 |
Usuarios
|
 |
|
 |
Desarrollo
|
 |
Untitled Document
Cultures d'arxiu
(octubre - noviembre de 2000
Fundació Antoni Tàpies, Barcelona)
- Recorrido
- Documentos
- Guía
Cultures d´arxiu:
memòria, identitat, identificació (julio - septiembre 2002 Universitat de València. La Nau)
- Recorrido
- Boletín:
solicita nuestro boletín nº1 (gratuito, incluir dirección)
Culturas de archivo: fondos y nuevos documentos (febrero - marzo 2003 Universidad de Salamanca. Palacio Abrantes)

- Recorrido
- Boletín:
solicita nuestro boletín nº2 (gratuito, incluir dirección)
Taller: arte, exposición, memoria
(octubre 2003. UPC, ETSAB. Barcelona)
Taller: arte, exposición, memoria II
(octubre 2004. UPC, ETSAB. Barcelona)
Culturas de archivo IV: representaciones
Febrero-abril 2005
Espacio-archivo
Monasterio de Nuestra Señora de Prado
Autovía Puente Colgante s/n
Fondo Ángel Ferrant
Patio Herreriano
Museo de Arte Contemporáneo Español
Jorge Guillén, 6
Sala de Referencia Planos y Dibujos
Archivo de la Real Chancillería de Valladolid
Chancillería, 4
Organización y producción: Junta de Castilla y León
Taller/Worshop: Culturas de archivo
Septiembre/September 2005
Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya
Escola Tècnica Superior
d'Arquitectura de Barcelona
- Visita al archivo districte Sants-Monjuic 28 septiembre 2005
Octubre/October 17-23 2005
KUNSTAKADEMIET I TRODHEIM
Fakultet for arkitektur og billedkunst
Lectures and workshop: Archive Cultures
Photogalleries:
- Lecture

-Temporary Library
- Visiting Legal Museum
- Visting Stadtarchiv

- Working on reference room
Participación en SEMINARIO DOCUMENTALIDADES. CGAC.
14 octubre 2006
ver más
Participación en el seminario "La imagen fantasma". Barcelona, Fundació Antoni Tàpies, 28 noviembre 2006
Participación en el simposio internacional "Revistas y Guerra". MNCARS, enero 2007
ver más
Ideas recibidas
Un vocabulario para la cultura artística contemporánea
Curso-programa de conferencias
MACBA Octubre/October 2008
Archivo: el acceso al saber/poder y las alternativas a la exposición
ALLAN SEKULA.
ver más
Conversaciones abiertas Dictadura, Arte y Archivo

