Ryan Gerety
Senior Field Analyst, Open Technology Institute

With recent NSA mass surveillance revelations, the Comcast and Time Warner Cable merger deal, and the uncertain future of net neutrality, the Open Technology Institute (OTI) wanted to take a read on digital optimism in the District and share a creative space to comment on these events.
On May 3, as part of the Tech Embassy at DC’s first Funk Parade, OTI’s field team set up a Name that Tech1 drawing space and “Technology should …” comment wall outside Affinity Lab on a sidewalk along U Street.
Name that Tech: People Defining Technology
In the Name that Tech drawing space, people doodled, drew or collaged answers to the following questions:
OTI provided these questions on sheets of paper, as well as markers, old magazines, copies of the Detroit Digital Justice Principles, Name that Tech: Words, Name that Tech: Shapes, scissors, tape and glue sticks. Below are a few of the compelling drawings. All of the responses are available here.




Technology should …
On the “Technology should…” comment wall, passersby and visitors of the Tech Embassy filled in the blanks with their ideas of what technology should and should not be.
A few of our favorite responses included, technology should “protect privacy not invade it”, “help everyone talk until they dont want to fight”, and “come from LOTS of companies, people and places.” The wall collected the following responses during the Funk Parade (photos):
Technology should …

Name that Tech Materials:
Technology Should Materials:
The Tech Embassy was hosted as part of DC’s first-ever Funk Parade, organized by The Curious Citizens Project, and made possible by its partners, including Affinity Lab, Code for DC, DC Public Library, Hamiltonian Gallery, Code for Progress, Mapbox, the Open Technology Institute, Visual Impact, JAM202, GoGoRadio and the Sunlight Foundation. Students from Logan EC (DCPS) and BASIS DC (PCS) created an online map showing homeless student enrollment.
1 Name that Tech was first develped by OTI, Nina Bianchi of The Work Department and Detroit Project Archive in 2011.