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  3. title : Sophie Toupin
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  6. <h3>Sophie Toupin</h3>
  7. <img src="sophie_drawing_0.jpg" />
  8. <p>Sophie Toupin is a researcher, activist, and feminist hacker based in
  9. Montreal, Canada. Her work explores the linkages between technology and
  10. activism through ethnographic studies and projects. She co-founded a
  11. feminist mobile hacklab in Montreal: Femhack and is involved in creating
  12. a feminist server managed by a feminist tech collective.</p>
  13. <hr />
  14. <h2>Presenting</h2>
  15. <h3>Anti-Colonial Hacking: The Case Study of An Autonomous Encrypted
  16. Communication Network Developed During the Struggle Against Apartheid in
  17. South Africa</h3>
  18. <p>In the 1980s, freedom fighters and hackers from South Africa built an
  19. autonomous encrypted communication network that allowed activists
  20. infiltrated on the ground in South Africa to communicate with the senior
  21. leadership of the African National Congress (ANC) based in Lusaka,
  22. Zambia via London. The encrypted communication network was set up as
  23. part of Operation Vula to attempt to launch a people's war and
  24. ultimately liberate a people's from apartheid. The ingenuousness of the
  25. encrypted communication system is such that it used an assemblage of
  26. technologies including computers, algorithms, tape recorders, acoustic
  27. modem couplers, the international telephone system, among others to
  28. adapt to the difficult context and condition on the ground whether it
  29. was the ubiquitous surveillance by the police state, the lack of
  30. infrastructure or the lack of electricity. This hidden chapter of
  31. history sheds light on one of the most exciting, but untold story of
  32. what I call anti-colonial hacking.</p>
  33. <p>This story is significant for multiple reasons. By shedding light to
  34. this hidden history, my presentation will help enlarge the goals,
  35. aspirations and political nature of the assemblage of transnational
  36. technological and communication networks. It will also allow to give
  37. credit to a continent of the world, Africa that is often eclipsed from
  38. the limelight of technological "innovation" and hackerdom. Moreover, it
  39. will create solidarities between movements with different situated
  40. knowledge, positionalities and contexts without suppressing the
  41. significant and important history of each of them. The desire to craft
  42. an autonomous and non-commercial encrypted infrastructure to bring about
  43. liberation to a people is reminiscent of the work of today's tech
  44. activists. This history fits in the history of tech activism and should
  45. be recognized as such to open up the possibilities of thinking about the
  46. use of crypto and the assemblage of variant forms of technologies for
  47. liberation struggles.</p>