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Welcome

Letter from the Editor
Michelle Thorne

Solarpunk and Other Speculative Futures

Swirling Sulas
Superflux

The Trouble with Imagination
Shayna Robinson

Solar Protocol
Tega Brain, Alex Nathanson, and Benedetta Piantella

Data Garden
Cyrus Clarke, Monika Seyfried, and Jeff Nivala

Big Tech Resistance 

Climate Disinformation: A Beginner’s Guide
Harriet Kingaby

Big Tech Goes Greenwashing: Feminist Lenses to Unveil New Tools in the Masters’ Houses
Camila Nobrega and Joana Varon

Bigger, More, Better, Faster: The Ecological Paradox of Digital Economies
Paz Peña

Sustainable Web Craft

A Carbon-Aware Internet
Chris Adams

Digital Sustainability: A French Update
Gauthier Roussilhe

Design Options for Sustainable Hardware and Software
Johanna Pohl, Anja Höfner, Erik Albers, and Friederike Rohde

Interview with Digitalization for Sustainability
Johanna Pohl, Maike Gossen, Tilman Santarius and Patricia Jankowski

A Guide to Ecofriendly CryptoArt (NFTs)
Memo Akten, Primavera De Filippi, Joanie Lemercier, Addie Wagenknecht, Mat Dryhurst, and Sutu_eats_flies

AI Promises and Perils

The Promise of AI: Can It Hold for Environmental Sustainability?
Cathleen Berger

A Social and Environmental Certificate for AI Systems
Abhishek Gupta

Artificial Intelligence and Sustainability – Emerging Challenges and Policy Implications
Friederike Rohde, Maike Gossen, Josephin Wagner, and Tilman Santarius

Change is a’ Commoning 

Aloha: Sovereignty and Sustainability Are Who We Are
Dennis “Bumpy” Pu‘uhonua Kanahele

City Data Commons against City Greenwashing
Renata Ávila and Guy Weress

Open Climate Now!
Shannon Dosemagen, Emilio Velis, Luis Felipe R. Murillo, Evelin Heidel, Alex Stinson and Michelle Thorne

Klasse Klima: Building a Resilient Collective through Tech and Education
Klasse Klima

The Story is a Forest: Narratives with Mass Resonance
Christine Larivière

About Branch

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Klasse Klima: Building a Resilient Collective through Tech and Education

Screenshot from Klasse Klima

Young generations are increasingly raising their voices to protest the slow responses of governments and institutions to the climate crisis, arguably the greatest challenge of our time. On university campuses, students are protesting the lack of attention to the crisis and are taking climate education into their own hands.  

In 2019 at University of the Arts Berlin (UdK), a handful of students organised a seminar to teach themselves about ecology, the arts and design and called themselves Klasse Klima. Since then the group has become an education format and a collective. It explores the agency of art and design in the climate crisis and social-ecological forms of coexistence.

Organic Collective

From the beginning, the seminar was informed by the awareness that as a student, you don’t know everything. To grasp the complexity of climate change and its global effects is cognitively and emotionally challenging for most single individuals—yet collective engagement can be more resilient. At Klasse Klima, members learn from each other and from visiting experts. 

In the two years since, the group has transcended the margins of its original disciplines, institution, and physical space. The internet has played an essential role in fostering and organizing the communication, practice and knowledge of the members.

Digital Expansion

Pandemic requirements were a catalyst to digitizing Klasse Klima, but an affinity to technology and network thinking guided the seminar from the start. Strengthening the digital turned out to be a chance to expand on the group’s principles of curiosity and openness. 

When the winter 2020/2021 seminar started, the collective prepared online and offline workshops, invited international guest speakers, and increased the group by 40 more students including from other universities. This matched well with the collective’s aims of connecting ecologically-minded students to form a large network. 

The design of Klasse Klima as a social and technological platform was intended as a safe learning space for asking questions and emboldening ideas through digital collaboration and to stimulate activism in the physical space. 

Open technology for collective learning

The chatroom for the class
Screenshot of Klasse Klima’s Matrix Chat

Klasse Klima has always maintained and developed its own digital infrastructure and toolbox. This enabled the group to better examine the climate impacts of its technology and strive for climate-neutral operations and data security. Focusing on cooperation and safety, especially as activists and public artists, was non-negotiable for the collective.

