o u t l i n e - openhardware.scienceopenhardware.science/wp-content/uploads/2017/12/... · o u t l...
TRANSCRIPT
1
Outline GOSH 2017 5
Organizers 6 Main Organizers 6 Early planning support 6 Safety Officer and Co-Creator for Code of Conduct 6 Documentation Team (architects of this document) 6
Sponsors 7 Participants and affiliation 9
Schedule 21
Thursday unconferences (March 23) 24 1. Design 24 2. Biology-Life Sciences 24 3. Collaborative Development 24 4. OSH Enabling education 26 5. Inclusivity 26 6. Performative Interactive Art 26 7. Open source in developing countries 26 8. Philosophy in practice 28 9. Agriculture and environmental data collection 28 10. Promote tech OS 28 11. Visionary science Speculative fiction 28 12. Low-tech 28 13. Upscaling 28 14. Legal Aspects and Policies of OSciH 30 15. Citizen science 30 16. Documentation 30 17. Business models 30 18. Standards 32
Friday Unconferences (March 24) 34 Documentation and Sharing with Tobey (Tobias Wenzel) 34 Design Skills with Maria 34 Business Model Canvas with Tara and Greg 34 Anti-capitalist Tactics/Strategies 34 Contextualising OSH: lessons from the global south 34 Mixed Signal PCB Design with Joel 36 OSH for Citizen Science 36 Workshopology 36
Page 2
Saturday workshop sessions (March 25) 38 Build Your Own Waterscope Microscope with Richard 38 DIY-CAD design with Marc 38 Feminist Meetup 38 Hands-on DocuBricks documentation with Tobey (Tobias Wenzel) 38 Embedded Politics and Value in Technology with Jeff Warren 39
GOSH 2017 roadmap: Making OScH ubiquitous by 2025 42 Roadmap Process 42
GOSH Code of Conduct 45 How It Works 45
We listen. 45 We practice consent. 46
Additional guidelines for online community behavior 46 Media Consent 47
How To Report A Problem during GOSH 2017 47 Consequences 47
Website: openhardware.science Twitter hashtag: #GOSH2017 Youtube channel: https://goo.gl/YgmC8a Flickr: https://www.flickr.com/photos/goshcommunity/ GOSH 2017 Forum: https://forum.openhardware.science/c/gosh-2017
This work has been identified as being free of known restrictions under copyright law, including all related and neighboring rights. You can copy, modify, distribute and perform the work, even for commercial purposes, all without asking permission, unless it is extracted other sources
Page 3
Page 4
GOSH 2017 The Gathering for Open Science Hardware (GOSH) is a diverse, global community working to enhance the sharing of open, scientific technologies. GOSH met for the first time in Geneva, Switzerland in 2016. Fifty key people working in Open Science Hardware (OScH) discussed the key opportunities and barriers facing OScH, and articulated our shared values as a social movement. In 2017, we came together for the second time in Santiago at the Innovation Centre, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile. This time, we included nearly 100 people. For GOSH 2017, organizers intentionally increased the diversity of participants to include the breadth of the open science hardware movement. Participants represented 30 different countries. 48% of invited participants were women or trans; 25% were people of colour; 55% were from low GDP countries (“the global south”); 34% were from NGOs or community groups; and 33% came from Latin America. Participants were scientists, artists, 1
lawyers, architects, community organizers, developers, teachers, and students. This diversity is crucial to a global movement, which became apparent in discussions and workshops-- the problems of OScH are different in different places for different people, and so ways forward are equally diverse. To support this diversity, GOSH organizers created a Code of Conduct based on respecting difference. In 2016, participants collaboratively produced the GOSH manifesto, a statement of our shared principles and values. This year, we used the manifesto to articulate a roadmap or compass to guide our social movement towards our shared goal of enhancing the sharing of open, scientific technologies. The Open Science Hardware movement contains many different groups and people with different--and even divergent-- points of view and ideas of how to move OScH forward. But we agree that it is important. GOSH exists to bring these differences together and synthesize them so that we can work collaboratively to achieve our shared goal of open scientific technologies becoming the norm in knowledge production, rather than the exception.
1 These demographics are of officially invited attendees only. They shifted as some people could not or did not attend, and some new people joined us through other routes.
Page 5
Organizers
Main Organizers
● Jenny Molloy, University of Cambridge
● Shannon Dosemagen, Public Laboratory for Open Technology and Science
(Public Lab)
● Max Liboiron, Civic Laboratory for Environmental Action Research (CLEAR),
Memorial University of Newfoundland
● Fernán Federici Noe, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile
● Greg Austic, PhotosynQ
Early planning support
● Francois Grey, University of Geneva
Safety Officer and Co-Creator for Code of Conduct
● Klie Kliebert, Public Lab, adapted from Public Lab’s code of conduct
Documentation Team (architects of this document)
● Juan Manuel Garcia Arcos, Open Science School / Institut Curie / CRI Paris
● Fernando Castro, Nodo 39 Fablab / Mendoza / Argentina
● Laura Olalde, Independent artist / Buenos Aires / Argentina
● Kshitiz Khanal, Open Knowledge / Nepal
● Max Liboiron, Civic Laboratory for Environmental Action Research (CLEAR), Memorial
University of Newfoundland
Page 6
Sponsors The Gathering for Open Science Hardware (GOSH) would like to thank the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation for its ongoing support. Alfred P Sloan Foundation – $125,000 Founded in 1934 by industrialist Alfred P. Sloan Jr., the Foundation is a not-for-profit grantmaking institution that supports high quality, impartial scientific research; fosters a robust, diverse scientific workforce; strengthens public understanding and engagement with science; and promotes the health of the institutions of scientific endeavor.
Mozilla – $1000
Mozilla is a global community of technologists, thinkers and builders working together so people worldwide can be informed contributors and creators of the Web. Their mission is to ensure the Internet is a global public resource, open and accessible to all, where individuals can shape their own experience and are empowered, safe and independent.
HardwareX – $500
HardwareX is an Elsevier open access journal established to promote free and open source designing, building and customizing of scientific infrastructure (hardware). HardwareX aims to recognize researchers for the time and effort in developing scientific infrastructure while providing end-users with sufficient information to replicate and validate the advances presented.
Page 7
Page 8
Participants and affiliation ● Aakriti Thapa, Karkhana (Nepal)
Currently working at Karkhana (http://www.karkhana.asia/), an education company that designs learning experiences for middle school students. She is one of the lead teachers who apart from delivering classes, is also involved in designing classes, and researching hands-on activities for content development.
● Agnieszka Pokrywka, Pixelache and Temporary (Finland)
● Akshai M, IIT Bombay (India) Electronics Engineer currently engaged at IIT Bombay as a Research Assistant in FOSSEE2 Project. He helps to design, simulate and manufacture mixed signal boards for Industrial Automation. Previously he was directly associated with Government Bodies, Kerala Startup Mission, ICFOSS, and FabLab Kerala for the promotion of Open Source Hardware. Also a collaborator at an NGO called MicroHOPE Foundation, that works on building communities to promote Assembly Language Programming, to improve fundamentals.
● Alejandro Nadra, CONICET (Argentina)
Professor at University of Buenos Aires and researcher at CONICET, working on structural biochemistry, proteins and DNA. Also pushing synthetic biology in the region through courses and igem.org teams. Since last year, co-organizer of TECNOx.org to promote and consolidate a network of technologist in Latin America, focused in solving regional problems with accessible (open) technologies. Developer (together with students) of an arsenic biosensor for drinking water based on modified bacteria. Interested in sci-art projects, he is part of Proteus sci-art group.
● Alexis C Johnson, Independent (Venezuela)
Artist, actually based in Cologne, Germany, she is trained in material sciences and molecular bioengineering. In her art practice she uses open hardware and open software to address questions on transgender futurism, technology, surveillance, ecosystems, intersectional feminism and progress. Technical skills include Medical Devices and Microscopy of Biological samples.
