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.

What The AI Consciousness Question Conceals
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We've seen the argument a few times now that computation and embodiment are fundamentally different, and that AI is one, and humans are the other, and that therefore AI cannot be conscious. I linked to The Abstraction Fallacy making this point a few days ago, and Barton Friedland links to Anil Seth's The Mythology of Conscious AI making much the same case back in January. I've covered both here. My response is to collapse the distinction; computation is embodiment (that's why, for me, a 'connection' exists only when one entity can change the state of another). Here, Friedland takes a different approach, combining the two layers via the mechanism of 'augmentation'. "In the human-AI arrangement, value lies not inside the machine, not inside the skull, but in the configuration between them." It's an interesting idea. Writes Friedland: If cognition is distributed, enacted and extended, then the relevant unit of analysis is not the individual brain (biological or artificial), but rather the configuration in which intelligence operates."

Today: Total: Barton Friedland, NOEMA, 2026/03/26 [Direct Link]
Coalition Publica launches new website for advancing open access
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By 'diamond open access' we mean open access publishing that has neither subscription fees for readers nor publication fees for authors. Usually the publications are supported by an academic institution, foundation, or government office. This article announces "A new website for the Canadian diamond open access community" for  Coalition Publica (CP), the partnership between Érudit and the Public Knowledge Project (PKP). There's no icon but you can find their RSS feed here.

Today: Total: Coalition Publica Communications, Public Knowledge Project, 2026/03/26 [Direct Link]
Top LLM PyPl package compromised to steal user details
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As reported here and widely elsewhere, "A hugely popular Python package called LiteLLM was compromised and used to deploy an infostealer malware to hundreds of thousands of devices." The malware grabbed API keys.env credentials, personal information, and much more. The danger is magnified because the package is frequently used by Claude Code, so people might not be aware their projects contain it. This points to the related question of how we store keys and credentials generally if we're working in a distributed that may involve AI agents and remote applications. To address this, Bitwarden has developed and offered as open source a software development kit (SDK) for "credential access with designated human oversight and robust end-to-end encryption, helping ensure passwords are never exposed or used without explicit authorization." Here's my own work (in collaboration with Claude) in this area - it's not quite as strong as what Bitwarden is proposing, but it's pretty strong.

Today: Total: Sead Fadilpašić, TechRadar, 2026/03/26 [Direct Link]
What's Up With That?
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I haven't tried this, because browser extension are blocked in the office, but I will when I'm home, and it's definitely worth a look. The idea idea is that the extension looks at the article you're reading, compares it to what else it can find on the same topic, and runs it through an analysis telling you what it adds that's new, what sort of wider analysis might be recommended, adjacent topics worth pursuing, etc. Here's an intro video. It's all relevant to me, of course, because I do the same thing to a limited extent here in my newsletter. As with everyone else in the world, I'm asking myself what people get from me that they can't get from a robot. I'm guessing it's my kindly demeanour and wry sense of humour. Via Intelligent Machines.

Today: Total: Marshall Kirkpatrick, 2026/03/26 [Direct Link]
Gen Xfest and the Better Suit Industrial Complex
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"Nothing against the suit, Hicks... a just-folks image that may've worked fine once... but the more we expect to be face-to-face with the well-to-do, you get it? ... The work changes, sure. But more importantly, who the work is for changes... What I was seeing on the floor wasn't just innovation (though AI can still blow your mind pretty quickly). It was an industry repositioning. The scrappy, independent hosting outfits are being written out of the geopolitical narrative." This - from my perspective - is the history of leaning technology. We've always been pushed toward the suits - sell to the institutions, sell to government, sell to corporations. When our real clients all along should have been those lease able to pay - the learners themselves.

Today: Total: Jim Groom, bavatuesdays, 2026/03/26 [Direct Link]
The Grant Application Is Dead. What Comes Next?
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"Come down the rabbit hole with me," invites Tom Watson, as he describes "how federated protocols, local agents, and organisational self-sovereignty could replace the broken funding model." There's a lot to like about this approach, and ideally, our future looks something like this. But wait, there's more. Why limit the model to grant applications for organizations? The existing system of earning degrees and submitting job applications is just as broken. With the right infrastructure support (which I would expect to become a future role for government) this becomes a model that replaces job applications generally. More from Tom Watson on open recommendations. More, from me.

Today: Total: Tom Watson, Tomcw.xyz, 2026/03/26 [Direct Link]

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

Copyright 2026
Last Updated: Mar 27, 2026 1:37 p.m.

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