IndieWebCamp

IndieWebCamp is a technology BarCamp that was founded in Portland, Oregon and has since been held all over the world, including at the offices of the New York Times and in Brighton, England. It describes itself as a 2-day creator camp focused on growing the independent web, and spawned the IndieWeb movement.[1]

The event was founded by Tantek Çelik, Amber Case, Crystal Beasley and Aaron Parecki, with an aim to empower everyone to publish to their own websites, while still reaching their contacts on "silo" sites like Twitter and Facebook.[2]

While the attendees of the original events were largely technologists; journalists, bloggers and media professionals have begun to attend in order to gain greater control over their own content online.[3]

IndieWebCamp 2014

IndieWebCamp 2014 was held simultaneously in Portland, OR, New York, NY, and Berlin, Germany. Attendees spoke to each other over WebRTC video chat, and collaborated on hackathon projects.[4]

gollark: See, it would be REALLY evil-mastermind if you actually came up with a really convincing argument that Google's privacy invasion was good and convinced us. But this is just stupid.
gollark: The thing is, andrew, it makes you seem stupider in aggregate, so people consider you stupider and are less likely to think "hmm maybe he is PRETENDING".
gollark: I genuinely believe(d) you (a/we)ere that stupid.
gollark: Oh, does it need to be multiple lines with really short lines or something too?
gollark: I'm a physic.

References

  1. "IndieWebCamp".
  2. Finley, Klint. "Meet the Hackers Who Want to Jailbreak the Internet". Wired. Retrieved 3 July 2014.
  3. Gillmor, Dan. "Why the Indie Web movement is so important". Retrieved 4 July 2014.
  4. Rosenberg, Scott. "IndieWeb and Respect Network: Two roads to decentralizing the network". Retrieved 4 July 2014.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.