Stephen Downes

Knowledge, Learning, Community

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Vision Statement

Stephen Downes works with the Digital Technologies Research Centre at the National Research Council of Canada specializing in new instructional media and personal learning technology. His degrees are in Philosophy, specializing in epistemology, philosophy of mind, and philosophy of science. He has taught for the University of Alberta, Athabasca University, Grand Prairie Regional College and Assiniboine Community College. His background includes expertise in journalism and media, both as a prominent blogger and as founder of the Moncton Free Press online news cooperative. He is one of the originators of the first Massive Open Online Course, has published frequently about online and networked learning, has authored learning management and content syndication software, and is the author of the widely read e-learning newsletter OLDaily. Downes is a member of NRC's Research Ethics Board. He is a popular keynote speaker and has spoken at conferences around the world.

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Stephen Downes, stephen@downes.ca, Casselman Canada

Are marketing orthodoxies limiting online student recruitment?
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"I've begun to increasingly question whether the playbook for online student marketing and recruitment has become too formulaic and rigid," writes  Neil Mosley. "I've also begun to speculate on whether this is limiting recruitment opportunities and, in some instances, constraining universities from being more competitive."

Today: Total: Neil Mosley, Neil Mosley Consulting, 2026/01/30 [Direct Link]
blento
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This is a service where you can "create your own beautiful personal website, with your data being saved to your bluesky profile." You can find my blento here (fwiw). Blento's beta launches on Sunday. Via Picalilli. I think we're about to enter a renaissance of sites like this, now that people are able to free their imagination with AI-generated software the way Florian Killius did with bento. Here's another one, via Alan Levine: Wobble

Today: Total: Florian Killius, 2026/01/30 [Direct Link]
Introducing the Forge, a New Innovation in Open Pedagogy | LibreTexts
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I should have covered this last June, but oh well, better late than never. I didn't notice it until it was mentioned in today's LibreText newsletter (which doesn't seem to have a web version). Anyhow, the Forge "is an assignment platform specifically built to advance Open Pedagogy and provide actionable insights through integrated analytics. The platform enables instructors to design renewable, collaborative long-form assignments and gives students meaningful opportunities to produce public-facing, openly licensed work." Meanwhile, why doesn't LibreTexts use RSS?

Today: Total: LibreTexts, 2026/01/30 [Direct Link]
TikTok Won’t Be Another Twitter
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The phrase "won't be another Twitter" doesn't refer to the content, which may well sink to the same levels under new ownership. It refers to the pattern of people leaving. "TikTok's structure differs from X in two meaningful ways," writes Laurens Hof. "The first is that its TikTok's architecture makes the network much more invisible to its own users... The second... is that where Twitter and X are the centers of political discourse, TikTok is the center of culture." Also (and in my view more importantly) "Video is in an entirely different category, with storage costs, bandwidth costs, transcoding costs, CDN costs that are both much larger than text." Still, "Skylight, the ATProto-based TikTok alternative, crossed 380,000 users this week with around 95,000 monthly active users." And there's also Loops, the ActivityPub video platform.

Today: Total: Laurens Hof, connectedplaces.online, 2026/01/30 [Direct Link]
CHEAT Benchmark
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David Wiley writes in this 'manifesto': "The CHEAT (Complicity in Harming Educational Assessment and Testing) Benchmark will measure the degree to which a model is willing to help students cheat. By publicizing CHEAT Benchmark scores for popular large language models, we can raise awareness of this clear and present danger to assessment integrity." I found reading the source of this document to be far more interesting than the HTML text - my curiosity was intrigued when my own software retrieving the content displayed only: 'Lovable Generated Project'. You can't actually find the text in the page at all! If you're curious, you can play with Lovable yourself - use it to "create apps and websites by chatting with AI." Anyhow, back to CHEAT: "CHEAT LMS is a 'honeypot' server that mimics core learning management system functions while capturing deep telemetry. It supports three assignment types - quizzes, essays, and discussions - and tracks everything from HTTP requests to client-side behavioral events like mouse movements and keystroke timing." CHEAT was built with Claude. Now to be clear - I have no objection to the use of AI to set up this project. But it's a bit audacious to use it to catch AI helping students 'cheat'.

Today: Total: David Wiley, 2026/01/30 [Direct Link]
Government Says There Are No Plans for National Digital ID To Access Services
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This seems surprising to me. "The (Canadian) government has confirmed that it has no plans to create a national identification system." In the response to a question tabled just a couple of days ago, Minister Patty Hajdu said "There are no plans or progress to report on the implementation of a national digital identification system, as one is not being implemented." There are two major services, GC Sign in, with pland to offer "more flexible identity verification options (online, in-person, mail) (and) supporting provincial/territorial digital credentials," and GC Issue and Verify, which includes the platform, the GC Wallet app, and the GC Verifier app, and would see use for license for people like for commercial aviation pilots and air traffic controllers, and for immigration and digital visas. The core assertion here - and it is probably the correct one - is that "access to federal services is not contingent on a digital identity." Still - there are so many services that could really use a digital ID, even if it's just a voluntary one (though I admit, voluntary use over time has a tendency of becoming required).

Today: Total: Michael Geist, 2026/01/29 [Direct Link]

Stephen Downes Stephen Downes, Casselman, Canada
stephen@downes.ca

Copyright 2026
Last Updated: Jan 31, 2026 4:37 p.m.

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