Responding to the pandemic, free and open-source enthusiasts at UdK and Klasse Klima started the medienhaus/ project. To this day, this new infrastructure is the backbone of the university’s online teaching and collaboration. Klasse Klima built on top of this infrastructure and received a fork of the medienhaus/ platform specifically for its corresponding needs. 

Overview of the class platform
Platform Interface for Welcome Screen

The core of the medienhaus/ project is based on the Matrix protocol, a standardised federated communication protocol that enables a decentralized architecture beyond corporate platforms. The medienhaus/ project builds on existing free and open-source projects, aligns them into a consistent design language, and integrates them in an easy way through a shared frontend. 

The tools were selected based on the needs of the user groups. Currently, the project includes the following components:

  • Asynchronous communication → Matrix/Element
  • Audio call → Jitsi
  • Digital video seminars → Big Blue Button
  • Collaborative writing → Etherpad-Lite
  • Livestreaming → nginx + RTMP module (soon: Peertube)
  • Collaborative whiteboard → Spacedeck
  • Polling/scheduling → Croodle
Software diagram for Medienhaus
Concept Medienhaus/ Software Stack

The aim is to balance centralised and decentralised networks with all tools that store user data but are not too resource-intensive running on their own, e.g., solar-powered low-end hardware (Raspberry Pi) services such as Element, Etherpad, Spacedeck. On the other hand, computationally intensive tools, which no longer provide data as temporary storage (e.g. Big Blue Button, Jitsi), are made available in solidarity by larger institutions. For example, Big Blue Button has been successfully put into operation at Udk Berlin with a load balancer.

Smaller autonomous student groups like Klasse Klima can easily set up their own digital communities in compliance with data protection regulations, host and provide them in a climate-neutral way, and know where their data is physically located without the disadvantages of decentralised infrastructure.

This means that smaller autonomous student groups, for example, small climate activist groups like Klasse Klima, can easily set up their own digital communities in compliance with data protection regulations, host and provide them in a climate-neutral way, and know where their data is physically located without the disadvantages of decentralised infrastructure.

The Klasse Klima’s digital infrastructure is continuing to evolve. Documenting the free and open-source project is among its plans for summer 2021.

Solar-powered learning software
Prototyping solar-powered Medienhaus/ Stack hosted decentralised on raspberry pi hardware acting as the Klasse Klima server

How to run one’s own classes

Reflecting on its evolution, Klasse Klima wants to emphasize that in case of a certain dissatisfaction with a situation, the first step is to acknowledge this state and find allies. It does not matter whether to kick off alone or with ten others to get it started. Most of the time it just needs a bold person to amplify an idea. A group brings different disciplines, opinions and expectations to the table. Therefore it’s essential not to get frustrated too easily but to build a trustworthy, supportive and respectful environment where individuals can develop and unfold. It takes some time and patience to mobilise people and make them become active or take over responsibilities. Digital tools are vital to create a space to distribute tasks, share knowledge and contain a flat hierarchy with little barriers.

In the end, it is central to point out that Greenwashing in tech is getting worse and worse, so one should consider taking things into their own hands, like operating their own infrastructure. Therefore, Klasse Klima is trying to lower the entry-level so that even small groups in the climate activist field that are not technically experienced can emancipate themselves from the existing capitalistic platforms. The Matrix protocol is an insanely important part of making the net more decentralised again and making digital content a comprehensible physical representation — this chance doesn’t come along very often. So, let’s make use of it and envision a climate-friendly, CO2-neutral, hierarchy-free future in which technology expands physical space but does not replace it.

Artistic Results

Petromodernity

Drill island theme park
Drill island theme park (Antonia Grohmann, 2021)
Bicycle expressways
Bicycle expressways (Marla Gaiser, 2021)
Powerplant Refurbishment
Powerplant Refurbishment (Vicente Mateus, 2021)
Post-growth/Degrowth
Seminar Post-growth/Degrowth (Julia Rosenstock, 2020)
Global strike sticker set
Burning Tree, Flight Shame, Ostrich-Effect & 1,5 Degree Fan — Sticker Set from the Klasse Klima for the global climate strike in March 2021 (Ludwig Pfeiffer & David Reitenbach, 2021)

About the Authors

Leon Erhorn, Lena Schubert, Nicolai David Herzog and Robert Schnüll are part of Klasse Klima and prepared this article for the collective.