Friday, January 20, 2017

Fwd: Attend the Summit on Digital Credentials and Badges



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: IMS Global Learning Consortium


Summit on Digital Credentials and Badges
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A full day of digital badges.


IMS Global Learning Consortium is holding a Summit on Digital Credentials and Badges, Tuesday, February 28, in Orlando, Florida.

As a participant in the Open Badges movement, we invite you to attend!

The program features an exciting lineup of speakers and panelists representing K-20 and non-traditional issuing organizations, employers, and market leaders who are invested in accelerating the progress of digital credentialing in learning and professional development.
Learn More
And following the Summit, you can join IMS Global for a special Open Badges Community meeting on Wednesday, March 1. We hope to see you in Orlando!

Registration is open to everyone. All attendees must register in advance. This event will be held at the Hard Rock Hotel at Universal Orlando. The deadline for making hotel reservations is January 27. Space is limited, so don't delay.
Thanks to our Digital Credentialing, Badges & CBE Initiative Sponsors
Copyright © 2017 IMS Global Learning Consortium, All rights reserved. Trademark Information

You are receiving this email because you participated in the Open Badges community group.

Our mailing address is:
IMS Global Learning Consortium
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5th Floor, PMB #112
Lake Mary, FL 32746


Thursday, January 19, 2017

Fwd: [DW] [civicmedia-researchers] CFP: Abusive Language Online

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Steven Clift 




Democracies Online
Photo of Steven Clift
[civicmedia-researchers] CFP: Abusive Language Online
by Steven Clift
in Newswire - Steven Clift's Democracies Online Newswire

See CFP below ...

A comment ... as someone monitors all sorts of political online groups on
Facebook, the conspiratorial tone is a return of what I saw on political
USENET newsgroups back in the 1990s. They were essentially anonymous and
totally chaotic or totally controlled if moderate (to keep politics out of
groups). It was terrible stuff.

Crafting another way led to E-Democracy's real name accountability based
forums with strong civility and active human facilitation. We did this in
1994 a decade before Facebook brought to the masses.

Again and again, folks hope for the magic bullet of cheap technology to
police the abuse at a low cost. Look at news online commenting. It doesn't
work or only can only help boost the essential role of active facilitators
that are supported by good rules and a culture of respect for their
leadership. Facilitators need to be real named people and not the mystery
man behind the curtain.

While real names work well on Facebook and encourage accountability and
self-control/censorship among "friends" and on public posts, the
introduction of less visible (to your friends and relatives) posts to
closed and secret groups have unleashed the beast inside of many of us.
Further with hundreds of millions of people online in the US for example,
you only need a small small percentage of people who feel they have nothing
to lose by being nasty as can be or worse when they comment on the White
House Facebook Page or a local news story about Somali immigrants in
Minnesota for example.

On top of this, with Twitter and Facebook profiles, the masses now have
public calling cards on the Internet which makes it 100x easier for anyone
to be privately contacted or publicly shamed. Previously only a small
percentage of individual people had websites or blogs.

So back to crafting another way ... that is what I am seeing on the best
Facebook Groups. Active facilitators, participants respecting those
leaders, and removing the abusers, spammers, or those unwilling or unable
(can be tied to severe antisocial behavioral medical conditions) to follow
the rules or get along with others. So to those looking to connect
non-friends online be bold and build another way. To those orgs who sponsor
online exchange, start investing in what really works - people as active
leaders and facilitators.

Steven Clift
E-Democracy
P.S. For orgs looking for great professional online facilitators who can
handle politics, I can hook you up.



From: "Andrew Whitacre" <awhit@mit.edu>
Date: Jan 19, 2017 8:52 AM
Subject: [civicmedia-researchers] CFP: Abusive Language Online
To: <cmsw-all@mit.edu>, "civicmedia-researchers" <
civicmedia-researchers@mit.edu>
Cc:

Part of the annual meeting of the Association of Computational Linguistics
2017 (Vancouver), August 3rd (or) 4th, 2017

https://www.hastac.org​/opportunities​/cfp​-1st​-workshop​-abusive​-language​-
online

Snippet:

Overview


The last few years have seen a surge in abusive online behavior, with
governments, social media platforms, and individuals struggling to cope
with the consequences. Online forums, comment sections, and social media
interaction in general have become a playground of bullying, scapegoating,
and hate speech. These forms of online aggression not only poison the
social climate of the communities that experience it, but also lower the
inhibition for direct physical violence, and increasingly even result in it.

