“…The evolution of digital technologies has had an impact for design practitioners and researchers: directly, through the development of new manufacturing technologies such as digital fabrication (Gershenfeld, 2012) and the larger trend of digital transformation of business and management processes (Schneider & Kokshagina, 2021). Indirectly, starting from the success of Open Source Software (Weber, 2005) to its application to design with the Open Design (Bakırlıoğlu & Kohtala, 2019) and Maker movements (Dougherty, 2012) and to research leading to the current mainstream status of Open Science, which started from activism (Delfanti, 2013) and that has now been accepted as an integral part of the research strategy of the European Union (European Commission, 2016). These phenomena have had an impact on design in other sectors too, such as biology with the DIYBio/Biohacking movement (Delfanti, 2013;Keulartz & van den Belt, 2016;Landrain et al, 2013;Wohlsen, 2011), a further expansion and development of the Maker movement in biology (Tocchetti, 2012), or healthcare -that is patients facing technologies.…”