Difference between revisions of "RTMark"

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'''RTMark''' (derived from "Registered Trademark") is an activist collective that subverts the "Corporate Shield" protecting US corporations.
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RTMark is itself a registered corporation which brings together activists who plan projects with donors who fund them. It thus operates outside the laws governing human individuals, and benefits from the much looser laws governing corporations.
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RTMark claimed as its first prank (perhaps fictionally) the [http://www.sniggle.net/barbie.php Barbie Liberation Organization], in which the voiceboxes of talking Barbie and GI Joe toys were swapped, and the toys then returned to the store (1993). The first prank documentable as being truly RTMark-sponsored was the [http://www.rtmark.com/legacy/simcopter.html SimCopter] "hack" (1996).
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Other RTMark stunts were ''gwbush.com'' (a faked campaign Website for George W. Bush), and ''voteauction''. They were also involved in the ''toywar''.
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Video:
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"Untitled#29.95" (1999) 'a video about video', critiquing the commodification of video art by the commercial art establishment in the 1990s, and advocating bootlegging of of commodified video art works in the name of accessibility: https://vimeo.com/18587448
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; Articles
 
; Articles
 
* [[Josephine Bosma]]. ''RTMArk Interview''. 1998. http://www.nettime.org/Lists-Archives/nettime-l-9809/msg00034.html
 
* [[Josephine Bosma]]. ''RTMArk Interview''. 1998. http://www.nettime.org/Lists-Archives/nettime-l-9809/msg00034.html
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; Links
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http://www.rtmark.com/
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[[Category:Net art]]
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[[Category:Hacktivism]]

Latest revision as of 15:02, 17 May 2016

RTMark (derived from "Registered Trademark") is an activist collective that subverts the "Corporate Shield" protecting US corporations.

RTMark is itself a registered corporation which brings together activists who plan projects with donors who fund them. It thus operates outside the laws governing human individuals, and benefits from the much looser laws governing corporations.

RTMark claimed as its first prank (perhaps fictionally) the Barbie Liberation Organization, in which the voiceboxes of talking Barbie and GI Joe toys were swapped, and the toys then returned to the store (1993). The first prank documentable as being truly RTMark-sponsored was the SimCopter "hack" (1996).

Other RTMark stunts were gwbush.com (a faked campaign Website for George W. Bush), and voteauction. They were also involved in the toywar.

Video: "Untitled#29.95" (1999) 'a video about video', critiquing the commodification of video art by the commercial art establishment in the 1990s, and advocating bootlegging of of commodified video art works in the name of accessibility: https://vimeo.com/18587448

Articles
Links

http://www.rtmark.com/