Manifestos-for-the-Internet.../content/manifestos/2013-10-04-computer-users-rights.md
2016-04-04 23:00:26 +02:00

3.8 KiB

Bill Of Computer Users Rights

We, Computer Users, demand the right to …

  • UNDO
  • Securely delete my history
  • have an "export" function
  • use free software on your own computer
  • ignore updates
  • See the URL from which content is displayed
  • own data
  • logout
  • Pause media indefinitely and be able to resume where I left off
  • see the computer
  • buy and install software outside 'app stores'
  • true anonymity
  • know whether my hardware will run free software
  • read source code
  • know explicitly what information is being retained due to my interaction - with your service/website/network/whatever
  • choose none of the above
  • a real keyboard (aka "hardkeys")
  • participate in society without having to use a particular software, - device or corporate web site.
  • symmetrical access
  • actually delete my account
  • disconnect
  • Access the file system and organize my data.
  • not be forced to use a app
  • copy & paste
  • be the (prime) beneficiary of whatever is created from our 'cognitive surplus'
  • have all data saved in clear text files
  • remove or reassemble all parts of hardware
  • have 6 months+ to grab my files before a hosting service shuts down
  • Have full control over the computing that my computer does
  • install applications outside of 'AppStores'
  • be un-Googable
  • a web browser
  • have more privacy in social networks
  • Knowledge of how the data is stored
  • not have my system "made obselete"
  • not be interrupted by a program
  • have the possibility to make everything useable without internet connection
  • switch off wireless and use a cable instead
  • peer-to-peer networks
  • edit app permissions in android settings
  • use my music as a ringtone
  • deep link
  • be certain in what country the server I'm connecting to is
  • have a button labelled "take off from cloud"
  • view the entire history of my online interaction
  • Install an operating system of my choice on a computer/phone/tablet/device
  • choose a platform
  • Control over user data access
  • my data not being converted
  • make screen shots.
  • pull
  • view offline
  • bequeath my social network account
  • add manually
  • be able to turn off the time stamp in Facebook
  • rename browser tabs
  • have every OS and mobile device compatible with each other
  • get revenue
  • disagree
  • contest the algorithm
  • show filetypes
  • not synchronise
  • negotiate terms & conditions
  • limit my content's virality
  • login
  • Hiding my Gender
  • exclude myself from experiments
  • see acceptable ads
  • customize colour schemes
  • personalize
  • simplification
  • eat kernels
  • not be spied upon by my device
  • hardware inter-compatibility
  • DDOS!
  • reply-all
  • not be a user
  • Control+Alt+Delete
  • set my own level of error correction!
  • have Ted Nelsons transclusion instead of copy&paste
  • ruin Internet Explorer. Forever.
  • abuse
  • convert any data for any device
  • plug off
  • idempotent requests without legal repercussions
  • actively distinguish between contributing to the public record and engaging in heresay

A year ago, in Turing Complete User, I wrote that the development of the Invisible Computer results in the creation of an Invisible User. We need to keep both the term and the idea of the User alive, to insure that users — those who use a system they haven't developed — don't lose either their rights or the opportunity to protect them. In the article I only briefly mention what these users rights could be.

Now I'd like to invite computer users to elaborate and suggest points (long or short) that should be included in a Bill Of Computer Users Rights. Please participate! At the moment we need to collect varying opinions. Don't think that it's only about big issues like free software or data privacy. Demand to have a back button, if its absence infringes upon your rights as a computer user!

olia lialina, 2013-10-04

designed & programmed by Dragan Espenschied