"CONSTITUTIONALISM FOUND IN THE INTERNET: a (re)think about the Human Right to Communication and protection against new forms of machinic submission".
Human right to communication. Decolonial communication. The Right Found in the Street. Constitutionalism Found in the Internet.
This dissertation is a reflection on the fundamental and urgent importance of the protection of the right to communication, as a human right, irrevocable and insurmountable. Not only the communicational act enables the simplest human interactions since the beginning of civilization – characterizing an intrinsic human need, but also because it has become a specialized instrument of mass control nowadays, through a network data articulated by the holders of the means of informational production. And that becomes a major obstacle to be analyzed, understood, dissected, and repeatedly rediscussed, in order to put into practice the project of the epistemological current of The Law Found on the Street.It is assumed that this right lacks justification and legal, political and social recognition, especially when analyzed in the context of technological control of communication processes in the virtual,regarding their collective impacts, often without justice.Inserted in a communication architecture in network constituted in favor of a domination project of modern capitalist societies and that can serve several purposes, whether ideological, political, but mainly marketing. It works, therefore, from the decolonial perspective of a new understanding of the informational dynamics, so that the harmful effects of the communication control in the world wide web can be discouraged and fought, so that a legal framework can be created in a theoretical and practical way,accompanied by a political and economic agenda. Taking into account communication in a human-centered approach, its cultural diversity, political identity and social control. The harmfull effects corrupt this human right by promoting the emptying of subjectivities, reducing the power of personal command, through various resources, including the appropriation and management of personal data of network users. It is proposed, therefore, with this study, to situate the right to communication in the virtual field as a dimension of human rights from a decolonial perspective, considering the critical theory of Law Found on the Street, as a political, theoretical and pedagogical path of epistemological resistance.