● Ali Afsha, HackScience (UK)
Currently finishing his PhD at Imperial College, he is working as part of HackScience on affordable lab automation tools based around maker technology. He has been working on drag and drop software platform to help makers in science build cloud-based control apps for their tools.
● Alvaro Meneses, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile (Chile)
● Andre Maia Chagas, University of Tuebingen/ Trend in Africa (Germany)
Retina researcher by day and full time open source advocate. Currently involved in projects related to open science and open hardware in general and related to neurosciences. Collaborator with an NGO called Trend in Africa (trendinafrica.org) where he is Involved in workshops on Basic electronics and 3D printing to empower researchers to build their own lab equipment and/or hack existing. Curator of the Plos collection on open source hardware.
Page 9
● Andrew Thaler, Blackbeard Biologic: Science and Environmental Advisors(USA) Independent researcher in Maryland, USA. Deep-sea ecologist that ended up working in marine robotics by accident. Science advisor for OpenROV, runs his own consulting firm: Blackbeard Biologic. Co-founder of Oceanography for Everyone, where are designed and built low-cost open-source oceanographic instruments for researchers and citizen scientists.
● Bengt Sjölén, Independent (Sweden)
Independent hacker, artist and (almost) biochemist/molecular biologist. His primary tool is code, be it parametric designs of physical objects to be machined, circuit board designs or code generating code for data processing, and parts for bio-lab equipment. He collaborates through many different networks: Weise7 (his own studio in Berlin), Critical Engineering Working Group, Aether Architecture, Hackteria, Teenage Engineering, Moodelizer and Automata for commercial projects.
● Benjamin Zamora, Laberinto Biohackspace Uchile / Biohack-Vilú (Chile) Student of Computer Science in the University of Chile. In 2015 they started a Biohacking collective called Biohack Vilú, in which they are developing a series of hacktivism activities and open source projects. As examples, one of them is Vektor2, a device that pretends to give humans the orientation sense that birds have, and other project that is called Laberinto Biohackspace, a place for non-expert people to solve real local problems for their communities.
● Bethan Wolfenden, BentoLab / UCL (UK) With a background's in biochemistry, she is part of the team setting up Bento Bio and also a member of London Biohackspace. She is interested in biology, science education and "extreme" citizen science. With Bento, they are currently producing DNA analysis equipment, designing DNA barcoding educational activities for individuals at home and exploring the limits of biology reagents.
● Byron Tarabata, Universidad Central del Ecuador (Ecuador) Currently working in Scientific divulgation, focusing in Open science (also hardware and software) http://www.quintopilar.com. Actually he started a project of a didactic toys "Micro aventuras" for children facing as a first challenge of the production of a book with different samples (insects, cells, etc.) that allows teaching principles of biology to children between 8 and 12 years.
● Coco Coyle, Harvey Mudd College (USA) Coco Coyle is a graduating engineering student and main collaborative inventor of the open-source LADI Trawl (Low Tech Aquatic Debris Instrument), which monitoring marine plastics on the surface of water. https://civiclaboratory.nl/2016/06/29/ladi-trawl/
● Daniel Vicente Lühr Sierra, Universidad Austral de Chile (Chile) Electrical Engineer, Doctor Candidate in Electrical Engineering at Universidad de Chile, Academic Staff at Universidad Austral de Chile, Entrepreneur, Researcher, Hardware and software developer. He has been an Open Source Advocate and a supporter of “free culture” since 1996. He has contributed with a grain of sand in several Free/Libre Open Source Software Projects, both in Documentation and Coding. He has recently organized a Free Software Install Fest in Valdivia. He is currently the co-director of LeufüLab, an open rapid-prototyping laboratory in Universidad Austral de Chile (in the spirit of FabLabs and/or Makerspaces, but adapted to the local needs). He is also a member of La Manzana a consumers’ cooperative that promotes the use of healthy, environmentally friendly, locally produced products and fair trade. Daniel has also collaborated with Fernán Federici in a synthetic biology summer school at Universidad Austral.
Page 10
● Danisa Peric, Fablab U. de Chile (Chile)
● David Bild, Chicago Academy of Sciences/ Peggy Notebaert Nature Museum (USA) Educator and organizer of Nature Museum TEENS program, an out-of-school time environmental science and urban ecology program for Chicago public high school students. Also part-time teacher at DePaul University (Env Ed) and fairly involved in Hive Chicago Learning Network and a couple other Mozilla things.
● Daily Laurel
Explorer at www.biohackingsafari.comnon profit he co-founded with his scientist colleague @QuitterieL, whom he met in Paris in squats / biohackerspaces / hackathons and now works on publishing a book on biohacking / citizen science / open science worldwide. Nowadays he is preparing a docu fiction involving biohackers and the concept of Gaïa (scientific Latourian definition) in the amazon forest.
● Dorn Cox, GreenStart (USA) Farmer, agriculturalist, and physiocrat. Currently serves as the Research Director for the Wolfe's Neck Farm Foundation. Passionate about participatory on-farm research and sharing open source agricultural tools, software and data to accelerate innovation and quantify environmental services from regenerative agriculture. Co-founder of a number of open science projects including the FarmOS software platform and the Farm Hack community, among others. He has a PhD in Natural Resources and Earth Systems Science from the University of New Hampshire.
● Eduardo Padilha Antonio, Federal University of Sao Paulo (UNIFESP) /University of Sao Paulo (USP)/ Biohack Academy (Brazil)
● Ellen Foster, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (United States)
Currently a doctoral candidate at the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in the Science and Technology Studies (STS) department, in Graz, Austria. Interested in public engagements of science and technology, redefining technology, and appropriation of technology for civic science actions. Particularly interested in the inclusion practices of specific groups as feminist hacker collectives, library fab labs, and fixing/repair groups. Organizer of several workshops entitled E-Waste to Makerspace (EW2MS).
● Fernan Federici, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile (Chile)
● Fernando Castro, Digital fabrication Lab (LabFD) National Technological University/ Nodo39 Fablab (Argentina) Fernando has been working for the last few years in the promotion and development of open educative/working spaces. He is the director of the recently created digital fabrication laboratory (LabFD) at the National Technological University and co-founder of Nodo39 fablab. He is interested in the local strengthening and promotion of open source hardware for education and citizen science. Currently working on the second prototype of a low-cost air quality monitor (MACA)
● Freyja van den Boom, Open Knowledge International (UK)
Currently nomadic doing artistic (see www.thecopyriots.com) and academic research for Open Knowledge International on law and technology. Also Involved in the Fablab/Maker movement tinkering with 3D printing for some time becoming aware of the legal side of hardware.
Page 11
● Gayatri Buragohain, Feminist Approach to Technology (India)
Founder and Executive Director of a non-profit called Feminist Approach to Technology (FAT). Currently working to promote women and girls' participation in Science and Technology in India. Her main focus is on making STEM education accessible and interesting for girls from marginalised communities.
● Gina Leite, Rede InfoAmazonia and WCS (Brazil) Based in Salvador (Brazil) she is part of two teams: as collaborator with Wildlife Conservation Society and also part of Rede InfoAmazonia. At WCS she is part of Amazon Waters Initiative team and she is researching participatory monitoring initiatives in the Amazon Basin and water monitoring solutions that could be used in the Amazon using a citizen science approach. In 2016 she also participated in the Public Lab Barnraising.
● Goldjian, Independent (Canada)
● Greg Austic, PhotosynQ (USA) Co-organizer of GOSH, he founded PhotosynQ.org and was lead designer on the MultispeQ
(www.photosynq.org/buy-multispeq). He’s been pushing open science and open technology for over 10 years and he is a strong believer that data sharing and the creation of effective developer networks is the best way to scale open science hardware in the long run.
● Gustavo Pereyra Irujo, Instituto Nacional de Tecnología Agropecuaria (INTA)/ Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas, CONICET (Argentina) Plant physiologist from Argentina working at the National Agricultural Research Institute. Mainly interested in promoting the use of sensors and platforms for high throughput measurement of plant and crop traits in research and breeding.
