Underground Media Zone

During the London 2012 Olympic & Paralympic Games, we will organize an underground media zone, accrediting citizen journalists and inviting professional journalists to tell the full legacy story of the nations, regions and host city.

This visualization precedes the articulation of this zone, if you're social and you like media, then sign up

www.jiscmail.ac.uk/media2012

We will take it from there. For now, mark your calendar for October 4, Manchester, Abandon Normal Devices festival of new cinema and digital culture www.andfestival.org.uk

Andy

‘The Internet is Over’ Prince & the Music formerly found at the Internet

20TEN

This one’s for the fans friends #Prince #20TEN #DailyMirror  #O(+>

I’ve been a Prince fan sine I was 16. My musical awakening occurred at the same time as the break up of my family. Like Prince, my father was a troubled alcoholic and workaholic (or maybe that was just his father in Purple Rain). Unlike Prince, I didn’t have a musical bone in my body. Still, O(+> became The One outlet for my adolescent expression and, I guess, his music helped me deal with The Time.

I followed his music throughout the years, from the time when he opened his own Prince shop in Camden Town (and subsequently closed it), way back when, to the unpronounceable Symbol. I also re-lived his early years through the music, right back to 1978 with his first album, with its relentless funk, and even obtained bootleg cassettes. It was a full on affair. I even called 1800-NEW-FUNK and remember playing Sexy MF in my high school art class – we were allowed to choose the music– but we didn’t make it to the end of the track (the teacher intervened after the 20th MF). I own all of his albums, but stopped short of being an obsessive collector.

I’ve seen Prince live in concert 5 times. The first time was supposed to be the Blenheim Palace, but he cancelled, I forget why. The next time was the first time, at the NEC in Birmingham. The most recent time was the 02 Arena. The best concert was Las Vegas in 2006, I was part of the NPG Music Club and got front row for the sound check, standing just one metre away from the legend, starstruck, though he lost me a little when God entered the arena. I can do the no drugs, no drink thing, but my Fascination for the wee guy stops short of a view that would have me believe that Prince’s talent is not his own making, as opposed to The Work of God.

I am not sure whether his pursuit of the Internet back in the mid-1990s inspired me to get online, but it certainly seemed cool. One of the reasons I liked him was for his ability to herald the times.

I downloaded Cybersingle for Free in 2000, when he asked ‘to be free, or not to be free?’– it seemed then to be the first online musical product. It was a raw, funky tune with lyrics that, like many of his tracks, captured the period. Other web-themed tracks like ‘Emale’ and ‘Computer Blue, made Prince the Internet musician of the time and his contribution prefigured the big Race to occupy the web and own online music. As he did with AIDS back in 1987 with Sign of the Times, he was always right on the money with the web. I remember when he would scan ‘his computer looking for a site…make believe it’s a better world, a better life’. The web would transform the Slave into the Master.  So, what happened?

In 20TEN, Prince announces in The Morning Papers that ‘The Internet is Over’ and his Word becomes a trending topic in Mashable and elsewhere. Of course, those who are online are likely to reply that he is way off with this one, but I can’t just write him off. Others will struggle too. He seemed to know his stuff back in the day. He seemed to have a Crystal Ball and his ideas have led to the Emancipation of other artists. This year, Prince features in TIME magazine’s 100 most influential people in the world. He’s still got The Funky Stuff and was writing about the Iraq war (Musicology) at a time when it doesn’t seem fashionable to sing about social or political issues.

So, back to this Internet thing. Do I agree? I think to understand his view – which has led to him shutting down his website – you have to understand the story behind his trajectory online. Early Prince websites were technologically advanced, sporting beautiful designs and Beautiful Strange encounters.

It was apparent from his optimism that the web promised to change the industry. The promise has not been fulfilled. Things have changed, but not far enough. It is not democratized. It is owned by a few people and, most of us online, play within their zone of monetization. People are trapped into using iTunes, which has an Extraordinary influence in terms of how music is consumed.

I often think about The Future of the Internet. My daily engagement with Twitter, Facebook, Flickr and Google are constant reminders of how much things change online. I suspect Prince will return to the web at some point, but it will have to be a very different web, one where more independent artists are getting paid.

In some sense he is right. Web 1.0 is over, isn’t it? The web today is very different compared to when he celebrated its arrival. Our personal freedom seems in direct correlation with the rise of  I’m not sure Prince ever got on board with Web 2.0, perhaps he’s waiting for Web 3.0.

