2016 Watsonville Agenda
The following is the working agenda for the California Nonprofit Technology Festival in Watsonville on April 28 - 29, 2016.
- The agenda is designed with a combination of planned sessions and participant-driven discussions, and is very likely to evolve through the course of the event.
- There are no presentations or panels. The event will instead be focused instead on being fully interactive through collaborative sessions and focused dialogues.
- The goal is to enable peer learning, address participant needs and questions, and surface both the tacit and active knowledge of this group of practitioners. Bring your stories, your ideas, your questions, and your knowledge to share!
We'd love to hear what you are thinking. If there is a session or discussion you would like to facilitate, feel free to be in touch with us.
The CA Tech Fest is an immersive experience to expand and strengthen the network of leaders in rural and urban areas through out California who are passionate about social justice and technology.
Wednesday, April 27, 2016
Afternoon: Travel Day
Out-of-town participants start to arrive
Thursday, April 28, 2016
8:30 AM – Coffee and light breakfast
9:00 AM – Welcome and Opening Circle
The event will start with introductions and welcomes, an overview of the agenda and guidelines, and announcements.
9:30 AM – Interactive Plenary
Participants will engage in an interactive and collaborative discussion.
Spectrogram statements read
- Technology isn't usable by all age groups.
- Social media is the most important part of the internet.
- Watsonville needs more tech companies.
- Net neutrality is essential.
- It is ok to significantly alter a project to fit a grant.
Statements not read
- Free tools are good for organizations.
- The tech platforms we use should reflect our social change values.
- Emails are dead, we should stop using it.
- There should be radical restrictions on guns in the US / civilians cannot own guns.
- Videos like Lemonade can create social impact.
- All jobs should provide childcare for parents.
- Co-ops are the best business models for economic justice.
- Online activism is as impactful as on-the-ground activism.
- Technology is replacing personal connection
Power and divides
- Technology separates generations.
- Voting is pointless
- Technology = power
- The digital divide will never be bridged
Security and privacy
- Privacy is not a concern if I'm not engaging in malicious activities.
- Some government surveillance is good.
- Encryption is EXTRA important for people of color.
- Our organizing communities NEED to learn encryption event though it's still SO HARD!
- Cybersecurity doesn't matter unless you are doing something suspicious
- Privacy rights are dead within the technological world
Funding and finance
- The outcomes of recieving controversial funding are worth it
- Organizations should share all salaries of staff to tackle the wage gap.
- Most non-profits don't invest enough in technology.
Communities
- Impoverished communities always benefit from increased access to information tech
- Santa Cruz County should be like Silicon Valley
- You have to be of the community to change the community.
- Silicone Valley's community contributions are positive
Social media
- Connections on social media are not real.
- The DOWNSIDES of facebook - surveillance, data mining for corporate profit -- are bigger than the UPSIDES for activists or organizers
- Facebook isn't worth it!
- Social media is good for humanity
- Using corproate controled social media is worth the larger social reach
The internet
- The internet should be restricted based on content.
- We are too dependant on the internet.
10:30 AM – Break
10:45 AM – Agenda Framing Discussions and Agenda Mosh-Pit
Working in small and large group formats, participants will discuss "big picture" issues relating to technology and social justice in California. From there, they will brainstorm specific topics to be revisited in subsequent working sessions as well as in post-event efforts. The goal of the session will be to generate a visualization of the state of the field, and enable participants to weigh on which topics are most promising for focus and further discussion during the remainder of the event.
12:00 PM – Lunch
Participants will be encouraged to sit with friends they have not yet met!
1:00 PM – Interactive Project Showcase Session: Farmers Market
Participants will present and share work they are doing in their various regions and fields.
2:00 PM – Break
2:15 PM – Collaborative Breakout Sessions
Participants will choose from 5-7 session topics, and will be welcome to suggest or request additional sessions.
- Constituent Relationship Management: like a swiss army knife. Can serve all sorts of purposes for your orga to organize the relationships you have with different people.
- Cooperatives: Collectives of business owners who own collective shares of a business. Equal shares in responsibility, income, etc. no heirarchy. Major takeaway was that employees/owners are not just there to make a democratic process but to promote the business. Not just a boss and employees where the boss is pushing things, you have 6 bosses trying to drum up work.
- Movie theater of social media: Push humor into social media as a tool to engage users and also make them laugh and want to come back. What we're working with isn't always funny, but important to have humor.
- Visualization: My aha moment was that you can use stick figures instead of words. Looking forward to integrating into presentations and research outputs to engage with a general audience.
- Security: Keepass is a FLOSS was to secure passwords. Only have to know one.
- Internships: They're not interns. Call them fellows. When we talk about social entreprenuers, we need a mutual understanding between the two projects. need to ask what they need to learn, as well as what our expectations are.
4:00 PM – Closing Circle
4:30 PM – Group Picture
5:00 PM – Adjourn Day 1
Participants are welcome to stay after and ask additional questions.
5:30 PM – Post-Event Hang Out
Hang out location to be determined.
Friday, April 29, 2016
8:30 AM – Coffee and light breakfast
9:00 AM – Opening Circle
9:30 AM – Peer Skill-Sharing Sessions
Participants will have an opportunity to share or learn tactical technology and campaigning skills in small group format.
10:30 AM – Break
10:45 AM – Collaborative Breakout Sessions
Participants will choose from 5-7 working groups, and will be welcome to suggest or request additional sessions.
12:30 PM – Lunch
1:30 PM – Collaborative Breakout Sessions
Participants will choose from 5-7 session topics, and will be welcome to suggest or request additional sessions.
2:30 PM – Break
2:45 PM – Where From Here
The group will pause to take stock of the progress made to this point and to inventory action items, next steps, and other bridges to post-event collaborations.