events
- January 28, 20252 p.m. Mountain TimeCristol Chemistry and Biochemistry Building 142 Are we, as technologists, responsible for how our work impacts society? In a 2022 paper, researcher David Widder published a study on
- November 4, 202410 - 11 a.m., Mountain TimeFree webinarWatch recording Despite extensive study of co-operatives' real and imagined benefits, we know little about the conditions under which they achieve the lasting scale needed
- September 23, 202410 a.m. to 11 a.m. Mountain TimeFree webinarWatch the videoAt the height of the COVID-19 lockdowns, Main Street Phoenix Project was founded as an audacious, worker-owned holding company to buy and protect food-service businesses.
- October 30, 2023, 11 a.m. to noon Mountain Time. In this webinar, Kelly draws on the lessons of her career—including her mistakes—to call for a movement that refuses to take the current system for granted.
- August 8, 2023, University of Colorado Boulder. What if we valued local technology the way we value local food and local businesses?
- July 5, 2023
9-10:30 a.m. Mountain Time
Free webinar
In this webinar, we will hear from nonprofit leaders and technologies on how the emerging social networks related to their organizations' goals. - June 13, 2023
3-4:30 p.m. Mountain Time
Free webinar
This webinar presents some of Open Social Media's origin stories from speakers who have been involved in the development, culture, and communities of their platforms. - April 12, 2023 5:00 p.m. Hale Science 270 at CU Boulder Featuring Joan Donovan & Brandi Collins-Dexter This event features two Harvard-based scholar-activsts who take seriously media that others would prefer to ignore, from the utterances of
- From the event page: Thursday, March 16, 9–10:30 AM Pacific, via Zoom While Twitter is in crisis, another generation of social media is emerging. But before we decide to stay or go or divide our attention across more platforms, we first need to
- September 20, 2021 10-11 am Mountain Time Free webinar Watch here In May, Colorado Sen. John Hickenlooper introduced the Capital for Cooperatives Act, an historic proposal for opening the doors of the Small Business Administration