On Saturday, I will buy the Mirror in order to get his new album 20TEN. If you don’t you’ll miss out on it as it won’t go on sale anywhere else. Millions of others will do the same in various countries of the world. I didn’t find out about this by the Internet, but by the telephone – my mother gets the Mirror. So maybe old technology is about to kick new technology’s butt. Either way, it’s technology. I Gotcha.

To conclude, here are a few Prince facts you didn’t know, or may have forgotten

  • In Wasted Kisses, the sound of Prince’s baby’s heartbeat is played. The child had died at the time of the recording.
  • He wrote Manic Monday and Nothing Compares to You.
  • He plays 27 instruments, or there abouts.
  • In a Chris Rock invu around 15 years ago, when asked about why he didn’t appear in the Michael Jackson ‘Bad’ video – you know, the bit with Wesley Snipes - he replied ‘The first line of that song is ‘Your Butt is Mine’. Now what I wanna know is who’s singing that to who. Coz I sure ain’t singing that to you. And you sure ain’t singing that to me’. Some of the funniest interviews I’ve seen.
  • In the same interview, he talks about getting comedy into music, which he has always tried to do.
  • In the dispute with Warner Bros, his had a number of names, Tora Tora, The Artist, TAFKAP, and, the Symbol of course.
  • Prince Rogers Nelson is his real name.
  • When We Are the World was made, he chose not to appear with the group of singers, instead donating a song to the cause ‘4 the tears in your eyes’

Pick up some lesser known Prince tracks that rock:

  • 4 the tears in your eyes
  • 5 women
  • Beautiful Strange
  • Don’t Play Me
  • Extra Loveable
  • Extraordinary
  • If I love u 2nite
  • Moonbeam Levels
  • My Little Pill
  • Player

Body Art Bioethics (2010, Aug 6)

Looks like a great event if you can make it there... A symposium exploring the culture and ethics of the use and ownership of living material, from the cell to the whole body, in art, science, law and philosophy.

The body is increasingly being transformed into commodity and media, put on display, fragmented, manipulated, preserved and rearranged. Scientists, artists, lawyers, historians and social scientists will come together to trace the radical shifts in our understanding of the body - and life itself - and investigate how these emergent realities influence our notion of being human while simultaneously challenging the relationship to the ‘Other’ that is living or semi-living. READ MORE

Symposium Details Date: 6 August 2010 Location: William Lambden Owen Room, Moot Court, Law Building The University of Western Australia (View Map) Registration: $110 (including GST) registration. Students and unwaged free Refreshments included. Download Registration Form More Information: e-mail: sym@symbiotica.uwa.edu.au | telephone: + 61 8 6488 7116

List of Speakers Lyn Beazley | Chief Scientist of Western Australia Ethan Blue | Historian Oron Catts | SymbioticA Director Elizabeth Costello | Writer Kathy High | Artist Stuart Hodgetts | Scientist Darren Jorgensen | Art Theorist Luigi Palombi | Lawyer Catherine Waldby | Social Scientist Ionat Zurr | Tissue Culture and Art Project

Verena Kaminiarz may the mice bite me if it is not true

The notion as well as the practical use of the “body” is increasingly changing and transforming in the light of new knowledge and new technological capabilities. The body is no longer perceived strictly as a unified whole let alone as solely human and bodies and parts of bodies are being traded and manipulated as part of the global economy. “New” bodies are being formed and assembled; from the cellular body; the chimeric body; the transgenic body – to the extent of creating “new kinds of bodies”, technological and synthetic - as hinted at by the case of Synthia – the first cell with a so called artificial genome.

Discussions will include • Patenting and copy right laws of biological materials and processes and the effects on global distribution and biodiversity, presented by Luigi Palombi

• A feminist-Marxist critique of the distribution and use of parts of bodies, classified as “gift” or “waste,” offered by Catherine Waldby as one of her areas of research

• Renown writer Elizabeth Costello speaks about poetry, philosophy, cruelty and animal welfare;

• The notion of the Other – in its broadest sense – investigated from multifaceted perspectives: • Ethan Blue investigates power and race relations within the American prison system. • Kathy High explores the Other animal and interspecies intimate relations in her art • Ionat Zurr presents the Semi-Living point of view.

• Research scientist Stuart Hodgetts discusses his experience working with animals and artists in the labs

• The use of the body in artistic expression is explored by Darren Jorgensen

• And some of the interdisciplinary hands-on research of SymbioticA residents who address ethics and biology will be dissected by Oron Catts.