As a field that directly works with computing over language, Natural
Language Processing researchers are in a unique position to develop
automated methods to analyse, detect, and filter abusive language.
Additionally, we recognize that addressing abusive language is not solely
the purview of NLP approaches but is a truly multi-disciplinary problem and
thus requires knowledge from other fields, including but not limited to:
psychology, sociology, law, gender studies, digital communication, and
critical race theory.

In this one day workshop, we aim to provide a space for researchers of
various disciplines to meet and discuss approaches to abusive language. The
workshop will include invited speakers and panelists from fields outside of
NLP, as well as solicit papers from researchers across all areas. In
addition, the workshop will host an "unshared task".

Paper Topics

We invite long and short papers on any of the following general topics:

-

NLP models and methods for abusive language detection
-

Application of NLP tools to analyze social media content and other large
data sets
-

NLP models for cross-lingual abusive language detection
-

The social and personal consequences of being the target of abusive
language and targeting others with abusive language
-

Assessment of current non-NLP methods of addressing abusive language
-

Legal ramifications of measures taken against abusive language use


-

Best practices for using NLP techniques in watchdog settings
-

Development of corpora and annotation guidelines


Panel Discussion Topics

Potential panel discussion topics reflect the relevance for industry and
individuals:

-

Responsibility of companies and governments in monitoring speech
-

Privacy and ethical implications of abusive language detection (false
positives)
-

Follow-up: what to do when a community experiences abusive language
-

Personal experiences from individuals who have been threatened online
-

Best methods for cross-pollination of ideas between fields


Andrew Whitacre
Communications Director
Comparative Media Studies/Writing
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (snips) | cmsw.mit.edu


Tuesday, January 17, 2017

Fwd: Let there be proof



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: John Hemington <jehemington@verizon.net>



It's well past time for the Obama administration to put up or shut up on this issue – and time is running out.  In the first article More than 20 U.S. intelligence, military and diplomatic veterans are calling on President Obama to release the evidence backing up allegations that Russia aided the Trump campaign – or admit that the proof is lacking.  This is not a trivial issue and could eventually lead to a nuclear confrontation with Russia.  If it is true Americans need some certainty before unleashing the dogs in the Defense Department.  If is nothing but a cover for Hillary's election loss it is doubly preposterous and destructive.   Senator John McCain has already declared it an act of war which must be retaliated against.  We must know and we must know before Obama leaves office. 


John

Links to articles in PDFs


Fwd: . . . and on it goes

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: John Hemington

We remain deeply embroiled in a serious class war in which young adults have become the most recent victims.  It's not just college graduates broken down with almost unpayable debts, it's also those without an opportunity to go to college who can't find jobs paying a living wage or any job at all.  It's minority youth of all stripes who are denied essential opportunities in a not-so-colorblind society as we would like to think.  Check out the attached article for additional information.

And lest we forget, young adults are not the only Americans suffering from this long-standing class war which resulted in the election of Donald Trump.  As this excerpt from Greg Maybury's article in Consortium News,  Fall and Rise of the Forgotten 'Deplorables' (see second attachment for full article), points our two major political have long ago abandoned and declared war on the rest of us also:

"In what must serve as the quintessential master class of prolonged, consistent, truly bi-partisan cooperation American politics has on offer, both parties have contributed enormously over the past three-plus decades to the dismantling if not effective destruction of the American Dream in its hitherto real and imagined dimensions.

Whether on broad economic, social, national security, or foreign policy issues, both parties have demonstrated a recidivistic, palpable indifference to the concerns and needs of average working- and middle-class Americans, with both repeatedly showing themselves prone to elitism, corruption, cronyism, manipulation, greed, deception, bribery, hypocrisy, opportunism, self-interest, contempt, cynicism and arrogance.

