Alissa Centivany
@r2rprof
repair + open access + technology policy law & ethics | PhD | JD | music + plants + pinball
ID: 1413500066275364871
09-07-2021 14:07:42
209 Tweet
149 Followers
127 Following
Awesome commentary by Alissa Centivany about Bill C-244. Good on Globalnews.ca as well to clarify that this is just one first step in the larger effort. globalnews.ca/video/10243634…
Check out "Flipping the Narrative" a statement in response to Public Safety Canada's decision to ban @flipper_zero (put together by members of the #CanRepair Working Group): canrepair.ca/latest-news The bottom line: repair makes us safer. Let's not blame tools for insecure design.
Read "Flipping the Narrative" here: drive.google.com/file/d/1VFlGk_… (authored by Alissa Centivany, Alana Baker, and Jasvinder (JP) Mann) And if you're like us and think that this ban makes no sense sign on to the petition opposing it: change.org/p/stop-the-abs…
This Friday, Oct 25, join repair enthusiasts and experts from across Canada for the Canadian Repair Convention. This inaugural event is co-organized by FIMS professor and StarlingCentre co-director, Alissa Centivany. 👉Registration: canrepair.ca/convention #westernu
Faculty of Information & Media Studies (FIMS) Alissa: "There's a shared human impulse to want to fix things". Thanks for a great canrepair.ca conference, Alissa and Anthony! @R2RProf Anthony Rosborough
"It's about creating a better world, a healthier planet, keeping more things out of the landfill & more money in our pockets, & being able to exercise a little bit more autonomy about our decisions" Alissa Centivany discusses changes in 🇨🇦's right to repair laws cbc.ca/news/canada/lo…
.Faculty of Information & Media Studies (FIMS) professor Alissa Centivany (Alissa Centivany) discusses what new copyright laws mean for Canadians with products in need of a fix. brnw.ch/21wOL2P
#WesternU prof Alissa Centivany (Alissa Centivany) discusses the right-to-repair movement in this Toronto Star article, highlighting why advocates are pushing for items to be easier to fix so they are less likely to end up in the landfill. Faculty of Information & Media Studies (FIMS) brnw.ch/21wQ8jn