[...] Our argument is that bills, charters, declarations, and manifestos would
have stronger imaginary force if they also derived their performative force from
everyday acts through the Internet: how people uptake positions as citizens of
cyberspace, how they respond to callings to participate in cyberspace, how they
create openings for constituting themselves differently, how they struggle for and
against closings, and how they make digital rights claims in or by performing
digital acts.[85] They would also have more performative if not legal force if they
arose from not only a universal commitment but also regional commitments to
understanding how the figure of the citizen is being articulated differently in
cyberspace and how this figure is essential for bringing the force of law into
being. The most significant space for thinking about the politics of the Internet
and the political subject it has given rise to—the digital citizen—is the space
between the inscription of rights and their enactment.
Hasta qué punto las criptodivisas y criptocontratos son una reiteración de este "yo, nosotros, ellos" y sus acuerdos a través de un algoritmo? La idea de inscribirse o excluirse son las únicas posibilidades. El resto de la política ocurre en repositorios de código y en "propuestas de mejora" técnicas.
El caracter recurrente del Data Week es una manera de hacer enactivos los compromisos que nos juntan como comunidad. La página es un acto de enunciación que es reiterado a través del Data Week