● Hagit Keysar, Politics and Government Department, Ben Gurion University (Israel) Researcher and activist living in Jerusalem, and an organiser at Public Lab. Her research interests are in visual culture and STS and she is currently interested in open science hardware for community-based activism in human rights context. http://cargocollective.com/hagitkeysar
● Hamilton Mestizo, exploratorio: taller public workshop of experimentation (Colombia)
Multidisciplinary artist from Colombia. For many years, he has been working around the relationship between arts, science and technology through critical, aesthetic and social perspectives. Since 2007 he’s been involved in science and design environments, working with creative-transdisciplinary teams and university students in issues as physical computing, biotechnology and citizen science.
● Jeffrey Warren, Public Lab (USA)
Works on supporting people to collaboratively develop environmental monitoring techniques (hardware, photographic, etc) at low cost. As part of Public Lab, he is also interested in how open collaborative techniques (on their website and beyond) can support the development of new, accessible techniques for collecting scientific data, and in helping people develop good experimental designs and environmental monitoring strategies in an open source way.
● Jenny Molloy, University of Cambridge (UK)
Page 12
Co-organiser of GOSH 2017. She works at the University of Cambridge as Coordinator for a research centre called OpenPlant and an internal Synthetic Biology Strategic Research Initiative. She is a molecular biologist by training and her doctorate was in genetic control of the dengue vectors Aedes albopictus and Aedes aegypti. Nowadays she is really interested in the role and impact of open science and open IP in biological research and innovation.
● Joel Murphy, OpenBCI, INC / Pulse Sensor (USA)
He has a couple of Open Source Hardware startups: www.pulsesensor.com that is an optical heart rate monitor, and www.openbci.com that is an EEG/EMG/ECG amplifier. He is part of a team that is working on a government funded project to create open-source tools for designing hearing aids www.tympan.org. With a background is in visual arts, he also made kinetic sculpture www.joelmurphy.net and also taught Physical Computing at Parsons from 2006 to 2014.
● Jorge Appiah, Kumasi Hive (Ghana) Jorge Appiah is a technopreneur and innovator with a background in Electrical/Electronic Engineering and Renewable energy. He has a key interest in system and design thinking coupled with appropriate technology. He specializes in accelerating the 4th industrial age technologies like Internet of Things, Drones, Augmented/Virtual reality, blockchain etc in solving crucial challenges in Africa through Human capacity building. He is the Co-founder/CEO of Kumasi Hive (www.kumasihive.com), a multi-space innovation place for rapid prototyping of ideas, budding local innovations, impact start-up support and promoting youth entrepreneurship as a way of addressing critical social economic and developmental challenges.
● Juan Keymer, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile (Chile)
● Juan Manuel Garcia, Open Science School (Spain/Peru/France) Juanma Garcia is a Spanish bioengineer based in Paris, PhD candidate at Institut Curie. His research is on imaging and microfabrication techniques to better understand the biology of the cell, including live cell imaging or synthetic biology. Juanma has founded several companies and projects around interdisciplinary research and innovative science education, one of his big passions.
● Juan P Maestre, University of Texas at Austin (USA)
Environmental scientist working on citizen science projects. Currently interested on instruments that can help citizen science and in their CS projects interested in water quality but also in indoor environmental quality. They also pursue representation of geospatial data to inform citizens and any help in this sense too is welcome.
● Julián Castro Bosisio, Nodo 39 FabLab (Argentina)
● Julieta Arancio, CENIT (Argentina)
Currently phD candidate in Social Studies of Science and Technology at CENIT/STEPS América Latina, her research is about finding out if there's an Open Hardware movement in Latin America, its specifics, and in which way it may be related to a different way of producing goods and addressing problems of local communities. With a background in environmental science, she is particularly interested in the crossing between Open HW and Agroecology.
● Kaspar Emanuel, Kitnic (United Kingdom)
Electronic engineer and software developer. Passionate about open source software and hardware. He created a site for making electronics projects easier to replicate: kitnic.it.
Page 13
● Kina Smith, University of Alaska (USA) Maker of stuff, Kina graduated from the Interactive Telecommunications Program at NYU in 2015. Currently working with a group of scientists in Fairbanks that are researching how the boreal forest uses water and what it might be expected from the rapidly changing climate in the arctic.
● Klie Kliebert, Public Lab (USA)
Safety Officer at GOSH. Operations Manager for Public Lab and also the Communications Specialist for Water Works LA, a local water group that focuses mostly on flood mitigation. Passionate about and experienced in social and biological sciences, this combo means to spend a lot of time brainstorming ways to help / create equitable, inclusive science spaces.
● Kshitiz Khanal, Kathmandu Living Labs/ Open Knowledge Nepal (Nepal) Researcher at Kathmandu Living Labs and the Open Science guy at Open Knowledge Nepal. He is interested in the open diffusion of science into the society. Currently involved in building machines, designing an open education practice/ experiment on aerodynamics, and a community education project in Nepal. http://oknp.org
● Laura Olalde, Independent (Argentina)
Visual artist based in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Graduated in Fine Arts, in the specialization of painting. In 2016 she got a Masters Degree in Electronic Arts and her research was based on sci-art coproduction. Since 2011, she has been involved in bioart practices, or practices that involve the use of living matter. From 2013 up to now, she is part of PROTEUS, a sci-art collective formed with molecular biologists and social scientists.
● Lawrence Nderu, Jomo Kenyatta University of Agriculture and Technology (Kenya) Lecturer in the department of Computing, Jomo Kenyatta University of Agriculture and Technology. His research interests are machine learning, fuzzy logic and robotics. Working on: use of drones in agriculture to support data gathering in agricultural fields, disaster robotics and wearable devices for health.
● Lena Asai, Open Science School (Japan/ France)
Lena Asai is a designer, biohacker, curator, project coordinator and fusionist. Since 2014, she has been involved with the London Biohackspace in Hackney and presented at iGEM 2015. In 2015, she initiated the Co-lab Workshops series and organised 9 series at institutions included but not limited to, University College London, Cambridge University, CRI-paris, EPFL, John Innes Center and Tsinghua University(China). She also worked on Doing It Together Science (DITOs), organising the workshops as part of the outreach activities for citizen science. Her skill is to be a medium between scientific institutions and of other communities to set up a collaborative platform.
● Leonardo Sehn, Centro de Tecnologia Acadêmica,CTA,IF/ UFRGS (Brasil)
Collaborator at the Center for Academic Technology (CTA) from Porto Alegre, Brazil. He would define it as a group/laboratory/community/center of people who develop free/libre open source technology and who are interested in promoting an emancipation culture, being the technology and scientific emancipation as a departure point. They develop free open source hardware (FOSH) projects, to fabricate other FOSH and promote events (like e-HAL, the first Brazilian free and open source hardware meeting).
Page 14
● Leslie Garcia, interspecifics.cc (Mexico) Media artist working in the intersections of science and technology. She is part of Interspecifics Collective (Mexico) where they try to explore interspecies communication processes from an artistic and philosophical view, using sound, visualization, hardware and software.
● Marc Dusseiller, Hackteria (Switzerland)
Co-organizer of GOSH in 2016. Formerly trained as a scientist, he left academic research about 10 years ago and focused mostly on educational activities and (cross-)cultural facilitation from DIY electronics to bio/art/hack. This has lead to the foundation of Hackteria | Open Source Biological Art, a global network of similar minded enthusiasts on creating access to tools and know-how to allow everybody to enter the field of biology in any creative way. http://hackteria.org
● Maria Frangos, Sensorica (USA)
● Marina de Freitas, Centro de Tecnologia Acadêmica (CTA), Instituto de Física,
Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul (Brazil) Close to become a Physical Engineering, she’s been working with Rafael Pezzi and Leonardo
Sehn at CTA since 2015. She participated of almost all events that CTA was involved, including
e-HAL, the First Brazilian Gathering for Open and Free Hardware.
● Mario Behling, FOSSASIA (Vietnam) Co-founder of FOSSASIA, a space for Science Hack events, summits and meetups as well as developing of software and hardware. Involved in Open Tech projects for many years, deployed mesh networks in schools in Afghanistan, started Linux distributions and currently works on a number of science related projects.
