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«Разрушение» патентных прав на Венецианской биеннале

конкурс международный открытый
  dead-line регистрации: 16.04.2018
  dead-line подачи проектов: 16.04.2018
  тема: Архитектура
  страна: Нидерланды
  открыт для: архитекторов, урбанистов, дизайнеров, художников, программистов - профессионалов и студентов
  регистрационный взнос: нет
  награда: призовой фонд - €1500
  организатор: Institute of Patent Infringement
  ссылки: Официальный сайт конкурса
  Institute of Patent Infringement - An Open Call for Patent Violation
  Конкурс, проходящий в рамках экспозиции павильона Нидерландов на архитектурной биеннале-2018 в Венеции, призван привлечь внимание к потенциальной угрозе, которую представляет активная деятельность компании Amazon по регистрации патентных прав (почти 6000 патентов за 8 лет). Запатентованные идеи касаются сфер автоматизации, архитектуры, промышленного дизайна и многих других. Многие из них могут повлиять на профессиональную деятельность в этих сферах, обесценить роль специалистов. Задача участников – представить идеи по предотвращению повсеместного «воцарения» технологий Amazon и, напротив, по эффективному их применению в архитектурной и других отраслях.
 
пресс-релиз:
As part of the extended programme of WORK, BODY, LEISURE, the theme of this year Dutch Pavilion at the Venice Biennale, The Institute of Patent Infringement is concerned with the existing legal infrastructure that allows ‘Big Tech’ a strangle-hold on questions surrounding automation, both today and in the future.

As we go through an ‘AI spring’ we’ve seen a gold rush to patent radically new forms of automated environments, driven through advances in deep learning and combined with increases in big data, machine-learning algorithms, computer processing power and cloud technology

Yet, while companies like Microsoft or Apple tinker with endless patent variations on consumer products, it’s Amazon, with their own brands of automated futurism, which seem intent on merging processes of machine learning with principles of spatial organisation.

Since 2010, Amazon Technologies Inc. has filed 5,860 patents that range from the seemingly banal to the resolutely absurd. Illustrated by dry line drawings these patents provide a glimpse and representation of the automated future Amazon aim to create.

The implications of this are broad. Amazon look set to define future typologies, bypassing the input of traditional professions. To take an example, management modules indicated in Amazon’s patents, can now map space more effectively than a surveyor, produce floor layouts to be more efficient than an architect and oversee retail facilities more productively than a retail manager.

An obsession with efficiency has further led to the quantifiable worker, seen through countless patents for technology that monitors and evaluate workers. But the scope of the quantified body goes far beyond this, and as patents for human RFID tags suggest, Amazon are equally at home with the technology transferred to the general public. Put another way, Amazon’s broad ambitions, seen through their patents, affect us both as practitioners and also as citizens.

Underlying this is the wider practice of intellectual property protection and patenting rights used as a means to define the direction of automation. It is a process that has proved an essential weapon in technology companies’ growth strategies and key to their monopolistic dominance over the last twenty years.

Intellectual property today is a complex web of international treaties, patent laws, institutions and steering committees that serve to create a legal infrastructure enclosing and privatizing knowledge. International legislation including the TRIPS Agreement and Patent Law Treaty has produced a closed framework that allows multinationals a monopoly on technological development.

Exploiting this legal framework, Amazon’s patent filings over the last seven years can be seen as a concerted effort to own both the digital and physical infrastructure of our unfolding landscapes of automation.


Open Call

To negate this top-down and closed system, The Institute of Patent Infringement thus invites submissions from students, industrial designers, architects, urban planners, artists, programmers and the wider public to merge, reimagine, infringe and hack existing Amazon patents.

The crux of the open call is to emphasise the radical and emancipatory potential inherent in these new technologies assembled by Amazon. To reveal this potential, submissions may chose to challenge: the hyper individualised and consumption based nature of Amazon’s wider patent filings; the emphasis on efficiency and quantification through data collection inherent in these new technological regimes; labour, social relations and the role of automation within this; the relationship with nature and the environment; unequal global processes of production and distribution; and the affect of these technologies on everyday life.

This may include ideas working at scales from the body to the planetary and from the rural to the urban. Relevant themes may ask: can patents for the wearable monitoring of workers be appropriated to hack and monitor nature? How could Amazon’s global distribution network be rethought? Can we think of new ideas to repurpose data centres, potentially merging these with other functions?  What might arise from the collective ownership and control of data?

Could fully automated warehouses be refunctioned as spaces of infinite leisure? What role does labour play in this new world?  Can smart road management systems for automated cars be used for an extensive and sustainable public transport network? How could Amazon’s quest for algorithmic efficiency, be used to plan a zero growth, zero carbon economy? And how might these technologies work if bottom up and participatory rather than top-down and monopolised?

Above all, submissions are encouraged to think of radical interventions challenging the essence of Amazon while considering the social role technology may potentially in any future. 


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