In the process democracy's once "proprietary" domains — equal justice, freedom, human rights, equality of opportunity, civil rights, liberty, and most everything from habeas corpus to the pursuit of happiness — have effectively been declared "no-fly-zones" for ordinary people, accessible only to those increasingly privileged, mostly unelected, and thoroughly unaccountable few.

Most significantly, both parties have undermined, possibly irreparably, the sense of pride and place folks had in their once beloved — but now maybe not so — United States of America.  Along with that, they have all but conspired to "deep-six" that once famously enduring, optimistic mindset that by some accounts enabled the country to thrive and prosper as a "paradise of opportunity" (or even a reasonable facsimile thereof).

Let's term that period The Era of Future Promise, or that time in history — from 1945 to say 1975 — where a whole generation or more of the majority of folks could not only envision a progressively better future for their kids and grandchildren, but anticipated it, and all things equal, if one was willing to strive for such, rightfully expected it.
That is no longer the case for an increasing number of people, and it is this sentiment — one whose seismic impact we have just witnessed — that's been neglected by both party majors.  That this envisioned future is no longer realistic for many comes as a direct result of neoliberalism — the roll-out of which was overseen by both parties — and with it the globalization of economic and financial activity itself culminating from there via "casino capitalism" in the inexorable transfer and consolidation of historically unprecedented wealth, power, and income into the hands of fewer and fewer people — is inarguable.

Now the end of this earlier era might have been heralded by Reagan's ascension in 1981 and the advent of neoliberalism.  But its sustained demise was enthusiastically presided over by Bill Clinton, in cahoots of course with this year's DNC candidate for president, his wife Hillary, and the then Party establishment.  Some folks clearly haven't forgotten that.  In short, there was no clear sign from Clinton that things would be substantially different under her regime than under that of her husband's administration.

And for those who understood there being such a thing as a "class war" and viewed globalization and neoliberalism through such a prism — if we recognize that the upper class won that war a long time ago — we might posit the following:  Why when after the vanquished have long since surrendered to distraction, disillusion or outright despondency are the victors still fighting the war?  Before this election, the short answer we might have suggested is that it's because they can!

The ascension of Sanders and Trump in this election demonstrated that vast masses of Americans have finally given up on the two elitist Parties and are ready to fight back; but unfortunately most of us still don't understand what's behind the system which oppresses so many while promising so much.  It is now imperative that we somehow figure out a way to redirect this anger and frustration into meaningful action.

Fight on!

John

Links from John's collection



Sunday, January 15, 2017

Fwd: Health care disaster continues

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: John Hemington

As we are dragged kicking and screaming into the frightening new era of Trumplandia, it is worth reexamining one of the issues which is most important to most Americans.  As most of you are aware, I am no fan of either Barak Obama or his namesake health abomination the Affordable Care Act.  Don't get me wrong, the ACA has, in fact, helped many Americans who would otherwise not have been able to get any health insurance at all.  That is, however, a very sad commentary given the kind of efficient, effective and affordable health care all Americans should be entitled to receive.  As it is, even with the ACA the U.S. has the least efficient, least effective and most expensive health care system of any developed nation in the world – and this is not an accident.  Obama and his New Democrat cohorts deliberately crafted the ACA (actually it was crafted by lobbyists from the pharmaceutical and insurance oligopolies and simply implemented by the New Democrats) to benefit their moneyed paymasters; and sold as the most wondrous thing since Wonder Bread (another not very good idea).  I know that I'm preaching to the choir on this, but it cannot be overstated – we deserve better, and we must demand better. 

There is no better time to stand up and demand what should have been done long ago than when things appear to be at their bleakest.  Many of us are depressed (though not defeated) by the ascension of Donald Trump to the presidency.  But, think about it, is the prospect of a Trump presidency really all that much worse than what we have had forty years or so?  It could be but for the first time in a while people who have been seduced by lesser evil Democratic Party scare tactics may be willing to get off the fence, stand up and fight for something important.  And yes, I realize that the issues included in the "identity politics" milieu are important; but also important (and in some ways more so) are issues of endless war, health care for all, control of the financial overlords, corporate money in politics, elimination of austerity politics, meaningful jobs for the poor and working classes paying living wages, global warming and environmental destruction and a host of others the New Democrats have chosen tot to address with any real gusto or ignore completely.  This is a process which is designed and intended to keep Americans separated and effectively at war with one another.  It is the essential construct of neoliberalism and it has worked far better than even the most hard-core neoliberal could have imagined.