● Max Liboiron, Civic Laboratory for Environmental Action Research (CLEAR) /Memorial University of Newfoundland (Canada) Co-organizer for GOSH 2017 and Director of the Civic Laboratory for Environmental Action Research (CLEAR) (https://civiclaboratory.nl), a grassroots, feminist, marine pollution laboratory in Newfoundland, Canada. They specialize in making no-power, DIY, citizen science tools so people in the north (northern, subarctic, arctic) can monitor their areas for pollution rather than waiting for official or government tools.
● Nur Akbar Arofatullah, Lifepatch.org / Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology (Indonesia) Currently Ph.D.candidate in Japan studying the molecular biology of tomato he is member/co-founders of Lifepatch, Citizen Initiatives in Art, Science, and Technology based in Yogyakarta, Indonesia. Also he is learning and working on projects related to open source greenhouse management system.
● Paloma López, Interspecifics (Mexico)
● Paz Bernaldo, Laboratorio el Sombrero, a research-action project (Chile) With a background in socio-economic and local development, she is working on a prototype project that aims to create empowerment and fight physical and digital segregation and inequity in vulnerable neighborhoods in Melipilla city.
Page 15
● Philip Ross, Stanford University (USA)
● Pierre Padilla, Universidad Peruana Cayetano Heredia (UPCH) / Biomakers Lab (Peru) Researcher and Masters candidate in Biomedical Informatics in Global Health at UPCH. Peru
Coordinator in SyntechBio and Open Biomedical Initiative. Founder and Director of Biomakers Lab, a Peruvian biohackerspace where that promotes and develops biology in a more accessible way for scientists, biohackers, amateurs or anyone which might be interested in this field.
● Puneet Kishor, Independent (USA) Independent and itinerant open science and data advocate. Before adopting a nomadic lifestyle traveling around the world and working with anyone and anywhere he can be of use, he was the Manager of Science and Data Policy with Creative Commons in San Francisco. His background is in engineering and environmental science with extensive experience with geospatial technologies and data aka GIS
● Rafael Pezzi, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul (Brazil) Advocate for Free Software, Free and Open Source Hardware, Open Science, Open Educational Resources, Physicist and professor at the Physics Institute at UFRGS and getting started on high energy Physics within the ALICE Collaboration at CERN.
● Renzo Filinich, Independent / Composer (Chile)
● Richard Bowman, University of Bath (UK)
Optical physicist at the University of Bath with a particular interest in microscopy. He is very interested in how to use 3D printing to make accurate, stable translation stages, for example to focus and move around in a microscope.
● Roshan Kumar Karn, Institute of Medicine / Open Access Nepal (Nepal) Director of Open Access Nepal, R2RC Chapter of Nepal. Medical Doctor by profession.
● Ryan Fobel, University of Toronto/ Sci-Bots Inc. (Canada)
Post-doctoral researcher at the University of Toronto in Canada. Developer of DropBot, a benchtop lab robot for miniaturizing and automating biology and chemistry experiments. He is actively engaging with other open-hardware hackers working on similar projects. Co-founder of a company Sci-Bots Inc.around open hardware/ software.
● Ryan Hammond, The Baltimore Underground Science Space / Open Works Baltimore (USA) Artist based in Baltimore, MD USA where currently works as a lab manager at the Baltimore Underground Science Space (BUGSS) a community synbio lab, and where started learning molecular biology and synthetic biology techniques, interested in creating an open source bioproduction method for sex hormones. Currently working on producing a series of plasmids that can be used for plant transformation that contain plant-optimized genes for enzymes necessary for human sex hormone production.
● Séverine Cazaux, Center for Biotechnology and Bioengineering, Universidad de Chile
(France) Currently living in Chile from the past three years, studying engineering in biotechnology she began to work on SynBio projects for iGEM first, and then on hardware for lab experiments in
Page 16
comprehensive schools. She is part of a group that is called OpenBio UChile and with computing guys, they are now motivated by creating a biohackspace in the Faculty.
● Shams Jaber, The Tech Academy (Bangladesh) Running a startup in Bangladesh that consists of an institute teaching CHILDREN open source hardware and software (Arduino, Raspberry Pi, Processing, Python) skills and knowledge WHILE also functioning as a tech firm. Recently, they have also started LEARNING and TINKERING with molecular biology, bio-hacking in collaboration with bio-hackers, biologists globally and also from local universities.
● Shan He, Greenovation Hub (China) Currently working with Greenovation Hub, which is a Chinese Green NGO focus on water safety issue. They visit villages all over China to understand their water risks, developed quick water test kits and DIY water filters to help them identify and relief the problems. She also does freelanced environmental investigations in China.
● Shannon Dosemagen, Public Lab (USA)
Co-organizer of GOSH. Shannon is co-founder and executive director of Public Lab based out of New Orleans. Shannon’s work has focused on supporting environment and public health groups address issues such as our declining freshwater resources, coastal land loss and building monitoring programs with communities neighboring industrial facilities.
● Shannon Hicks, Stroud Water Research Center (USA) Research engineer at the Stroud Water Research Center near Philadelphia. Developer of Mayfly Data Logger, an Arduino-compatible board that has all the features needed for low-cost datalogging. Starter of an online community a few years ago called EnviroDIY where people can share their ideas about do-it-yourself environmental monitoring. Teacher at hands-on workshops to students and other groups about working with open source technology and using it for environmental research.
● Shingo Hisakawa, Independent (Japan)
Independent software&hardware hacker making PCR like NinjaPCR. With use of this PCR, DNA extraction reagents and chromatography chips for infectious diseases, food allergen and meat detection, he wants to make food/blood self-test as popular as pregnancy self-test and shut down pandemic quickly with power of open source and citizen science. Manpowered aircraft and Augmented Reality satellite watching app are part of his hacks too.
● Shneel Malik, University College London (India)
● SP Mohanty, EPFL (Switzerland)
● Stacey Kuznetsov, Arizona State University (USA)
Assistant Professor at the School of Arts, Media, and Engineering1 at Arizona State University, currently develops projects that cover DIY biology, low-cost solar cooking, interactive screenprinting, 3D printing food, and works with a thermal-sensing drone. Director of the SANDS (Social and Digital Systems) group, a transdisciplinary research collective at ASU.
● Tara Tiger Brown, KitHub (Canada/USA)
In the last 7 years she has gotten into hardware and education, mostly because of hackerspaces and the makerspace she founded in LA. She is an advocate for interest-driven STEM education
Page 17
and very passionate about ways to help regular people without a science or tech background learn about their environment and contribute ways to solve problems that affect them.
● Tarunima Prabhakar, Center for Effective Global Action, CEGA (India)
Currently pursuing a masters in public policy at UC, Berkeley in United States. Before she worked on an IoT project to monitor quality of electricity supply in India, a maker-space in rural India, and at a non-profit in Delhi that is reworking primary school math and science curriculum in the country. With a background in electrical engineering and computer science, she is dedicated to extending STEM and its applications to the vulnerable and least privileged.
● Teon Brooks, Stanford University (USA)
● Thomas Hervé/ Mboa Nkoudou, Projet SOHA/ Université Laval (Canada /Cameroon)
PhD candidate in information and communication at université Laval, in Quebec City. Interested in the maker movement in Sub-Saharan Africa countries. In 2016 he has launched FABREL, a fab devoted to OER (Open Educational Resources). Nowadays he is involved to be the Manager of the Scholarly Communication and Open Science office at Higher Institute of Medical Technology (Cameroon).
● Thomas Maillart, University of Geneva (Switzerland)
Computational social science researcher in Geneva (and previously at UC Berkeley), interested in both collective intelligence and cyber risks. He is setting up a social bio-sensory lab, which aims is to perform social science experiments in natural environments in relation with social status, including, but not limited to gender inequalities.
