- The Deluge of Spurious Correlations in Big Data (Calude & Longo 2016)
- A 2016 mathematical proof that demonstrates the fallacy of the market-driven, anti-scientific Big Data ideology, that "computer-discovered correlations should replace understanding and guide prediction and action." In fact, "[t]oo much information tends to behave like very little information. The scientific method can be enriched by computer mining in immense databases, but not replaced by it." The aim of the authors is "to document the danger of allowing the search of correlations in big data to subsume and replace the scientific approach."
- The Computer for the 21st Century (Weiser 1999)
- Xerox PARC has been one of the epicenters of theoretical and practical computer development in the Silicon Valley. This article predicts the disappearance of computers in our Century by ubiquity. "There is more information available at our fingertips during a walk in the woods than in any computer system, yet people find a walk among trees relaxing and computers frustrating. Machines that fit the human environment instead of forcing humans to enter theirs will make using a computer as refreshing as taking a walk in the woods."
- Indigenous Cartography in Lowland South America and the Caribbean
- Collaboratively mapping alternative economies Co-producing transformative knowledge, (Labaeye, 2017)
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“One of the critical factors of digital knowledge is the ‘hyperchange’ of technologies and social networks that affects every aspect of how knowledge is managed and governed, including how it is generated, stored, and preserved” (Hess and Ostrom, 2007, p. 9).
Hess and Ostrom (2007), argued that digital technologies redefine knowledge as a commons, meaning, as a resource shared by a group of people that is vulnerable to social dilemmas (Hess and Ostrom, 2007, p. 3).
Understanding knowledge as a commons offers a new lens for considering the question of ownership in the process of knowledge production and its outcomes.
[...] This leads to the formulation of the hypothesis that licenses and infrastructure provision do play a central role in defining how mappings of alternative economies unfold.