These perspectives explore the current phenomenon in which life (consisting of varied, diverse and contested bodies) is increasingly treated as malleable raw material to be engineered. At the same time, new and recurring mindsets regarding what a body is and in what ways and by whom it can be put into use, compete for consensus. This transformation should be observed and debated critically; especially in relation to the objectification and instrumentalism of life and the transformation of its different gradients into currency. However this same transformation can create a niche for fresh perceptions of life in which a more post-anthropocentric view of life can flourish.

The Body/Art/Bioethics symposium aspires to explore, from multidisciplinary perspectives, the emerging ethical perplexes and understandings of scientific and artistic uses of bodies as media. Discussions will investigate and problematise the social, legal, philosophical, and aesthetic issues that arise from the concept of a “Body”. Speaker Bio

Welcome Address - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Lyn Beazley Chief Scientist of Western Australia A professor in Zoology at the University of Western Australia, Professor Beazley’s research career spans 30 years of studies into regeneration after neurotrauma and colour vision in Australian native animals, including lizards and marsupials. Her past research has also changed clinical practice in the treatment of infants at risk of pre-term delivery. Having graduated from Oxford University, she undertook her doctorate at Edinburgh University. Professor Beazley transferred to Perth in 1976 and built up an internationally renowned research team that focused on recovery from brain damage. A Fellow of the Institute of Biologists, Professor Beazley has served on numerous peak bodies advising State and Federal Governments. Internationally she recently served on a panel assessing research performance for the Swedish Research Council and is a member of the Education Committee of the International Brain Research Organisation. Lyn was a Trustee of the Western Australian Museum from 1999 until 2007 and appointed Chief Scientist of WA in December 2006. BACK TO TOP

Keynotes - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Catherine Waldby University of Sydney & King’s College London Catherine is Professorial Research Fellow in the Department of Sociology and Social Policy, University of Sydney, and Visiting Professor at the Centre for Biomedicine and Society, King’s College London. She researches and publishes in social studies of biomedicine and the life sciences. Her books include AIDS and the Body Politic: Biomedicine and Sexual Difference (1996 Routledge), The Visible Human Project: Informatic Bodies and Posthuman Medicine (2000 Routledge), Tissue Economies: Blood, Organs and Cell Lines in Late Capitalism (with Robert Mitchell, Duke University Press 2006) and The Global Politics of Human Embryonic Stem Cell Science: Regenerative Medicine in Transition, (with Herbert Gottweis and Brian Salter, Palgrave 2009). She is a foundation member of the global biopolitics research group, an international consortium of scholars who investigate the effects of cultural, political and economic globalization on the social relations of biomedicine. She has received national and international research grants for her work on embryonic stem cells, blood donation and biobanking. http://www.arts.usyd.edu.au/sociology_social_policy/staff/profiles/catherine_waldby.shtml BACK TO TOP

Dr Luigi Palombi Australian National University Luigi read law between 1977 and 1981 and economics between 1982 and 1985 at the University of Adelaide. He practiced law in Australia between 1982 and 1997, specialising in patent law and biotechnology. He led the Australian litigation team that challenged the validity of a patent which claimed isolated hepatitis C virus nucleotides and polypeptides as inventions. Having led several international patent litigation teams involving litigation in the United States as well as in the UK and Europe (including the European Patent Office), between 1997 and 2001 he advised various organisations around the world with regard to human health, biotechnology and gene related patents. Between 2001 and 2004 he undertook his PhD candidature (The Patenting of Biological Materials in the Context of TRIPS) at the University of New South Wales. After he was awarded his doctorate in 2005, he consulted to Minter Ellison, Australia’s largest law firm, in biotechnology patents. Since 2006 he has headed the Genetic Sequence Right Project at the Australian National University and in 2007 he and Prof Peter Drahos, his colleague at the Regulatory Institutions Network at the ANU, were awarded a three year Australian Research Council Discovery Project Grant entitled The Sustainable Use of Australia’s Biodiversity: Transfer of Traditional Knowledge and Intellectual Property. He has delivered invited papers and lectures in patent law at international legal conferences and meetings. He has written on various aspects of patent law and gene patents and Edward Elgar (London, New York) and Scribe (Melbourne) have recently published his first book, Gene Cartels: Biotech Patents in the Age of Free Trade, simultaneously in hardback and paperback. http://cgkd.anu.edu.au/menus/people_staff&students.php#palombi BACK TO TOP