● Tim Rudge, Universidad Católica de Chile (Chile)
● Timothy Marzullo, Backyard Brains (Chile)
● Tobias Wenzel, University of Cambridge(Germany)
Bioengineer at the University of Cambridge. Editor-in-chief of the Journal of Open Hardware, created by a large group of members of the GOSH movement. Also the founder of the free open hardware documentation software and repository DocuBricks. He is researcher on quantitative biological data, organism-technology interfaces, or general instruments like a parametric laser-cut gel-electrophoreses system.
● Xiamyra Daal, Waag Society (The Netherlands) Concept developer at the Open Wet lab of Waag Society where they focus on Open, Fair and Inclusive projects. They have a Fab lab, Wet lab and Textile lab where they develop open source tools and techniques. The Wet lab hosts the events of the Dutch DIYbio community and the BioHack Academy.
● Yuenyong Nilsiam (Ake), Michigan Tech (USA) PhD candidate in computer engineering at Michigan Technological University. Also a member of Michigan Tech's Open Sustainability Technology Lab (MOST) run by Dr. Joshua M. Pearce. Currently he is working on metal 3D printing project and focusing on an open source slicer software and optimization of steel 3D printing. He also created a web site for searching inactive patents of the U.S. which are in public domain.
Page 18
● Yuliana Rodriguez, Platohedro (Colombia) Psychology major and currently experimenting and producing with and through alternative pedagogies. Coordinator of the project Manga Libre, a community created to manage eatable gardens and last but not least ounder and member of the experimental sound group Jaquer Noise, a group of friends and activists that work with free culture and low cost construction.
Page 19
Page 20
Schedule Wednesday, March 22nd 2017
09:45-10:00 Location introductions
10:00-10:20 GOSH history, background, intro to CoC
10:20-11:40 Speed meeting
11:40-13:30 Lunch and setting up of posters
13:30-15:00 Lunch break
15:00-15:15 Open poster session and tables
15:15-15:35 Anacleto Angelini Innovation Centre and UC welcome
GOSH movement introduction
15:35-15:45 Launch of the community-run Journal of Open Hardware
15:45-16:45 Short stories of
OSH
– Max Liboiron – Open Science Hardware for Equity
– Jorge Appiah – Open Science Hardware: A tool for Africa’s innovation and Development
– Andrew Thaler – Open Source for an Open Ocean
– Rafael Pezzi – Collaborative tools for open hardware development community
– Xiamyra Daal – BioHack Academy
16:45-17:15 Open discussion and Q&A
20:30-00:00 Reception at The Clinic/Bar Radicales
Thursday, March 23rd 2017
Unconference
Space A Unconference
Space B Unconference
Space C Unconference
Space D Unconference
Space E
10:30-11:30 Design Biology, Life
Sciences, Microfluidics
Collaborative development
OSH tools enabling
education
11:30-12:30 Inclusivity Performative and
Interactive art
Open Source in Developing countries
Philosophy in practice
Agriculture and environmental data
collection
12:30-13:30 Lunch break
13:30-15:00
Promote teaching of
Open Source Hardware
Visionary science speculative
fiction Lowtech Upscaling
Policies, legal, and more
15:00-15:15 Coffee break Coffee break Coffee break Coffee break Coffee break
15:15-16:30 Citizen Science Documentation Business Models
Standards
19:00 Dinner at The Clinic/Bar Radicales
Page 21
Friday, March 24th 2017
Unconference Space A
Unconference Space B
Unconference Space C Unconference Space D
09:30-11:00
Documentation and publication
workshop with Tobey
Design skills with Maria
Make an OSH business plan with Greg and Tara
Discussing Anticapitalist OSH
11:15-12:45
Contextualizing OSH: lessons from the
Global South with Thomas
Mixed signal PCB design with Joel
OSH for citizen science. Defining citizen science, resources, ethics, values
and networks.
“Workshopology”: sharing workshop
models with Juanma.
12:45-14:15 Lunch break Lunch break Lunch break Lunch break
14:15-15:00 GOSH roadmap: introduction and definition of core values of community
15:00-15:45 GOSH roadmap: add more ideas and post-its to the different areas
15:45-16:15 GOSH roadmap: prioritize the objectives and ideas
16:15-17:00 GOSH roadmap: questions, answers, discussion.
Saturday, March 25th 2017
Unconference Space
A Unconference
Space B Unconference
Space C Unconference
Space D Unconference
Space E
09:30-12:30 Build your own waterscope microscope with Richard
DIY CAD. Draw circuit boards, and
soldering, with Marc
Feminist meetup
12:30-13:30 Lunch break
13:30-15:00 Hands-on DocuBricks documentation with
Tobey
Politics in technology
with Jeff
Identify a project to collaborate with
Greg
Python for science
15:00-16:30 Applying for funding,
with Bethan Design skills with Maria
OSH curriculum building with
Andrew
How to make human powered
aircraft with Shingo
Fix it together with Ellen
Extra afternoon parallel
sessions
GOSH documentation team working session
Latin-American GOSH meetup
Write a legal two-pagers about GOSH
Page 22
Page 23
Thursday unconferences (March 23)
1. Design
Synopsis: In this session we discussed around the questions: what design can contribute to OSH? And what can OSH contribute to design? It was a conversation between many methodologies of design (critical design, collaborative design, open design, co-design and speculative design) where design is viewed as a relationship that brings closer designer and user, that is empathetic, hackable and can be adapted to new questions, problems and contexts.
2. Biology-Life Sciences
Participants: Juan Pedro, Shingo, Ryan Hammond, Shneel, Fernando Castro, Juan, Juanma, Tobey, Bengt, Ryan Fobel, Lawrence, Andre, Jenny, Phil, Andrew, Pierre, Stacey, Eduardo, Mohanty, Alexis, Paloma. Synopsis: We discussed what challenges arise from the field of life sciences, biology, synthetic biology and microfluidics. We discussed how open hardware can, for example, solve the problem of non-reproducibility of scientific data (publications even in high impact journals like Nature or Science have low reproducibility). Another example is the potential of open hardware to “fix” the medical industry or biomedical research by supplying more reliable, affordable or distributed production of equipment or knowledge. Also, we discussed what kind of experiments we can perform without a biosafety level 1 lab, just in a kitchen. Furthermore, it was pointed out as a challenge to be able to produce scientific data that can join a scientific publication. Many participants were concerned that many workshops about science or microfluidics were just reduce to “playing” or tinkering. Finally, the role of art in communicating and teaching science was also valued by all participants.
3. Collaborative Development
Participants: David Bild (notes), Marina de Freitas, Séverine Cazaux, Thomas Hervé, Mboa Nkoudou, Dorn Cox, Coco Coyle, Tara Tiger Brown, Kaspar, Gayatri Buragohain, Akshai M, Rafael Pezzi, Greg Austic, Daniel Vicente Lühr Sierra, Shan He, Bethan Wolfenden, Mario Behling, Lena Asai, Jeffe van Holle Synopsis: In this session we tackle the question of how disparate people from disparate places can collaborate to develop a thing/technology for accordingly to local communities needs. We also discussed the main forms, issues, problems, methodologies and possibilities related to the collaborative development of software and hardware.
Page 24
Page 25
4. OSH Enabling education
Participants: David Bild, Julián Castro Bosisio, Jeffe Van Holle, Teon Brooks, Thomas Maillart, Tara Tiger Brown, Aakriti Thapa, Tobias Wenzel, Gustavo Pereyra Irujo, Jorge Appiah. Synopsis: We discussed how to facilitate learner-centered environments and we shared problems, tips and resources from our diverse experiences.
5. Inclusivity
Participants: Shneel, Tara, Paloma, Gayatri, Bethan, Shannon, Aakriti, David, Klie, Severine, Xiamyra, Juanma, Jenny Synopsis: This discussion looked at inclusivity in science and technology and specifically open science hardware. The conversation covered whether 'inclusive' is a good word to use as it implies a sense of other. If friends explicitly state 'oh, we'll include you', that does not feel welcoming. The conclusion of the discussion was that being welcoming, listening, visible, open and attempting to understand the community is the crux of working with people who, for example, don't feel they should have a view or opinion on a scientific topic, or who do not feel empowered to teach science. Whether bringing people in is always the right thing to do was also a consideration, it is difficult to differentiate between people who would like to engage with appropriate opportunities and those who just do not want to engage.