Like the Republican Party the Democratic Party has no present intention of addressing any of these core issues.  We are, and have been for many years like it or not, been embroiled in an ever escalating class war and the plutocrats and their political minions have so disarmed the rest of us with ceaseless propaganda and endless new techno-toys intended to keep us helplessly indulged in a mindless frenzy of consumerism.  They tell us that only their "experts" can understand, explain and establish government policy.  They tells us the federal government out of money and being hopelessly constrained by unpayable debt – but it is never a problem when the funding of endless war or the bailing out of the financial system to the tune of 29 trillion dollars is concerned.  The money is always available for corporate needs, but when peoples' needs are mentioned the cupboard is bare and austerity is the stock answer.  This is why we have no government provided health care for all.

I believe strongly that one of our most important tasks is to share as widely as possible the reality behind the neoliberal myths which have been promulgated via state and think tank propaganda and political lies ever since Maggie Thatcher and Ronald Reagan assumed power in Great Britain and the United States in the 1980s.  We are most certainly engaged in a class war and for the moment only the ruling class is engaged.  It is time that the rest of us began our offensive against our rulers.  But in order to effectively organize ourselves, I believe that we must first come to understand the myths we have been sold and why they are destructive lies which have kept us separated for so long. 

Socialists, Progressives, Liberals and those on the political left cannot effectively engage, nor can we ever win this class war on our own – and we have a long history of fighting one another.  We must somehow learn to engage with those on the right side of the political spectrum, remembering that they are just as splintered and confused as are we.  We have to stop being enemies and become allies wherever possible.  And, yes, there are some on both sides we will never be able to reach.  That is just the way things are and won't be changed no matter what we or they do.  But that should not dissuade us from the task at hand.  When I speak of education I certainly do not mean "smart" liberals talking down to "dumb deplorables" as the New Democrats seem prone to do.  I mean listening exchanging views and ideas, explaining differences and hearing others' experiences and what they have learned from years of systemic abuse and neglect.  This can be much more important and more powerful than anything we might have to offer from our life experiences.

I started this by talking about health care because I believe that it is an issue we can all discuss and share experiences and ideas.  It is a problem for all of us who do not dwell in the gated compounds of the 1%.  I also believe that the reality behind fiat money, debt and credit are subjects which must be brought into the open if we are to have any change to break through to the other side with social solutions.  As long as a majority of Americans continue to buy into the myth of the national debt as a constraining inhibitor limiting their and their children's opportunities there will be no opportunity to convince them of the benefits of collective action and governmental social programs.  In short we need two-way teaching and we need it now.  I am not at all certain how best to accomplish this, but I think that some significant collective effort must be put forth to find out.  Absent that we will continue to get kicked to the side of the road by our "betters" in the plutocracy.



John


Links

Fwd: SAR19: Pre-Summit | Volunteers | Workshops | Registration


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Summit Against Racism <summitagainstracism@gmail.com>


Schedule is LIVE + Pre-Summit Town Hall Reminder + Online Registration
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Seeking Volunteers for the Summit
We need volunteers for Friday evening (1/20) and Saturday (1/21). Roles include registration, taking notes during workshops, food, set-up, and clean-up.
Volunteer to sign up here.  Volunteer orientation is 1/19, 6:00-8:00 p.m.

Schedule for the Summit is Posted on Our Website
View SAR19 Schedule
Join us for a 
Pre-Summit Town Hall in Partnership with Union Project Tuesday 1/17
5:30 p.m. - 8:30pm at Union Project,
801 N. Negley 15206
Register for Pre-Summit Here
Workshops are Posted on our Website.  Decide What to Attend Before You Arrive
Read About Our Workshops Here

Online Registration
Closes Thursday 1/19
| *NEW* Half-Day Rate |

Online registration will close on Thursday, January 19th, at
 11:59 pm. However, registration will still be available in person from 
8:00 am to 2:00 pm on the day of the event, Saturday, January 21st. 

Can't attend the full Summit? We are offering a special half-day rate of $20 that does not include lunch.

Register Online HERE
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