Date archives "June 2012"

Emergence, Crisis, and Replacement of the Era of Decentralized Networks

P2P is about how distributed network models are replacing decentralized network models. David de Ugarte retraces three moments in this phase transition. • Article: Emergence, Crisis, and Replacement of the Era of Decentralized Networks. By David de Ugarte Excerpted from the Book: The Power of Networks. Moment 1: The Emergence of Decentralized Networks David de… Continue reading

Where crowdfunding needs to go (1). By Felix Stalder.

In the introduction to a mega-interesting interview with Goteo commons-crowdfunding project co-founders Olivier Schulbaum and Enric Senabre, the interviewer Felix Stalder makes a brilliant assessment of the weaknesses of current crowdfunding models. The interview is here and a must-read. Felix Stalder writes: “We are reinventing social and cultural practices. By necessity and desire. New ways… Continue reading

The São Paulo Declaration on Culture and Sustainability

I’m attending the Unconference on Culture and Sustainability in Rio de Janeiro. This is one of the initiatives being discussed, as explained by Jose Murillo: “About the São Paulo Declaration: on January 29, 2012, the Brazilian Ministry of Culture organized another meeting at the ‘Thematic World Social Forum’ in Porto Alegre and the ‘Meeting of… Continue reading

Movement of the Day: the Las Indias cooperative movement

Las Indias is a cooperative, a contemporary example of the network form of Phyles, i.e. a community-supportive business network. They have an amazingly interesting english-language blog which is at the forefront of p2p theorizing, and I consider them as a true sister organization to the P2P Foundation. David de Ugarte explains what it means for… Continue reading

Hilary Wainwright on Cooperatising the State

Excerpted from Hilary Wainwright in Red Pepper (UK): “Genuine co-operative alternatives are making headway. The pressure to marketise grows in parallel with the mounting evidence of failure – the Southern Cross care home operator heads a growing list, as patients, users and medical staff become more confident whistle-blowers – but few want to return to… Continue reading

A Brazilian Copyright law innovation: the Open Unified Registry with Public License

The unified registry with public license, to be implemented with the new Brazilian Author’s Rights Law, is an important innovation, explains Jose Murillo, of the Brazilian Ministry of Culture: “In this last stage of process for the reform of the Brazilian Author’s Right Law, an important novelty was introduced by Minister Ana de Hollanda. That… Continue reading

Essay of the Day: Dmytri Kleiner on Radical Openness

Excerpted from Dmytri Kleiner: “Thinking about “the challenges of a open practice” gets me thinking about what “radical openness” could mean. On the surface, it could just mean really, really, extremely, very open. But that’s a overly colloquial understanding of the word radical, as in “totally rad,” as opposed to “radical critique.” Extreme or drastic… Continue reading

Book of the Day: The Case for Copyright Reform

* Book: The Case for Copyright Reform. Rick Falkvinge and Christian Engström. Download free version here. Rick Falkvinge explains: “The book is a compilation of the strongest articles on reform of the copyright monopoly from Christian Engström (MEP) and myself, edited into book format for readability and bedside-table friendliness for those who want the whole… Continue reading

The post-Westphalian implications of phyles and peer to peer currencies

Internet socialisation and practices are inherently global, and are creating new global institutions, argues Kevin Carson, author of the upcoming Desktop Regulatory State. This article is one year old but still an excellent argumentation about this thesis. Kevin Carson: “Neal Stephenson’s “The Diamond Age” was set some years after encrypted currencies and e-commerce removed most… Continue reading

Essay of the Day: Stephen Downes on What Have We Learned From MOOC’s

Excerpted from a speech to EdgeX2012, Delhi, India, March 12, 2012. Stephen Downes: “What this talk is about – it’s called “Education as Platform” – is the idea of exploring some of the experiences we’ve had with massive open online learning, and exploring some of the criticisms that we’ve experienced, some of the criticisms that… Continue reading