6. Performative Interactive Art
Participants: Shams , Julian, Eduardo, Leslie, Ryan, Freya, Daily, Fernan, Mariana, Alexis C Johnson, Anne Goldenberg. Synopsis: A discussion of the role of open hardware in art spurred on by two talking points: crypto Dance: a choreography trying to explain cryptography to lay people and DIY electronic music.
7. Open source in developing countries
Participants: Mohanty, Kshitiz, Roshan, Puneet, Jorge Appiah, Daniel Vicente Lühr Sierra Synopsis: This was a discussion on how open source hardware is used in developing countries and some of the problem faced with adoption of OS hardware vs proprietary options. Some adoption of os tech has been in response to prohibitive costs of closed hardware and software. This makes for sustainable usage and adoption. We discussed the different audiences to increase open source adoption: government, business, higher education. How do we get developing country to contribute their local knowledge from Indigenous solutions? What are the ethics of this?
Page 26
Page 27
8. Philosophy in practice
Participants: Alejandro Nadra, Rafael P., Fernando Castro, Thomas, Joel, Jeff W., Alexander, Juliana, Maria, Ellen, Phil, Max, Hagit, Lina, Laura Olalde, Andre. Synopsis: In this discussion we talked about the philosophies in regards to values and ethics embedded within OSH and science/technology. After discussing our own interests in the session, we posed questions that we would like to be answered. What are the strategies and tactics of making values explicit in open source hardware? Does a design object have inherent political values, or do the values come to the object in context? Can open science hardware mobilize public action? How design helps build publics? Given capitalism how do we keep openness? In which way do we think open hardware can change the world?
9. Agriculture and environmental data collection
Participants: André, Stacy K, Ali, Coco, Shannan H. Leonardo Sehn, Shan He, Nur Akbar Arufatullah, Mario Behling, Gustavo Pereyra Irujo, Andrew Thalor, Lawrence Nderu, Juan Keymer, Greg A., Dorn Cox, Kina Smith Synopsis: We discussed a variety of topics about data collection tools, sensor types, data formats and how to know what to measure. Our main action item was to create a collection of useful tools, not just a list of links, but actual short videos describing each tool in its use and design.
10. Promote tech OS
11. Visionary science Speculative fiction
12. Low-tech
Participants: Akbar Arafatullah, Roshan Kumar Karn, Shams Jaber, S.P. Mohanty, Juan P Maestre, Akhsai M., Yuenyong (Ake) Nilsiam, Laura Olalde, Julieta Arancio, Paz Bernaldo, Gina Letie, Rafael Pezzi, Coco Coyle, Alejandro Nadra, Lawrence Nderu, Kshitiz Khanal, Fernando Castro Synopsis: Traditional knowledge already exists, with more local context. what exactly is technology? Is does not have to be fancy and expensive the simpler the tool, the easier to maintain/repair/use? the word "low-tech" doesn’t make sense. (usually differentiating based on the first look of the tool) As long as something solves a problem efficiently. which is the minimal technology that solves a problem? Is the technology appropriate for a community?
13. Upscaling
Page 28
Page 29
14. Legal Aspects and Policies of OSciH
Participants: Gustavo Pereya Irujo, Leonardo Sahn Alves, Frayja van den Boom, Thomas Haerve Mboa Nkoudou, Joel Murphy, Phillip Ross, Kina Smith, Daniel Vicente Lühr Sierra, Tarunima Prabhakar, Byron Tarabata, Max Liborion, Shannon, Daily Synopsis: At this session we shared some general information and concerns about patents and copyright. The international differences in legal frames regarding patent and licences were exposed. Then we suggested some alternatives and different pathways in hardware development to keep their results open and avoid patents.
15. Citizen science
Participants: Leonardo Sehn, Laura Olalde, Tarunima Prabhakar, Shannon Dosemagen, Hagit Keysar, Klie Kliebert, Lawrence Nderu, Jeffe Van H, Gina Leite, Juan P Maestre, Fernando Castro, Hamilton Mestizo, Mohanty, Nur Akbar Arofatullah, Thomas Hervé Mboa Nkoudou, David Bild, Max Liboiron Synopsis: We had a discussion around several questions related to the engagement of citizens and communities in the construction of scientific knowledge. We made a distinction between citizen science, community science, civic science and participatory monitoring. We analyzed the difficulties in align scientific community, NGO, and community interests and the approach used to engaged to/in/with communities and we tried to clarify which are the incentives/motivations for their participation.
16. Documentation
Participants: Jeffrey Warren, Yuenyong Nilsiam, Tobias Wenzel, Dorn Cox, Rafael Peretti Pezzi, Laura Olalde, Gustavo Pereyra Irujo. Synopsis: Documentation is often the real "source code" of open hardware in that it is required for an open source hardware project to be built and rebuilt. We shared some experiences and platforms to document OSH and tackled some general questions about ways to do version control, improve feedback and attribution in replication and how increase participation/appropriation.
17. Business models
Participants: Shams, Pierre, Joel, Bethan, Fernan, Shingo, Jorge, Maria, Ali, Greg, Ryan, Tara. Synopsis: We shared our business models experiences and ideas. We discussed and analyzed main issues and difficulties around funding, value propositions, manufacturing, scaling up and organization models. Finally we shared some resources about case studies of businesses that have reached sustainability.
Page 30
Page 31
18. Standards
Participants: Daniel Vicente Lühr Sierra and more Synopsis: Standards are primarily ways of ensuring that hardware is safe, accurate, compatible, and follows best practice. There are already standards, both technical and legal, for any hardware product that's sold (e.g. CE mark, RFI standards) and also for scientific hardware (e.g. centrifuge standards). Sometimes we're legally required to comply (when selling products) and sometimes it's a good idea but not necessary. How can we support each other as a community to meet relevant standards? Also, some standards are voluntary, and could even be created by us - do we need GOSH standards (or a GOSH standards group), or would this be a barrier to openness?
Page 32
Page 33
Friday Unconferences (March 24)
Documentation and Sharing with Tobey (Tobias Wenzel)
Participants: Marc, Richard, Kina, Ali, Bengt, Daniel, Shams, Bethan, Kshitiz, Gustavo Pereyra Irujo, Fernando Castro, Marina de Freitas, Veyron, Doran, Laura Summary: All participants shared why they were interested in documentation and sharing session and shared their past experiences with documentation. Participants read, added comments, and discussed over an already prepared collaborative document, which had headings on hardware documentation, making hardware open, requirements of open hardware documentation, sharing open source hardware, and some personal tips on open hardware documentation.
Design Skills with Maria
Business Model Canvas with Tara and Greg
Participants: Shingo Hisakana, André M. Chagas, Thomas Maillart, Leonardo, Tarumina, Alexis C. Johnson, Yuenyoung (Ake) Nilsian, Rafael Pezzi, Nur Akbar Arofatullah, Jorge Appiah Overview of topic: Hands on workshop on drafting business models. Discussion on the elements of the Business model canvas (template) adapted for open source business from Strategyzer.com.
Anti-capitalist Tactics/Strategies
Attendees: Kaspar, Andrew Thaler, Shneel, Stacey K, Klie Kliebert, Thomas Mboa, Coco Coyle, Juan P Maestre, Max Liboiron, Freyja, Ryan, Ellen Foster, Lena Asai, Eduardo Overview of topic: In this session we first talked about why we do not like capitalism, and then tactics, strategies and mechanisms we have done, heard of, or seen that cultivate a subversion of capitalism -- with the hope to bring them into our own practices. Discussions of issues around patent law and struggling to keep things open was raised. Some very important critiques and different viewpoints on how we define, engage, and are affected by capitalism were brought up in regards to the non-Western context -- and the conversation ended on this note and the need to focus on social needs and community engagement.
