Date archives "June 2009"

De-privatising the car and the bicycle

The following is from a report on the future of transportation, which I will present tomorrow, i.e. The Digital Nexus of Post-Automobility, published by the Department of Sociology, Lancaster University. Authors are K. Dennis and J. Urry. Today, a foretaste with an extensive excerpt on the emergence of sharing schemes for cars and bicycles. Dennis… Continue reading

Participation Camp: Change the Rules – New York City and Online – June 27th and 28th

Participation Camp is a two-day conference in New York focused on improving citizen participation in government.  Since the means to making a truly participatory democracy are not obvious or well-defined, we’re focusing on making the event fun and exploratory.  Here’s some text from ParticipationCamp.org. Democracy is a game in which we all make the rules…. Continue reading

Can Twollars become a ‘real’ internet currency?

Twollars, a name made up of Twitter and Dollars, aren’t ‘real’ money – at least not yet. (http://p2pfoundation.net/Twollars) (http://twollars.com/) The Twollar is an appreciation unit that can be given by simply tweeting a worthy recipient, specifying how many Twollars you want to give. More than that, though, it’s a harbinger of things to come. My… Continue reading

Thomas Greco on the End of Money (3): Towards A Complete Web-Based Trading Platform

In our first treatment of Thomas Greco’s new Book of the Week, we presented the book with the critique of the current system, while last wednesday, we showed his analysis of why present alternatives are not yet working. Today, Thomas Greco brings us recommendations for a new integrated post-monetary exchange system, using the features of… Continue reading

A typology of online journalism: journalists as facilitators

In the French journal Esprit, “Laurent Mauriac and Pascal Riché, members of the team behind French politics website Rue89, explain how they attempt to bridge the gap between print and the Internet by encouraging contributions from experts and web users, but using journalists to coordinate, direct and edit this participation.” Here’s an excerpt in which… Continue reading

Does Google search practice an oligarchic algorithm?

Intriguing suggestion by Andrew Lehman: “It was clear to me that in preparation for going public, Google was actually seeding its searches with inefficiencies in order to encourage profits. Regarding commercial searches, it’s only got worse with time. By embedding top 10 positions with Wikipedia entries, videos and other tangentially related content, commercial businesses continue… Continue reading

Peer producing agriculture with Crop Mobs

The idea is bigger than barn-raisings, more technical than workshops, more thoughtful than textbooks. It is guerrilla agrarianism in the information age. Maybe that isn’t an apt description, but when I watch shovels hitting dirt on a foreign farm with a crew assembled using email, social networking and word of mouth, it surely feels like… Continue reading

Four types of human practice

Tom Haskins continues to refine his modelling of relational and governance models First the graph: Tom Haskins comments: “By combining the Cynefin and TIMN models together, I’m exploring a different set of questions about practice. I’ve been wondering about the following four questions: * What tribal practice(s) handle unknowable, chaotic situations better than institutional, market… Continue reading

Thomas Greco on the End of Money (2): Why Exchange Alternatives Fail to Thrive

The following text, The State of the Alternative Exchange Movement, by Thomas Greco, is an excerpt from Chapter 13 of our book of the Week: The End of Money and the Future of Civilization. Please note the book can be ordered here. Thomas Greco: “Exchange alternatives are not entirely new. Indeed, in times past, there… Continue reading

Peer Money

Christian Siefkes denies that money and markets are “more or less neutral tools which can be used for non-capitalist purposes,” arguing that since money and markets were never the primary means of organizing production in a non-capitalist society, money “cannot become the dominant social form outside of capitalism.” . I would note, in passing, that… Continue reading