"GetUp... [is] expanding its workforce and financial position after a period of consolidation...
GetUp [has] a growing membership base and war chest of more than $1m."
This article (and the good news announced within) is the product of so much hard work by the GetUp staff team.
shorturl.at/cYeNe
Posts by Glen Berman
Hard agree.
My oped is about causes of & responses to antisemitism. The Gaza genocide isn't a cause of antisemitism. The actions of the pro-Israel lobby, while reprehensible, are also not a cause of antisemitism. I don't think I need to restate my politics on Palestine every time I want to discuss antisemitism.
Why is that relevant to my piece on antisemitism in Australia?
As many of those who follow me here are perhaps unlikely to be subscribers to @getup.org.au's emails, I thought I'd share here what I wrote (with the help of the lovely staff team at GetUp) to the membership yesterday.
Off to the UK for a month (with baby, wish me luck). Come listen to me talk about contextualisation challenges in AI on 17 Nov -- link below. Will also be at Fantastic Futures in early December, talking about designing robust evaluation approaches for AI deployments in the cultural sector.
If you'll be in Melbourne (or nearby) in February, come join us for a one day symposium. We're seeking proposals for talks that engage with Hannah Landecker's recent paper Life as Aftermath.
More detail here: docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1F...
The new HASS Digital Research Hub at ANU is recruiting research fellows (2 yrs, fixed) & a research software engineer.
The fellows will work with @jamessmithies.bsky.social (& me too occassionally) on developing a digital strategy for supporting computational methods in the humanities.
Check out:
Mindblowing that a UK Labour government has managed to beat the Trump admin in the race to see who can weaponise anti-terror laws to suppress opposition first.
www.theguardian.com/politics/202...
Thanks for sharing!
Thanks for sharing!
Yes, great point. I think generally the weakness of this metaphor is that it doesn't do a great job of foregrounding the sociomaterial aspects of AI, so something to keep working on.
Am working on a longer piece that develops a more detailed account of GenAI, epistemic practices, and the science system, so keen for feedback.
Screenshot of first page of commentary.
After one too many conversations about the ways GenAI + peer review = shitshow for all involved, I dashed off this slightly polemic commentary on how I think we should talk about GenAI as an epistemic carcinogen.
link.springer.com/article/10.1...
And Jewish safety certainly won’t come by following through on Segal’s recommendations, which should be seen for what they are: a right-wing fantasy story of antisemitism as the product of humanities education and student organising.
Anyway, if you agree, consider signing
getup.to/P9Wj8tPMyTPd...
The Australian govt can and must do more to fight antisemitism, but Jewish safety won’t come by treating antisemitism as an isolated phenomenon, disconnected from other forms of racism.
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Was a privilege to be a small part of this conversation opening #AusSTS this year. Looking forward to two more days of amazing papers and workshops.
This time next week is #AusSTS. If you can't make it in-person, join for the keynotes, which we're streaming. Includes this one on Infrastructures of Noise, with @digitaldang.bsky.social, Fabian Offert, @katemannell.bsky.social & @ranjodhdhaliwal.com: www.youtube.com/live/ZGBAJWT...
- Proactive strategies to further their missions through GenAI, which could include using GenAI to supercharge decentralised campaigning and to support evidence gathering and campaign research, and supporting new GenAI-focused advocacy organisations to emerge.
Keen for feedback & chats.
3/3
The TL:DR is that I think advocacy orgs need to develop:
- Reactive strategies to protect themselves from the ways GenAI is changing patterns of Internet use, enabling new attacks on the credibility of civil society, and being put to use by government and corporate decision-makers.
And...
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What does GenAI mean for advocacy and social change organisations?
Here are a few ideas, loosely informed by my PhD research and my experience working in the advocacy sector.
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Kate Williams is a brilliant PhD supervisor & this is a timely and significant project to join. When research funding and academic freedom is under attack, developing a better understanding of what happens when research evaluation is standardised and institutionalised is vital.
shorturl.at/3kHgx
And if you made it this far: Shabbat Shalom.
I’ve no magic solutions. But I’m hoping that writing more about this creates space for productive dialogue and some new voices.
As I’ve discovered this week, an unnamed source pedalling untrue rumours can also be enough to warrant expulsion. But, this isolation works in favour of right-wing pro-Israel movements: it creates an inherent social barrier to Jewish people joining the pro-Palestine movement. Where to from here?
We also feel that our membership in progressive pro-Palestine movements is contingent on us remaining within the boundaries of the pro-Palestine Good Jew. Saying this out loud, of course, falls foul of these very boundaries.
Jews, like me, who are opposed to the genocide in Gaza and occupation of Gaza and the West Bank are doubly isolated. We struggle to see ourselves reflected in mainstream Jewish cultural and religious organisations.
(Sidenote: if you’re not familiar, please do check out the Jewish Council of Australia for an example of an alternative community voice.) But, the appearance of Western Jewish uniformity is the product of the Good Jew caricatures of the pro-Israel and pro-Palestine movements.
I know that it can appear that Western Jewish communities have almost entirely internalised the pro-Israel caricature of the Good Jew – especially due to the prominence conservative media gives to organisations like the Australian Jewish Association.