How augmented reality is changing activism Glenn Cantave

My name is Glenn,

I’m 25,

and I don’t know my real last name.

It’s not uncommon in America.

Most black people in this country
are walking around

with a slave owner’s last name.

Black history has been systemically erased
and altered for centuries.

As I give this talk,

there are more than 700 Confederate
monuments standing nationwide.

These were erected
to honor Confederate soldiers

who fought to maintain slavery –

mostly in the South –

from the 1890s to the 1950s,

when Jim Crow laws enforcing
racial segregation were in full effect.

To this day, black people are forced
to confront monuments of slaveholders

in our public spaces.

These memorials are a physical
representation of a system

that is actively working
to define whose lives matter

and whose lives do not.

If we are going to disrupt the narrative,

we have to start at the origin.

Genocide, slavery and patriarchy
started in the Americas

with Christopher Columbus.

Most people in the United States
know about his voyage of 1492.

Fewer people know that an estimated
250,000 indigenous Arawaks were wiped out

within two years of his arrival.

Even fewer people know

that Columbus admitted in a letter
written to Doña Juana de la Torre

that “nine and 10-year-old girls
were in high demand,

and for girls of all ages
a good price must be paid.”

Yet New York City’s Columbus Circle
has had him perched 76 feet high

next to Central Park since 1892.

I started Movers and Shakers,

a nonprofit,

to get the statue removed.

Movers and Shakers
is a group of activists, artists,

educators and engineers
focused on using immersive technology

to highlight the narratives
of the oppressed.

In our campaign to knock
Columbus off his pedestal,

we engaged in a visually
provocative form of activism.

We created an augmented
reality installation

on the true story of Christopher Columbus

and used it to host teach-ins
in Columbus Circle and Times Square.

Many see the controversy around the statue

as tension between
the Italian-American community

and the indigenous community.

The reality is that most black people
are here in this country

as a result of the atrocities

that were kicked off
by Christopher Columbus.

So we ended up holding
a slave auction in Union Square

to tie into the genesis
of the transatlantic slave trade.

I ran the New York City Marathon in chains
to spread awareness to this issue.

I was also arrested in Giants Stadium
for hosting a slave reenactment

at their football team’s home opener.

We gave it everything that we had,

but in the end,

New York City decided to keep the statue,

and New York State unanimously voted
to make it a landmark.

The news was devastating,

but it opened up another door.

We realized that with augmented reality

you don’t need permission
from the government

to put up a monument
or to make a statement.

You can just do it.

So New York City right now

currently has more than 150 statues
of men and six of women

and currently acknowledges slaveholders
in public spaces as well.

So we decided, why not just put up
a bunch of AR monuments

of women and people of color
throughout the city?

Typically, monuments are created

to commemorate the achievements
of the deceased,

but with augmented reality,
we can reroute the rules.

We started with sports.

Colin Kaepernick.

He was the starting quarterback
of the San Francisco 49ers,

and he wanted to use his platform

to highlight the injustice
of systemic racism.

So he consulted a Green Beret
on the most respectful way to do this,

and he decided to take a knee
during the national anthem.

He lost his contract with the 49ers,

he was blackballed by every NFL owner,

he was criticized by millions

and even the president
of the United States

decided to insult him.

It may be decades before Colin Kaepernick
is adequately respected for his courage,

so our team decided to do this.

Now anyone that walks by Trump Tower
can see Colin Kaepernick take a knee

in augmented reality,

and there’s nothing they can do about it.

(Laughter)

Representation matters.

Serena Williams proved to the world

that a black girl from Compton
can dominate a sport

that’s traditionally played
at exclusive country clubs.

Let’s celebrate her now.

Jackie Robinson.

He broke the color barrier

and empowered many black athletes
to play in Major League Baseball.

We’re going to take this monument of him
and put it in Ebbets Field

so that anyone can see him
swing for the fences

in Ebbets Field in Brooklyn.

With augmented reality,

we have the power to tell stories
in public spaces that need to be told.

The achievements of people
like Frida Kahlo, Audre Lorde,

Toussaint Louverture,

Madam C.J. Walker –

this should be common knowledge.

Our vision is a “Pokémon Go”
for a contextualized history.

Augmented reality can also be used
as a tool to support organizations

that are fighting
against systemic oppression.

In 2019 we will release
our free smartphone app

with augmented reality
monuments and content.

You can take your smartphone
and hold it over any one-dollar bill

and see a scene in augmented reality

that illustrates
the injustice of cash bail.

You can then click on the screen

and be directed to the donation page
of The Bail Project,

a fund that raises money for people
who cannot afford bail.

With augmented reality,

we the people have the power

to highlight the narratives
of the oppressed

when institutions refuse to do so.

We can use this tool
to highlight the systemic implications

of erasing someone’s history.

And more concretely,

we can use this technology
as a way to support initiatives

that are fighting against systemic racism.

With AR, we have the power
to reimagine a world

that prioritizes justice over oppression.

Thank you.

