standardization of credit networks has allowed for the purchase of goods using money deposited in a bank half a world away. These advancements did not eradicate the different systems they affected; instead, each system has been transformed so that it can interoperate with systems all over the world, while still preserving local diversity. But interoperability is not also without its risks. In this presentation authors John Palfrey — Henry N. Ess Professor of Law and Vice Dean for Library and Information Resources at Harvard Law School — and Urs Gasser — Executive Director of the Berkman Center — demonstrate how interoperability is a critical aspect of any successful system, and now is mor e important than ever. Interoperability offers a number of solutions to global challenges, but in order to get the most out of interoperability while minimizing its risks, we will need to fundamentally revisit our understanding of how it works, and how it can allow for improvements in each of its constituent parts. video/audio on our website>

video/audio

RB203: From Digital Uprising to Digital Society

berkman

Lots of digital ink has been spilled about how and whether digital technology played a critical role in bringing about the Arab Spring. But it's been 18 months since the spark of revolution was first lit in Tunisia, way back in December of 2010. How has digital technology played a role in laying the foundation for a stable Tunisia? Today's guests were tasked with finding an answer to that question. And it turns out to be a very complex and interesting one, leading them to explore Tunisia's communications infrastructure, Tunisia's digital economy, and an increasingly technology-enabled civil society. Zack Brisson and Kate Krontiris of Reboot are the authors of the recently completed TUNISIA: FROM REVOLUTIONS TO INSTITUTIONS. audio on our website>

Other Events of Note

Events that may be of interest to the Berkman community:

You are receiving this email because you subscribed to the Berkman Center's Weekly Events Newsletter. Sign up to receive this newsletter if this email was forwarded to you. To manage your subscription preferences, please click here.

Connect & get involved: Jobs, internships, and more iTunes Facebook Twitter Flickr YouTube RSS

See our events calendar if you're curious about future luncheons, discussions, lectures, and conferences not listed in this email. Our events are free and open to the public, unless otherwise noted.