Contextualising OSH: lessons from the global south
Overview of topic: We discussed issues around the way technology, particularly open technology, gets to the global south. The ideas of OSH as a "common", cognitive justice, science shops, cultural appropriation of technology, and how we can make technology easy to appropriate.
Page 34
Page 35
Mixed Signal PCB Design with Joel
OSH for Citizen Science
Workshopology
Attendees: Juanma, Marc, Lena, Shneel, Kshitiz, Xiamara, Laura Olalde, Alejandro Nadra, Gustavo Pereyra Irujo Overview: Participants discussed in groups of 3-4 about an workshop they organized in the past - cost, method, positives, negatives, lessons learned etc. Participants selected in random shared their experiences of organizing workshops so that everybody can learn different models of organizing workshops from each other.
Page 36
Page 37
Saturday workshop sessions (March 25)
Build Your Own Waterscope Microscope with Richard
Attendees: Gina Leite, Gustavo Pereyra Irujo, Hamilton Mestizo, Juan Pedro Maestre, Paz Bernaldo, Yuliana Rodríguez. There is a video of this section: https://vimeo.com/213341233, made by Paz, and a post in the forum.openhardware.science (only this documentation available) https://github.com/rwb27/openflexure_microscope/releases/tag/v5.16.10-beta
DIY-CAD design with Marc
Attendees: Shan He, Akshai, David, Aakriti, Tara, Andrew, Alexis, Kshitiz Bar Session 23.3.2017: Richard, Paz, Puneet, Juan P. Maestre, Ryan & others Overview of topic: We have been testing the new workshop that i developed for GOSH, called diy-CAD (do-it-yourself Children Aided Design), specifically for the Gär Lämpli project (fermentation lamp). The core idea of the workshop-kit is tool for creative designs of printed circuit boards, introducing basic concepts of Open Hardware being something to re-design for your own use. Going from an open/shared schematic and bill of materials to a manufacturable board, using SMD (surface mount devices) components. The design tool is mostly pen and paper, where the footprint of the parts are scaled 400% and can be freely rearranged, and then a copper layer can be painted to draw the functional board design by hand.
Feminist Meetup
Attendees: Max, Bethan, Gayatri, Klie, Jenny, Severine, Goldjian, Coco, Freyja, Ryan, Alexis, Jeff, Lena, Shneel
Overview of topic: A meeting of feminists that mainly discussed the following topics:
● Surviving work (and non-feminist spaces) ● Joining up in networks for support & how do we keep up a connection after GOSH ● How do we talk to people about feminism? ● Going deeper and looking at feminist ways of doing science, technology ● Creating spaces that embody feminist spaces: online networks, physical meetings
Hands-on DocuBricks documentation with Tobey (Tobias Wenzel)
Attendees: Shingo, Yuenyong, Mariana, (3 others), Tobias (later individually with Kaspar, Fernan, and Roberto)
Overview: The modular hardware documentation structure of DocuBricks was explained, while everyone downloaded the editor software. The group explored how to add authors, parts in the Bill of Materials (with optional manufacturing instructions), how to add sub-bricks and parts to the content of bricks, and how to add instructions, images, videos, design files and code. It was tested how the editor saves the XML structure, how downloaded projects can be reopened and modified, and how uploaded projects get
Page 38
rendered online. The session then continues in a range of individual discussions on where to use, connect to, and extend the documentation tool.
Embedded Politics and Value in Technology with Jeff Warren
Attendees: Rafael P., Fernando Castro, Thomas, Joel, Jeff W., Alexander, Juliana, Maria, Ellen, Phil, Hagit, Lina, Laura, Andre
Overview of topic: In this discussion we talked about the philosophies in regards to values and ethics embedded within OSH and science/technology. After discussing our own interests in the session, we posed questions that we would like to be answered. We tackled the first question, but then run out of time for discussing, so are hoping to continue the discussion in person and through an online forum.
Page 39
Page 40
Page 41
GOSH 2017 roadmap: Making OScH ubiquitous by 2025 The GOSH roadmap is a guiding document to help organize the GOSH and other OScH communities to achieve the goal of making OScH ubiquitous by 2025. Using the roadmap, we intend to: change the norms within established, institutional science so researchers openly share knowledge and technology; so research can happen in or out of the academy, in or out of the lab, in or out of commercial spaces; and so enable science to take place where it would not usually happen. The roadmap has several sections that outline areas of intervention to make this happen:
1. Supporting the Open Science Hardware Community 2. Growing the Open Science Hardware Community 3. Moving traditional developers towards Open Science Hardware 4. Supporting Open Science Hardware Projects in all their Parts 5. Education, Training & Learning 6. Research to support Open Science Hardware 7. Institutional Support 8. Funding 9. Impacts & Seeing Success
Roadmap Process The Roadmap began during GOSH 2016, when we summarized the main discussions of spontaneous unconference sessions to support the GOSH manifesto (http://openhardware.science/gosh-manifesto/). This text, in turn, became the foundation for a three day workshop at CERN in Geneva, Switzerland, focused on crafting the roadmap. The outline above, as well as some of the points within it, emerged at this meeting. At GOSH 2017 in Santiago, we put the nine sections on whiteboards, as well as a section about our shared values, our community members, and those we impact (stakeholders), and invited all participants to flesh out the sections. First, we collectively outlined and prioritized our main values--46 in all, with openness, sharing, respect for different knowledges, transparency, and sustainability being our most prevalent shared values. Then, people added their ideas, resources, and questions to each of the nine sections. Finally, we choose which aspects of the roadmap each person would work on; some would steward the process, others would write and translate, and still others would take on smaller project within the framework to bring the framework into action.
Page 42
Page 43
Page 44
GOSH Code of Conduct The Gathering for Open Science Hardware (GOSH) is a diverse, global community working to enhance the sharing of open, scientific technologies.
We strive to make open science hardware open to everybody, regardless of scholarly or professional background, gender identity and expression, sexual orientation, ability, physical appearance, body size, race, age, economic background, country of origin or employment, religion, and other differences. Because we come from different backgrounds, it is important to be intentional about providing respectful, equitable spaces — both online and in person — for our community to come together and engage in constructive, respectful discourse. As our manifesto states: GOSH is used for peaceful purposes and causes no harm.
GOSH is equitable. Equity is different than equality; equality is about treating everyone exactly the same, while equity recognizes that everyone does not start from the same position and so treating everyone the same may leave them in the same uneven positions they began in. For this reason, we are intentional about actively reducing the inequitable barriers that stand between science and those who create, use, and learn from it.
This code of conduct applies to all GOSH spaces, both online and in person.
While we operate under the assumption that all people involved with GOSH subscribe to the GOSH Manifesto and the values laid out above, we take Code of Conduct violations very seriously. Therefore, individuals who violate this Code may affect their ability to participate in GOSH, ranging from temporarily being placed into online moderation to, as a last resort, expulsion from the community or in-person events. If you have any questions about our commitment to this framework and/or if you are unsure about any aspects of it, email [email protected] and we will provide clarification.
How It Works
This Code is an effort to maintain a respectful space for everyone and to discuss what might happen if that space is compromised. Please see the guidelines below for community behavior at GOSH 2017 in Santiago.
We listen.
We begin interactions by acknowledging that we are part of a community with complementary goals. When something has happened and someone is uncomfortable, our first choice is to work through it through discussion. We listen to each other.
● For active listening, we ask questions first, instead of making statements.
Page 45
● We give people time and space to respond.
● We appropriately adjust our behavior when asked to.
● We know that repeating hurtful behavior after it has been addressed is
disrespectful.
● We avoid this ourselves and help others identify when they are doing it.
We practice consent.
At in-person gatherings, everyone’s physical space must be respected at all times. We do not touch other people without asking first — this includes physical greetings such as hugs, handshakes, or kisses, since not everyone is comfortable with the same type of touch.
● Ask first.
● We respect everyone else’s right to walk away at any time.
● If you see or experience a violation of consent at GOSH 2017.
