Whose internet(s)?
When I ask Sneha from the Centre for Internet and Society about her imaginations for the internet(s), she replies:
"It's not one kind of internet. It's not one broad internet. It's multiple internets. You know, everyone has their own sort of version of the internet or their own sort of idea or understanding of the internet and what it means to them. For someone, it's a source of livelihood. For someone, it's recreation. For another person, it's a space to voice their disagreement or even seek solace and create some kind of an affective network or space of safety, right? So it can mean different things, and for me, I think the fundamental thing is to be able to keep it that way, to be able to keep it accessible to people in a way that you're able to engage with it meaningfully, productively, the way that you would like to. And the conditions then that are required to be able to do that – here all the adjectives would come in: inclusive, accessible, multilingual and therefore I feel, you know, feminist."