(Applause and cheers)

我叫格伦,

今年 25 岁

,我不知道我的真实姓氏。

这在美国并不少见。

这个国家的大多数黑人都

带着奴隶主的姓氏四处走动。 几个世纪以来,

黑人历史一直被系统地抹去
和改变。

当我发表这个演讲时,

全国有 700 多座
邦联纪念碑。

这些是
为了纪念从 1890 年代到 1950 年代

为维持奴隶制而奋斗的同盟士兵(

主要是在南方)

当时执行
种族隔离的吉姆克劳法律全面生效。

直到今天,黑人被迫

在我们的公共场所面对奴隶主的纪念碑。

这些纪念碑是一个系统的物理
表示,该系统

正在积极
努力定义谁的生命重要

,谁的生命不重要。

如果我们要打乱叙述,

我们必须从原点开始。

种族灭绝、奴隶制和父权制
始于

克里斯托弗·哥伦布的美洲。

美国大多数人都
知道他 1492 年的航行。

很少有人知道,在他抵达后的两年内,估计有
250,000 名土著阿拉瓦克人被消灭

更少人

知道哥伦布在
写给多娜·胡安娜·德拉托雷的一封信中

承认“九岁和 10 岁的
女孩需求量很大,

而且对于所有年龄段的女孩来说,都
必须付出高昂的代价。”

然而,自 1892 年以来,纽约市的哥伦布
圆环让他栖息在中央公园旁边 76 英尺高的地方

我创办了非营利组织 Movers and Shakers,

以拆除雕像。

Movers and Shakers
是一群活动家、艺术家、

教育家和工程师,他们
专注于使用沉浸式技术

来突出
被压迫者的故事。

在我们将
哥伦布从他的基座上击倒的运动中,

我们从事了一种具有视觉
挑衅性的激进主义形式。

我们

根据克里斯托弗哥伦布的真实故事创建了一个增强现实装置,

并用它
在哥伦布圆环和时代广场举办教学活动。

许多人认为围绕雕像的争议

是意大利裔美国人社区

和土著社区之间的紧张关系。

现实情况是,

由于克里斯托弗·哥伦布(Christopher Columbus)发起的暴行,大多数黑人来到这个国家。

所以我们最终
在联合广场举行了一场奴隶拍卖,


了解跨大西洋奴隶贸易的起源。

我以连锁方式参加了纽约市马拉松比赛,
以传播对这个问题的认识。

我还在巨人体育场被捕,因为我

在他们足球队的主场揭幕战上举办了一场奴隶重演。

我们给了它我们所拥有的一切,

但最终,

纽约市决定保留这座雕像

,纽约州一致投票
决定将其打造为地标性建筑。

这个消息是毁灭性的,

但它打开了另一扇门。

我们意识到,借助增强现实,

您无需获得

政府的许可即可竖立纪念碑
或发表声明。

你可以做到。

因此,纽约市

目前有 150 多
座男性雕像和 6 座女性雕像,

并且目前
在公共场所也承认奴隶主。

所以我们决定,为什么不在整个城市建立
一堆女性和有色人种的 AR 纪念碑

呢?

通常,纪念碑是

为了纪念死者的成就
而创建的,

但通过增强现实,
我们可以改变规则。

我们从运动开始。

科林·卡佩尼克。


是旧金山 49 人队的首发四分卫

,他想利用自己的平台

来突出
系统性种族主义的不公正。

因此,他咨询了一位绿色贝雷帽
,以最尊重的方式做到这一点

,他决定
在奏国歌时单膝下跪。

他失去了与 49 人队的合同,

他被每个 NFL 老板拉黑,

他受到数百万人的批评

,甚至
美国总统也

决定侮辱他。

Colin Kaepernick 的勇气可能要过几十年才能
得到充分尊重,

所以我们的团队决定这样做。

现在任何路过特朗普大厦的人
都可以看到 Colin Kaepernick

在增强现实中屈膝,

而他们对此无能为力。

(笑声)

代表很重要。

塞雷娜·威廉姆斯向世界

证明,一个来自康普顿的黑人女孩
可以主宰

一项传统上
在高级乡村俱乐部进行的运动。

现在让我们为她庆祝吧。

杰基·罗宾逊。

他打破了颜色障碍

,让许多黑人运动员
能够参加美国职业棒球大联盟。

我们将把他的这座纪念碑
放在埃贝茨球场,

这样任何人都可以看到他

在布鲁克林埃贝茨球场的栅栏上挥杆。

借助增强现实,

我们有能力
在公共场所讲述需要讲述的故事。

Frida Kahlo、Audre Lorde、

Toussaint Louverture、

C.J. Walker 女士等人的成就——

这应该是常识。

我们的愿景是“Pokémon Go”
,讲述一段情境化的历史。

增强现实也可以
用作支持

与系统性压迫作斗争的组织的工具。

2019 年,我们将发布

带有增强现实
纪念碑和内容的免费智能手机应用程序。

您可以拿起您的智能手机
并将其放在任何一美元钞票上,

并在增强现实中看到一个场景,该场景

说明
了现金保释的不公正性。

然后,您可以单击屏幕

并被定向到保释计划的捐款页面

该基金为
无法支付保释金的人筹集资金。

借助增强现实,当机构拒绝这样做时,

我们人民就有

能力突出
被压迫者的叙述

我们可以使用这个工具
来强调

擦除某人历史的系统性影响。

更具体地说,

我们可以使用这项
技术来支持

反对系统性种族主义的倡议。

借助 AR,我们有
能力重新构想一个

将正义置于压迫之上的世界。

谢谢你。

(掌声和欢呼)