The internet, as shaped by the world's oldest living culture. From RMIT University with contributions from First Nations Media Australia. Produced in partnership with Telstra.
Internet access might be something city dwellers take for granted. In town camps and remote communities across Australia, just sending an email isn't always straight forward. In this episode we visit Hidden Valley, a town camp in Alice Springs. While Hidden Valley struggles with satellite internet, the Alice Springs suburbs just across the road have new fibre optic connections. This is the latest chapter in Hidden Valley's long struggle for local infrastructure.In this episode you heard from:Meret MacDonaldNoeleen McMillanStella McMillanTim McNamaraProfessor Ampalavanapillai (Thas) NirmalathasDaniel FeatherstoneMusic prior to credits: Neon Moon by Miiesha featuring The Woorabinda Singers, licensed courtesy of Australian Broadcasting CorporationMain story produced by Else Kennedy, Meret MacDonald and Noeleen McMillan.The transcript of of this episode is available as a Word document or PDF.Soft sculpture of tin can telephone by Rhonda Sharpe, Yarrenyty Arltere Artists. Image design by Pam Koger
Information spreads quickly online and so does misinformation. The early days of the internet were an optimistic time but today people talk more about fake news than the information superhighway. Online misinformation touches every community; in this episode we look at the way it spreads in indigenous communities and how a history of colonisation makes the problem worse.In this episode you heard from:JordanTina NgataDeen SandersMusic prior to credits: We Have Survived performed by DOBBY, licensed courtesy of Australian Broadcasting Corporation.The full transcript of this episode is available as a word document and PDFArtwork: Soft sculpture of tin can telephone by Rhonda Sharpe, Yarrenyty Arltere Artists. Image design by Pam Koger.This podcast is funded by Telstra
Access to phone and internet is not universal within Australia. In some places, just getting mobile phone service can be a logistical challenge. We follow the story of a family in Kwale Kwale, west of Alice Springs, as they try to get connected.Disconnect is a podcast about the internet in remote Australian Aboriginal communities. Produced by RMIT University, led by Ellie Rennie, Indigo Holcombe-James and Tyson Yunkaporta, with producer James Milsom and production assistance from Campbell McNolty. Additional research assistance for this episode was provided by Sam Kininmonth. Special thanks to Alyson Wright. Disconnect was funded by Telstra as an action within their Reconciliation Action Plan 2018-2021.In this episode you heard from:Rhonda InkamalaTrudy InkamalaMark Sulikowski, TelstraMichael Perez, TelstraMusic prior to credits: Around Here by Tia Gostelow, licensed courtesy of Australian Broadcasting CorporationThe full transcript for this episode is available as a Word document or PDF.The inDigiMOB program worked with us on this episode. inDigiMOB is a partnership between First Nations Media Australia and Telstra.First Nations Media Australia is the national peak body for the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander media industry.Soft sculpture of tin can telephone by Rhonda Sharpe, Yarrenyty Arltere Artists. Image design by Pam Koger.The Home Internet Project mentioned at the start of the episode involved an infrastructure component, which was run through the Centre for Appropriate Technology (CAT) and funded by the Aboriginals Benefit Account. A research component accompanied the provision of internet, which was funded by an Australian Research Council Linkage Project (LP110200440). The research was a collaboration between CAT, the Central Land Council, the Australian Communications Consumer Action Network, and university researchers (based at Swinburne University of Technology at the time). A book about the project is available open access
There are many ways to preserve language. We trace the story of Australia’s first Indigenous emoji project, which is bringing Indigenous culture and the Arrernte language onto your smartphone. In the process we encounter emoji’s bosses and find out why it is so hard to add a new emoji to the set.Disconnect is a podcast about the internet in remote Australian Aboriginal communities. Produced by RMIT University, led by Ellie Rennie, Indigo Holcombe-James and Tyson Yunkaporta, with producer James Milsom and production assistance from Campbell McNolty. Additional research assistance for this episode was provided by Sam Kininmonth. Disconnect was funded by Telstra as an action within their Reconciliation Action Plan 2018-2021.In this episode you heard from:Joel Liddle Perrurle, IndigemojiCaddie Brain, IndigemojiDr Kate Miltner, University of EdinburghGraham Wilfred Jr, inDigiMOBMusic prior to credits: Blackfellas by Nooky, licensed courtesy of Australian Broadcasting CorporationThe full transcript for this episode is available as a Word document or PDF.You can download the Indigemoji sticker set now for iOS and AndroidThe inDigiMOB program worked with us on this episode. inDigiMOB is a partnership between First Nations Media Australia and Telstra.First Nations Media Australia is the national peak body for the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander media industry.There is a Māori emoji set too. Check out Emotiki developed by Te Puia in Rotorua, NZ.Soft sculpture of tin can telephone by Rhonda Sharpe, Yarrenyty Arltere Artists. Image design by Pam Koger.
Indigenous Australians are losing tens of millions of dollars to scammers every year. In this episode, we travel around the country to look at how online scams are being targeted to remote communities, and trace their story back beyond social media.Disconnect is a podcast about the internet in remote Australian Aboriginal communities. Produced by RMIT University, led by Ellie Rennie, Indigo Holcombe-James and Tyson Yunkaporta, with producer James Milsom, Disconnect was funded by Telstra as an action within their Reconciliation Action Plan 2018-2021 (hyperlinks below).RMIT University: https://digital-ethnography.com/Telstra's Reconciliation Action Plan: https://www.telstra.com.au/content/dam/tcom/about-us/community-environment/pdf/tel024_telstra-reconciliation-action-plan-2018-2021.pdfIn this episode you heard from:Jennifer BardaPamela Lynch KngwarrayeLynda Edwards, Financial Counselling AustraliaTom Holder, PY MediaChloe James, inDigiMOBPercy Bishop, inDigiMOBDelia Rickard, Australian Competition and Consumer CommissionNathan Boyle, Australian Securities and Investment CommissionMusic prior to credits: Mr La Di Da Di by Baker Boy courtesy of Lunatic EntertainmentThe inDigiMOB program worked with us on this episode. inDigiMOB is a partnership between First Nations Media Australia and Telstra.First Nations Media Australia (formerly known as Indigenous Remote Communications Association or IRCA) is the national peak body for the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander media industry.Soft sculpture of tin can telephone by Rhonda Sharpe, Yarrenyty Arltere Artists.Image design by Pam Koger.