Note that many forms of harassment do not look like physical or verbal abuse, but still fall into this category. Non-consent can include exhibiting sexual images in public spaces, deliberate intimidation, stalking, following, photography or recording without permission, sustained disruption of talks or conversations, inappropriate physical contact, and unwelcome sexual attention.
Additional guidelines for online community behavior
Online modes of interaction involve large numbers of people without the helpful presence of visual cues. Because of this, respectful and self-aware online conduct is especially important and difficult. In addition to the Code, which remains in play in online spaces, our community has created specific guidelines for online interactions. If someone violates these guidelines, someone from the Moderators group (currently GOSH organizers and the Safety Officer, though this will evolve) will place them into moderation by changing that person’s posting permission on the relevant list or forum, on the website, or both. Our triple notification standard for moderation means a point person from the Moderators group will 1) email the person directly with a brief explanation of what was violated, 2) send a summary email to the rest of the moderators group, 3) if it happened on a public list (vs a website), notify the list that one of our members has been placed into moderation with a brief explanation of what is not tolerated.
Page 46
If you wish to begin the process of getting out of moderation, respond to the email sent to you from [email protected].
Media Consent
● There will be a media release for GOSH 2017. If you do not wish to be
photographed or sign the release, you are responsible for placing stickers on your
nametags, and/or raising your hand in the moment to alert photographers to
move you out of frame. We are happy to accommodate you.
● If you are taking a photograph, let people in the room know.
● Always check with parents about posting anything with minors, and never post
the name of a minor in conjunction with their photograph.
How To Report A Problem during GOSH 2017
In Person — Safety Officer: If at any time you experience or witness something that you are not comfortable with and that you feel may be a violation of our GOSH Code, you may contact the Safety Officer for support or guidance either in person, via email, or via our anonymous reporting app. For GOSH 2017, this person was Klie Kliebert. You can also approach a member of the organizing team: Shannon Dosemagen, Jenny Molloy, Max Liboiron, Fernán Federici Noe, and Greg Austic.
Via email — GOSH Organizers: If you experience or witness something and would prefer to email, email Klie Kliebert at [email protected]. You can also email the organizers at [email protected]. Before, during, and after GOSH, the organizers will be checking this email.
Confidentially via online form: To submit a report anonymously for review by the Safety Officer, go online via phone or computer to our anonymous “contact” survey, located at https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/CKBG7FP. This contact form will be monitored throughout the day (at least twice daily) during GOSH 2017. For inquiries before and after GOSH 2017, please email [email protected].
Reporting should never be done via social media.
Consequences
● Anyone requested to stop behavior that violates the Code of Conduct is expected
to comply immediately, even if they disagree with the request.
Page 47
● The Safety Officer or GOSH organizers may take any action deemed necessary
and appropriate, including immediate removal from the meeting without warning.
● The organizers reserve the right to prohibit attendance at any future meeting. This Code of Conduct was created collaboratively, facilitated by Klie Kliebert and Max Liboiron, and drew from other CoCs, including those by Public Lab, International Congress of Marine Conservation 2016, and TransH4CK.
Page 48
Page 49
Page 50
Appendix 1: GOSH 2017 Media and Online Coverage
Journal Articles
1. Dosemagen, S., Liboiron, M. & Molloy, J., (2017). Gathering for Open Science Hardware 2016. Journal of Open Hardware. 1(1), p.4. DOI: http://doi.org/10.5334/joh.5
2. Dryden, M.D., Fobel, R., Fobel, C. and Wheeler, A.R., 2017. Upon the Shoulders of Giants: Open-Source Hardware and Software in Analytical Chemistry. Analytical Chemistry, 89(8), pp.4330-4338. DOI: 10.1021/acs.analchem.7b00485
Online Magazines/Journal Blogs
1. Liboiron, M. & Molloy, J., (2017). We need to break science out of its ivory tower – here’s one way to do this. The Conversation [online]. Available at: https://theconversation.com/we-need-to-break-science-out-of-its-ivory-tower-heres-one-way-to-do-this-76354
2. Chagas, A.M., Liboiron, M., Molloy, J., Garcia Arcos, J.M., and Warren, J., Gathering for Open Science Hardware 2017: building a movement. PLOS Blogs. [online]. Available at http://blogs.plos.org/blog/2017/03/27/gathering-for-open-science-hardware-2017-building-a-movement/
3. van den Boom, F. Santiago de Chile, capital of the Global network for Open Science Hardware. Makery [online]. Available at http://www.makery.info/en/2017/03/31/gosh-santiago-du-chili-capitale-de-lopen-science-hardware/
Personal Blogs
1. Austic, G. People-led Research: A strange, sleeping giant [online]. Available at: https://medium.com/@gbathree/people-led-research-a-strange-sleeping-giant-8b8f6e11ec4f
2. Daal, X. De wereld verbeteren met open science hardware [online]. Available at: http://waag.org/en/blog/change-world-open-science-hardware
3. Bernaldo, P. Roadmap or compass? Gathering of Open Science Hardware (GOSH) 2017 [online]. Available at: https://medium.com/@PazByC/roadmap-or-compass-10e968487ad
4. Pereyra Irujo, Gustavo., Open tools for better science | Tecnologías abiertas para más y mejor ciencia [online]. Available at https://medium.com/@gpereyrairujo/tecnolog%C3%ADas-abiertas-para-m%C3%A1s-y-mejor-ciencia-7ce39214cbb5
5. Nadra, A. El Hardware Científico Abierto Puede Popularizar Y Redistribuir Los Beneficios De La Investigación [online]. Available at
Page 51
http://www.agenciacyta.org.ar/2017/04/el-hardware-cientifico-abierto-puede-popularizar-y-redistribuir-los-beneficios-de-la-investigacion/
6. Mestizo, H. #GOSH2017 [online]. Available at https://biolabescueladecreacion.wordpress.com/category/escuela-de-creacion/
7. Brook, T. GOSH @ Santiago de Chile [online]. Available at https://medium.com/the-traveling-scientist/gosh-santiago-de-chile-a04d06622cf9
GOSH Mentions in External Reports and Conference Presentations
1. Digital Social Innovation Toolkit
Two projects from members of the GOSH community were selected as part of six case studies from the European Commission-funded Digital Social Innovation Toolkit. The GOSH Manifesto was cited as a source for best practice in design of open science hardware and used as an explanatory factor for their inclusion as examples of digital social innovation.
2. Sage Assembly 2017: Mapping Open Research Ecosystems
The GOSH Manifesto was cited as a positive example of embedding values and ethics into design in a participatory science community by Eleonore Pauwels (Commons Lab, Woodrow Wilson Center) in her introductory remarks during the Ethics and Ecosystems panel.
Page 52
Appendix 2: GOSH Roadmap Plans
Point people volunteered at GOSH 2017 for each section of the Roadmap. They are currently tasked with a) outlining their sections according to what was on the post-it notes following the GOSH roadmap session, as well as to b) copying and pasting anything from the original CERN version of the roadmap and b) copying and pasting from the GOSH2017 pre-manifesto document that is relevant to their section.
CERN version
GOSH 2017 pre-manifesto
Post it-notes are documented on Flickr here https://www.flickr.com (GOSH community)
Overall stewards
Shannon Dosemagen ([email protected])
Jenny Molloy ([email protected])
Gayatri Buragohain ([email protected])
Greg Austic ([email protected])
Max Liboiron ([email protected])
Section Point Persons
Supporting the GOSH & OScH community: Main point people Juanma & Xiamyra
Growing the GOSH & OScH community: Main point person- Klie K, with support from Thomas Mboa
Involving Traditional developers in OScH: point people- Benjamin Zamone
Supporting OScH in all its stages: point people- Ryan & Jeff Warren
Education & Learning: point people- JP M., Dave Bild, Thomas Mboa Nkoudou, with Gustavo
Funding- Point people- Tara B, Bethan Wolfenden, with Andrew Thaler on gov’t and philanthropy
Research to Support OScH- no point person yet
Institutional Support- no point person yet
Page 53