Elizabeth Costello Writer Elizabeth is an Australian writer of international renown. She is the author of The House on Eccles Street (1969) and other novels and regularly presents on the lives of animals. BACK TO TOP

Presenters - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Ethan Blue The University of Western Australia Ethan is an Assistant Professor of History and received a PhD from the University of Texas at Austin in 2004. His research focuses on the creation and contest of social inequality across political economic formations, with particular interests in the histories of racism, state violence, and punishment. He is also an award-winning teacher. http://www.history.uwa.edu.au/about/staff/ethan_blue BACK TO TOP

Oron Catts The University of Western Australia Oron is an artist, researcher and curator whose work with the Tissue Culture and Art Project has won numerous international awards. In 2000 he co-founded SymbioticA, an artistic research laboratory housed within the Anatomy and Human Biology department at The University of Western Australia. Under Oron’s leadership SymbioticA has gone on to win the 2007 Prix Ars Electronica Golden Nica in Hybrid Art and became a Centre for Excellence in Biological Art in 2008. In April 2009 Oron (together with Ionat Zurr) was recognised by Icon Magazine (UK) as one of its top 20 Designers, “making the future and transforming the way we work.” His work is included in the New York MoMA design collection and has been exhibited and presented locally and internationally. He has published 13 book chapters and numerous articles. http://www.symbiotica.uwa.edu.au/welcome BACK TO TOP

Kathy High Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, New York Kathy is Head and Associate Professor of Video and New Media at the Department of the Arts. She teaches digital video production, history and theory and has been working in the area of documentary and experimental film, video and photography for over twenty years. She produces videos and installations posing queer and feminist inquiries into areas of medicine/bio-science, science fiction, and animal/interspecies collaborations. She has also recently started the BioArts Initiative at Rensselaer, a collaboration between the Arts Department and the Center for Biotechnology and Interdisciplinary Studies. http://kathyhigh.com/about/ BACK TO TOP

Stuart Hodgetts The University of Western Australia Stuart is currently a Research Assistant Professor at the Eileen Bond Spinal Research Centre in the School of Anatomy and Human Biology. He has extensive knowledge and expertise in cell based transplantation therapies and has been devoted to this area of research for over 10 years. He has considerable expertise in spinal cord injury and a strong interest in the application of stem cell based transplantation therapies as well as immune modulation of the host response to improve donor cell survival in treatments for spinal cord repair. Previously, he worked at the Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation, USA (93-96). In 1998 he began transplantation research as a potential treatment for Duchenne muscular dystrophy until 2004 when he changed fields to apply his expertise in the repair of spinal cord following injury. He has published 18 peer reviewed papers in high ranking journals and 2 book chapters. He began a long-standing collaboration with SymbioticA around 1998 and has been involved in projects such as “Lifeboat” with Riksutstillinger, SymbioticA, & Sonic Objects, Oslo, Norway (2004), as well as being Scientific Consultant & Adviser to SymbioticA (1998-present). He also lectures in undergraduate courses and supervises many students (undergraduate and postgraduate) and his service to the UWA community includes Chair of the Animal Users Committee, Director of Tissue Culture Facilities at ANHB, Treasurer of the UWA Research Staff Association, Executive Committee Member (ANHB), as well as other committees. https://www.socrates.uwa.edu.au/Staff/StaffProfile.aspx?Person=StuartHodgetts BACK TO TOP

Darren Jorgensen The University of Western Australia Darren lectures in art history in the Faculty of Architecture, Landscape and Visual Arts. He largely publishes on science fiction, Aboriginal art and critical theory. https://www.socrates.uwa.edu.au/Staff/StaffProfile.aspx?Person=DarrenJorgensen BACK TO TOP

Ionat Zurr The University of Western Australia Award winning artist and researcher, Ionat Zurr formed, with Oron Catts, the internationally renowned Tissue Culture and Art Project. She has been an artist in residence in the School of Anatomy and Human Biology since 1996 and was central to the establishment of SymbioticA in 2000. Ionat, who received her PhD, titled "Growing Semi-Living Art" in 2009, is a core researcher and academic co-ordinator at SymbioticA. She is considered a pioneer in the field of biological arts and her work has been exhibited locally and internationally. http://www.tca.uwa.edu.au/ BACK TO TOP