If you’ve driven through the Northern Territory lately you may have seen these structures, always in places where there is no mobile phone reception. No reception, that is, until you rest your phone on one of these bush hotspots.Disconnect is a podcast about the internet in remote Australian Aboriginal communities. Produced by RMIT University, led by Ellie Rennie, Indigo Holcombe-James and Tyson Yunkaporta, with producer James Milsom, Disconnect was funded by Telstra as an action within their Reconciliation Action Plan 2018-2021 (hyperlinks below).The research underpinning this podcast series is as follows:RMIT University: https://digital-ethnography.com/Telstra's Reconciliation Action Plan: https://www.telstra.com.au/content/dam/tcom/about-us/community-environment/pdf/tel024_telstra-reconciliation-action-plan-2018-2021.pdfIn this episode you heard from:Dennis CharlesPamela Lynch KngwarrayeVeronica Lynch KngwarrayeAndrew Crouch, formerly Centre for Appropriate Technology Steve Rogers, Centre for Appropriate TechnologyMusic prior to credits: Ngarrikwujeyinama performed by Emily Wurramara. Licensed courtesy Wantok Music.The inDigiMOB program worked with us on this episode. inDigiMOB is a partnership between First Nations Media Australia and Telstra.First Nations Media Australia (formerly known as Indigenous Remote Communications Association or IRCA) is the national peak body for the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander media industry.Soft sculpture of tin can telephone by Rhonda Sharpe, Yarrenyty Arltere Artists.Image design by Pam Koger.
When you live in a place with mobile phone reception you can switch off your device, but the network stays on. But what if you wanted the whole thing switched off? In some remote Australian communities, it can be.Disconnect is a podcast about the internet in remote Australian Aboriginal communities. Produced by RMIT University, led by Ellie Rennie, Indigo Holcombe-James and Tyson Yunkaporta, with producer James Milsom, Disconnect was funded by Telstra as an action within their Reconciliation Action Plan 2018-2021 (hyperlinks below).RMIT University: https://digital-ethnography.com/Telstra's Reconciliation Action Plan: https://www.telstra.com.au/content/dam/tcom/about-us/community-environment/pdf/tel024_telstra-reconciliation-action-plan-2018-2021.pdfIn this episode you heard from:Dennis CharlesKumanjayi KatakarinjaJenny McFarland, CAYLUSDaniel Sacchero, Easyweb DigitalJonathan Daw, First Nations Media AustraliaMusic prior to credits: Native Tongue performed by Mojo Juju. Licensed courtesy Australian Broadcasting Corporation.The inDigiMOB program worked with us on this episode. inDigiMOB is a partnership between First Nations Media Australia and Telstra.First Nations Media Australia (formerly known as Indigenous Remote Communications Association or IRCA) is the national peak body for the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander media industry.Soft sculpture of tin can telephone by Rhonda Sharpe, Yarrenyty Arltere Artists.Image design by Pam Koger.
In some Aboriginal cultures, when someone passes away, their name and image should not be spoken or seen, let alone shared online. In this episode we discuss the topic of death, and how customs surrounding death are being challenged by social media and internet use.Disconnect is a podcast about the internet in remote Australian Aboriginal communities. Produced by RMIT University, led by Ellie Rennie, Indigo Holcombe-James and Tyson Yunkaporta, with producer James Milsom, Disconnect was funded by Telstra as an action within their Reconciliation Action Plan 2018-2021 (hyperlinks below).RMIT University: https://digital-ethnography.com/Telstra's Reconciliation Action Plan: https://www.telstra.com.au/content/dam/tcom/about-us/community-environment/pdf/tel024_telstra-reconciliation-action-plan-2018-2021.pdfIn this episode you heard from: Dennis CharlesDjaluDhapanbal YunupinguIshmael MarikaKumanjayi Katakarinja Veronica Lynch KngwarrayeMusic by DRMNGNW.The inDigiMOB program worked with us on this episode. inDigiMOB is a partnership between First Nations Media Australia and Telstra.First Nations Media Australia (formerly known as Indigenous Remote Communications Association or IRCA) is the national peak body for the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander media industry.Soft sculpture of tin can telephone by Rhonda Sharpe, Yarrenyty Arltere Artists.Image design by Pam Koger.
In this episode we discuss conflict arising on social media, including the spread of fight videos in remote communities and privacy problems arising from the sharing of devices. First released in 2018. We’d like to thank the youth forum participants, and Papulu Apparr-Kari for inviting us along. Thanks also to Lesley Acres and the State Library of Queensland, which is working with Telstra to improve digital literacy and cyber safety in that region - and to Associate Professor Nicolas Suzor from QUT.This podcast was produced by RMIT University, led by Ellie Rennie, Indigo Holcombe-James and Tyson Yunkaporta with Audiocraft’s Camilla Hannan and James Milsom. Telstra funded the project as an action within the ‘Connection and Capability’ priority focus area of their Reconciliation Action Plan 2015–2018.In this episode you heard music from Emily Wurramara.Soft sculpture of tin can telephone by Rhonda Sharpe, Yarrenyty Arltere Artists.Image design by Pam Koger.