Brighton Salon Partners

Spiked Online
Culture Wars is the online review of the Institute of Ideas in London

addthis social toolkit

Contact us

If you would like to be notified about our events or have any queries, simply use the options below to get in contact with us.

Talk to us on +44 (0) 207 193 5071.
8am to 8pm GMT.
Click here to skype dan.travis.
Download Skype by clicking here.
Email any queries you have to dan.travis@thebrightonsalon.com. Click here to send us a message .Click here to follow The Brighton Salon on twitter. Click here to join our facebook group.

More Salon Talks

Cory Doctorow, Nico Macdonald and Michael Bull on 'The Future of Collaboration: Sharing and Work in the Networked Age' on Saturday October 17

Thistle Hotel BrightonSaturday October 17: The 21st century looks set to be the age of online collaboration. While old forms of community and solidarity have waned, leaving us apparently more fragmented and individualised, the social web enables many of us to work, play and organise with others in ways previously unimaginable.

Technologies like Flickr, Delicious, Wikipedia and LINUX evidence new means of sharing information and working together. Many suggest these technologies will have far-reaching social implications, and even presage a new form of production and work outside the market system.

Click here to Read Sean Bell's Review of the Talk

While traditional free market capitalism is compromised by the worldwide recession, the world wide web is said to promise an exciting alternative. Wired’s Kevin Kelly suggests we are entering a new collectivist epoch, a ‘New Socialism’. Technology guru Howard Rheingold sees these developments as disruptive, and will change the way people ‘meet, mate, work, fight, buy, sell’. Charles Leadbeater, author of We-Think, sees the new means of networked collaboration as presaging a new production model: ‘Mass Innovation rather than Mass Production’.

There are challenges to the optimists, though. What about privacy and authorship, if innovations, ideas and information are open to all? Does ‘sharing’ our photos, ideas, and writing open up egalitarian and creative possibilities, or merely allow multinational corporations to take advantage of free labour and have access to our intellectual property? Cory Doctorow argues we are in danger of becoming IP serfs having to pay to access ideas which should be freely available, and champions a ‘creative commons’ as a bulwark against this trend.

Can and should these new forms of production be regulated? If so, by whom and how? Is new technology really a Utopian challenge to the market, or merely more of the same in virtual space? Can the profound problems of social fragmentation and an economic system in crisis be resolved by sharing technologies and collaborating and innovating with online ‘friends’?

Speakers

Chair

  • Rob Clowes

    Robert Clowes is chairman of The Brighton Salon, and divides his time between Lisbon and Brighton. He visiting research and teaching fellow at the Centre for Research in Cognitive Science, University of Sussex and also the Philosophy of Language Institute at the New University of Lisbon. He is currently completing his book:Being Human after Facebook


blog comments powered by Disqus