Symposium Image Details

Verena Kaminiarz may the mice bite me if it is not true Verena Kaminiarz may the mice bite me if it is not true 2008-2010 Original Photograph: Bo Wang Kaminiarz graduated from a Master of Biological Arts at SymbioticA in 2008. Her project focused on mice used in science to model human diseases. The work consists of four mice positioned as living portraits of people who have died from conditions that these mice were developed to model. The resulting mouse portraits were of: Franz Kafka (tuberculosis), Joseph Beuys (natural causes), Felix Gonzalez-Torres (compromised immune system) and Gilles Deleuze (lung cancer). The work re-contextualized laboratory animals, relocating them into a field of cultural and philosophical study. http://www.aedc.ca/verena/may_the_mice_bite/images_may_the_mice_bite.htm

body/art/bioethics Kira O’Reilly inthewrongplaceness Kira O’Reilly inthewrongplaceness 2005-2009 Photographer: Axel Heise O’Reilly was a SymbioticA resident in 2003/2004. A part of her research involved culturing skin tissue taken from a pig being used for bioscientific research. O’Reilly has since performed a number of performance works for one person at a time, inwhich her body is juxtaposed and interacts with the corpse of a female pig; exploring the complicitness, responsibility and connection with the other animal. http://www.kiraoreilly.com/blog/

Symposium Postcards and Poster Graphic Design by Paul Rayment.

Posthuman Lifestyles: The Film

At long last, the footage from my inaugural lecture is online. Take a peek at the last 10 years of biology and computing to see whether 'the future has arrived'

The Singularity Summit

Check out the 2010 schedule, info belowSpeakers include Futurist Ray Kurzweil, Magician-Skeptic James Randi

San Francisco, CA (PRWEB) June 2, 2010 -- Will it be one day become possible to boost human intelligence using brain implants, or create an artificial intelligence smarter than Einstein? In a 1993 paper presented to NASA, science fiction author and mathematician Vernor Vinge called such a hypothetical event a "Singularity", saying "From the human point of view this change will be a throwing away of all the previous rules, perhaps in the blink of an eye". Vinge pointed out that intelligence enhancement could lead to "closing the loop" between intelligence and technology, creating a positive feedback effect.

This August 14-15, hundreds of AI researchers, robotics experts, philosophers, entrepreneurs, scientists, and interested laypeople will converge in San Francisco to address the Singularity and related issues at the only conference on the topic, the Singularity Summit. Experts in fields including animal intelligence, artificial intelligence, brain-computer interfacing, tissue regeneration, medical ethics, computational neurobiology, augmented reality, and more will share their latest research and explore its implications for the future of humanity.

"This year, the conference shifts to a focus on neuroscience, bioscience, cognitive enhancement, and other explorations of what Vernor Vinge called 'intelligence amplification' -- the other route to the Singularity," said Michael Vassar, president of the Singularity Institute, which is hosting the event.

Irene Pepperberg, author of "Alex & Me," who has pushed the frontier of animal intelligence with her research on African Gray Parrots, will explore the ethical and practical implications of non-human intelligence enhancement and of the creation of new intelligent life less powerful than ourselves. Futurist-inventor Ray Kurzweil will discuss reverse-engineering the brain and his forthcoming book, How the Mind Works and How to Build One. Allan Synder, Director, Centre for the Mind at the University of Sydney, will explore the use of transcranial magnetic stimulation for the enhancement of narrow cognitive abilities. Joe Tsien will talk about the smarter rats and mice that he created by tuning the molecular substrate of the brain's learning mechanism. Steve Mann, "the world's first cyborg," will demonstrate his latest geek-chic inventions: wearable computers now used by almost 100,000 people.

Other speakers will include magician-skeptic and MacArthur Genius Award winner James Randi; Gregory Stock (Redesigning Humans), former Director of the Program on Medicine, Technology, and Society at UCLA's School of Public Health; Terry Sejnowski, Professor and Laboratory Head, Salk Institute Computational Neurobiology Laboratory, who believes we are just ten years away from being able to upload ourselves; Ellen Heber-Katz, Professor, Molecular and Cellular Oncogenesis Program at The Wistar Institute, who is investigating the molecular basis of wound regeneration in mutant mice, which can regenerate limbs, hearts, and spinal cords; Anita Goel, MD, physicist, and CEO of nanotechnology company Nanobiosym; and David Hanson, Founder & CEO, Hanson Robotics, who is creating the world's most realistic humanoid robots.

Interested readers can watch videos from past summits and register at www.singularitysummit.com.


Social media connecting the world to the Youth Olympic Games