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(I’m republishing here the press announcement from the Culture Forum, please help to spread it!)

A huge international coalition has come together to campaign for respect for the civil rights of citizens and artists in the digital era. Today they are launching internationally the Charter for Innovation, Creativity and Access to Knowledge. This initiative is a response to the pressure of the lobbies of the culture industry on the European Parliament and national parliaments. The Charter is an outcome of the Culture Forum held last week in Barcelona.

The press recently announced the accord reached by the European Commission on the “protection” of Internet access, the so-called Telecommunications Package. The agreeement is ambiguous but on the positive side, it is not granting the full demands of the culture industry lobbies which included the drastic measure of cutting off anyone who interchanged files on the Internet.

The changes added in defense of fundamental rights and in favor of the jurisdictions of each country were the results of the efforts of hundreds of organizations and citizens who pressured the European Parliament members and served to counteract the pressures of the culture industry lobbies.

This case, like many others, shows the need for civil society to organize and make firm demands so that their rights are respected in adapting laws to the new structural advances of the digital era.

More than 100 renowned specialists from 20 different countries participated last week in the Culture Forum of Barcelona and created a huge international coalition to urge respect for the civil rights of citizens and artists in the digital era.

This historic gathering, whose activities included coordinating the response to the final meeting of the commission on the Telecommunications Package, constitutes the beginning of an unprecedented offensive of civil society in defense of the fundamental rights in the digital era. These rights range from the right to freedom of expression to the right of access to culture and knowledge; the defense of a just division of authors’ rights, the inviolability of communications and of privacy and the neutrality of access to the Internet. The Charter sees all these rights as great levers for the transformation of economic, political and social relations.

After three days of intense work, the Charter of the Culture Forum of Barcelona for Innovation, Creativity and Access to Knowledge was produced.

This Charter, which invites citizens to take it as theirs and use it in their requests and demands, will be disseminated worldwide through formal presentations to governments and also through a variety of actions by individuals and organisations.

The Charter will be presented to more than 1000 political institutions and governments, including WIPO, the Obama administration, the European Commission and many national governments. Some of these organizations have already shown an interest in listening to the demands, and two representatives of the European Commission and official observers from the Brazilian Ministry of Culture, among others, were present during the approval of the Charter.

The campaign will make a particular appeal to the Spanish government, which has made the regulation of the digital environment one of the flagship items in its upcoming presidency of the European Union. In 10 days the Charter will be delivered personally to “la infanta Cristina”, the daughter of the king of Spain.

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Back to Stockholm! I’ve spent this whole weekend in Barcelona in the Free Culture Forum, working together with more than a hundred people from all over the world to debate about how to face the new (and old) challenges with copyright, net neutrality and education, among others, and decide the next actions to take.

First of all, I’d like to congratulate and thank everyone who contributed to organize and manage this. Despite the lack of a solid financial and human support, the forum was an undeniable success in terms of organization – I felt like at home and had a real good time.

Our main task was to elaborate a document reflecting our vision, goals and demands. We worked in five groups: Education, Economy, Politics, Digital Infrastructure Rights and Legal. I worked on Education since I was invited to the event in representation of Alqua.

Since the document has been composed with the input of so many people, I’m a bit concerned about its coherence and homogeneity, so I’ll advocate for several different proof-reads before publishing anything, including mine. Also, the idea is that the different individuals and organizations who attended the forum will sign it as a whole, so we have to be very careful with the inclusion of any “too” radical demand in order to reach a reasonably broad acceptance.

One of the atendees suggested that we should speak about the next steps we, as individuals, either representing a project/group or not, will take to achieve the goals stated in our chart. I think this is rather important since otherwise (and even if we do so) we’re in risk of this awesome forum to become no more than a declaration of intentions, an utopy, without any real commitment of work and thus failed. Don’t get me wrong – I’m the first who starts slackering and procrastrinating if I don’t state my own commitments clearly. So here are my agenda of next actions, which I will post to our (hopefully upcoming) mailing list:

- Concact the Spanish universities and ask them to upload their already existing educational material to OAI-enabled repositories. OAI is a metadata standard for easy dissemination of content. Contact Ignasi Labastida (Creative Common Spain), who showed us some of the different tools available, to help me to understand how these repositories work.

- Place the already existing Alqua documents in OAI-enabled repositories, or create a new one, to increase their visibility.

- Contact David Gómez-Ullate, who is currently leading a (publicly funded!) pedagogical innovation project to use free software in some courses and research work in Universidad Complutense de Madrid.

- Investigate the current use of Free Software in the Spanish universities to find out use cases and good practices.

This is all for now, friends. If you’re (even slightly) interested in helping or have any suggestions, don’t hesitate to contact me! :)

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