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Being a Good Relative in the Digital World - Coggle Diagram
Being a Good Relative in the Digital World
Relationships and Reciprocity
Building trust and respect always comes first
Collaboration should help the community, not just the project
Knowledge sharing means giving credit and being thankful, not taking without asking
We should create a safe digital space where everyone feels respected
(CARE Principles, Indigenous Computational Future Ethics, OSPP)
Authority, Consent, and Sovereignty
Always get Free, Prior, and Informed Consent before using indigenous knowledge or materials
Communities have the right to control how their data and stories are shared
Listening to tribal leaders and following their protocols show respect
Sovereignty means Indigenous nations make their own decisions, both offline and online
(UNDRIP, CARE Principles, OSPP Guide)
Cultural and Intellectual Property Care
Don't treat Indigenous culture like something you can just "use", because its living knowledge
Credit the original creators and make sure benefits go back to the community
Always ask before sharing designs, art, or stories that aren't yours
Some knowledge isn't meant for everyone to see, and that's okay
(Think Before You Appropriate, Design Charter, Protocols for Native American Archival Materials)
Data Governance and Digital Ethics
Data about Indigenous peoples should serve their goals first
Respect cultural protocols when storing or sharing digital information
FAIR data is good, but CARE make sure its actually respectful
(CARE Principles, OCAP, UNDRIP)
Context, Access, and Stewardship
Work with communities to decide what's shared publicly and what stays private
Add context so information isn't taken the wrong way or misused
Update old or disrespectful labels with language approved by the community
Return cultural materials or records if they were taken without consent
(Protocols for Native American Archival Materials, UNDRIP)