Training Knowledge Share
Revision as of 23:08, 30 November 2016 by Willowbl00 (talk | contribs)
Session to synthesize providing support for digital security training efforts
- Removing conversation from white male dominated space
- Interested in building training capacity
- Responsibility around providing security guidance
- Sharing better resources in newsroom context, figuring out where solidarity fits into this conversation and around threat modeling
- Roundup post of existing tool kits, tool kits that are going out of date
- Digital security training and community building in a domestic context
- Encountering lots of people who want to train, but do not have an audience
- Education backgrounds, issues with the way that trainings are done
- Not just what resources are out there, but think about ways to build training approaches that are less “colonial”
BRAIN DUMP!
- Add to wiki list of resources: [TBD]
- Organizations, forums, networks to be aware of for those looking for resources for training
- Events and meet ups – both local and global level, large and small
EVENTS
How folks who don’t feel like experts engage with events – how can they?
- Internet Freedom Festival 2017 (Valencia)
Diversity & Inclusion Fund – provides travel support for those with sessions in the final approved program
- RightsCon 2017 (Brussels)
Not entirely positive on travel support, but large scale gathering of useful and involved folks
- Allied Media Conference (Detroit)
Collaborative support for attendance, tend to be proactive in outreach to get engaged folks to come
- NICAR (TBD)
Journalists only, closed network, but can get in if you pitch a session that is accepted
TAKEAWAYS
What are the key takeaways from this conversation over the past few days
- Realization of the shelf life of digisec tools and resources
- Need to break tool based training models, parachute models
- We need to make resources and materials more remixable
- Have help desk resources, trainer help desk for assistance
- Coming up with language that reflects and fits our movement models
- Accessibility of information to non-native tech users
- Language, cultural relevancy, who is actually benefitting from these trainings?
- How much of a barrier is the localization question and language skills problem
- New thing! Potential risk of longevity related to tools that we’re recommending? Ex. Signal
- Keeping software dev projects mission centered and supported
- Alternative training models?
- Disentangle “accessibility” and reactionary aspect of Opening Something That Is Closed
- Become a trainer from within the culture of a movement or community itself
- Not about delivering a training, its about building a relationship