Casa Amèrica Catalunya. c/ Còrsega, 299. Barcelona
7/8/9 OCTUBRE 2008 www.americat.net
Programa
Libro Santiago Roqueta. Co-edición y concepto. El libro constituye un montaje de documentos imágenes y rastros dejados por S.R. en su actividad profesional y docente.
Follow more events at amateurarchivist.calendar |
|
Tema: Following are the News Items published under this Topic.
|
|
Ver todos los artículos
 |
The Web Means the End of Forgetting
Enviado por editor en Sábado, 24 Julio, 2010 - 08:30 (25854 lecturas)
Tema Identificación / Identification
|
nytimes.com
July 19, 2010
The Web Means the End of Forgetting
By JEFFREY ROSEN
Four years ago, Stacy Snyder, then a 25-year-old teacher in training at Conestoga Valley High School in Lancaster, Pa., posted a photo on her MySpace page that showed her at a party wearing a pirate hat and drinking from a plastic cup, with the caption “Drunken Pirate.” After discovering the page, her supervisor at the high school told her the photo was “unprofessional,” and the dean of Millersville University School of Education, where Snyder was enrolled, said she was promoting drinking in virtual view of her under-age students. As a result, days before Snyder’s scheduled graduation, the university denied her a teaching degree. Snyder sued, arguing that the university had violated her First Amendment rights by penalizing her for her (perfectly legal) after-hours behavior. But in 2008, a federal district judge rejected the claim, saying that because Snyder was a public employee whose photo didn’t relate to matters of public concern, her “Drunken Pirate” post was not protected speech.
When historians of the future look back on the perils of the early digital age, Stacy Snyder may well be an icon. The problem she faced is only one example of a challenge that, in big and small ways, is confronting millions of people around the globe: how best to live our lives in a world where the Internet records everything and forgets nothing — where every online photo, status update, Twitter post and blog entry by and about us can be stored forever. With Web sites like LOL Facebook Moments, which collects and shares embarrassing personal revelations from Facebook users, ill-advised photos and online chatter are coming back to haunt people months or years after the fact. Examples are proliferating daily: there was the 16-year-old British girl who was fired from her office job for complaining on Facebook, “I’m so totally bored!!”; there was the 66-year-old Canadian psychotherapist who tried to enter the United States but was turned away at the border — and barred permanently from visiting the country — after a border guard’s Internet search found that the therapist had written an article in a philosophy journal describing his experiments 30 years ago with L.S.D.
According to a recent survey by Microsoft, 75 percent of U.S. recruiters and human-resource professionals report that their companies require them to do online research about candidates, and many use a range of sites when scrutinizing applicants — including search engines, social-networking sites, photo- and video-sharing sites, personal Web sites and blogs, Twitter and online-gaming sites. Seventy percent of U.S. recruiters report that they have rejected candidates because of information found online, like photos and discussion-board conversations and membership in controversial groups.
|
| |
 |
Ministers to trim DNA database
Enviado por editor en Jueves, 07 Mayo, 2009 - 12:29 (10351 lecturas)
Tema Identificación / Identification
|
bbc.co.uk
Ministers are to trim up to 850,000 DNA profiles from the current total of 4.5m on a national database after a court ruled innocent people must be removed.
Those arrested, but later released or acquitted, will have their profiles wiped after between six and 12 years.
Officials warned the changes could reduce the number of crimes solved.
But opposition parties accused the government of "giving as little as possible" in response to the European Court of Human Rights judgement.
Last year the court ruled that the database in England and Wales' was illegal - unlike Scotland's which was deemed "fair and proportionate".
“ Why does [the DNA profile] need to be held on file? That shouldn't be the case unless you've been convicted ”
Dr Helen Wallace, Genewatch
The court said rules allowing police to keep everyone's profile on store were blanket and indiscriminate because they did not differentiate between criminals, the severity of their crimes and innocent people who had never been convicted of an offence.
Current practices in England, Wales and Northern Ireland allow police to retain a numeric genetic profile of everyone arrested for a recordable offence - regardless of whether they are charged or convicted.
|
_READMORE (4922 bytes más)
| |
 |
DNA, a new religion?: Government plans to keep DNA samples of innocent
Enviado por editor en Sábado, 28 Febrero, 2009 - 04:34 (7364 lecturas)
Tema Identificación / Identification
|
www.guardian.co.uk
Government plans to keep DNA samples of innocent
DNA samples of innocent to be kept on file
* Afua Hirsch, legal affairs correspondent
* The Guardian, Friday 27 February 2009
The government is planning to get around a European court ruling that condemned Britain's retention of the DNA profiles of more than 800,000 innocent people by keeping the original samples used to create the database, the Guardian has learned.
A damning ruling last December criticised the "blanket and indiscriminate nature" of the UK's current DNA database - which includes DNA from those never charged with an offence - and said the government had overstepped acceptable limits of storing data for crime detection.
Last month the home secretary, Jacqui Smith, said she would publish a white paper setting out "a more proportionate, fair and commonsense approach", but she has not given any indication whether DNA samples already obtained would be destroyed. However, Home Office sources said the government, which was given three months to respond to the ruling, has "no plans" to destroy samples of DNA.
|
_READMORE (3966 bytes más)
| |
 |
Denuncia / Report: Big Sister is watching: EDVIGE and the angry French
Enviado por editor en Viernes, 12 Septiembre, 2008 - 12:01 (8102 lecturas)
Tema Identificación / Identification
|
arstechnica.com
By Julian Sanchez | Published: September 09, 2008 - 07:45AM CT
It was a Frenchman, Michel Foucault, who most famously argued that the etymological link between "states" and "statistics" is no accident—that gathering and organizing information about a population is, in itself, a means of exercising power over it. Some of his countrymen have taken the message to heart: The chorus of critics that has emerged to oppose a massive new "Big Sister" database has just been joined by a prominent member of President Nicolas Sarkozy's own cabinet.
|
| |
 |
Congress: Terror database upgrade failing
Enviado por editor en Domingo, 31 Agosto, 2008 - 09:46 (6967 lecturas)
Tema Identificación / Identification
|
By PAMELA HESS, Associated Press Writer
Thu Aug 21, 8:13 PM ET
A congressional committee on Thursday asked for an investigation into a counterterrorism database software upgrade that it says is months behind schedule, millions over budget and would actually be less capable than the U.S. government terrorist tracking system it is meant to replace.
|
_READMORE (2081 bytes más)
| |
|