Date archives "August 2012"

The P2P Revolution in Transportation (1): moving people

If citizens can’t get the transportation systems they need from governments, we’ll have no choice to make new ones ourselves. A good summary of what’s happening in the field of transportation (U.S. examples), mostly through enterpreneurial initiatives, excerpted from SEMIL SHAH: “A decade into the 21st Century, oftentimes it feels easier to get from JFK… Continue reading

Book of the Day: Inside the Global Cyber Insurgency

* Book: We Are Anonymous: Inside the Hacker World of LulzSec, Anonymous and the Global Cyber Insurgency. Parmy Olson. “Journalist Parmy Olson spent a year researching Anonymous, the loosely defined hacker collective that’s antagonized everyone from the Church of Scientology to PayPal to the CIA. Her new book, We Are Anonymous: Inside the Hacker World… Continue reading

Project of the Day: the Great Lakes Commons Map

‘I can’t help but think that future adaptations of the Ushahidi platform could help commoners elswhere recover their stewardship rights over nature. The Balkans, Africa and Latin America spring to mind. The software has a wonderful capacity to aggregate a dispersed public that otherwise has few opportunities to come together as a self-aware, deliberative body… Continue reading

Time wars: our finite lives frittered away by the neoliberal machine

Cory Doctorow introduces the remarkable essay, Time-wars’ by Mark Fisher: The system distributes the gains of automation so unevenly that a tragically overworked class is pitted against a tragically unemployed class. Meanwhile, the only resource that is truly non-renewable — the time of our lives — is frittered away in “work” that we do because… Continue reading

Book of the Day: How Networks Can Revolutionise the World

Network effects, the fact that a person can and often does decide to change his or her preferences simply on the basis of what others do, pervade the modern world. * Book: Positive Linking: How Networks Can Revolutionise the World. By Paul Ormerod. Faber and Faber, 2012. Here is the publisher’s summary: ‘According to Paul… Continue reading

Towards a Legal Framework for the Commons

As proposed by Tommaso Fattori, ‘Commons: towards a legal framework‘: “It is commonly acknowledged that there is a legislative gap concerning the protection and recognition of the sphere of Commons (1). The consequence of these inadequate legal guarantees is the extreme vulnerability of Commons, which remain without protection from processes of “enclosure”, due both to… Continue reading

Book of the Day: What Ecology Can Teach Us about Responsible Media Practice

The French theologian Pierre Teilhard de Chardin argued that if the biosphere is all that contains life on Earth, then a noosphere contains our collective consciousness. The semiotic version of a noosphere is the semiosphere, which is the totality of human signs and symbols. Anthropologist Wade Davis envisions an ethnosphere, which contains the totality of… Continue reading

The Public – Commons Partnership and the Commonification of that which is “Public”

A crucial intervention by Tommaso Fattori: (this is the future of p2p politics and commons policy making!) “The field of Commons can be for the most part identified with a public but not-state arena, in which the actions of the individuals who collectively take care of, produce and share the Commons are decisive and fundamental…. Continue reading

Civic Crowdfunding shouldn’t undermine public services

Crowdfunding can be used to undermine public goods and services, and this should be avoided, argues Ethan Zuckermann. But first, he gives some examples. Ethan Zuckermann: “Kansas City was denied funds from the US Department of Transportation to build a new streetcar line. Jase Wilson is now trying to raise $10 million towards the streetcar… Continue reading

Abundance/Scarcity and Equality/Hierarchy: Four Basic Scenarios for the Future

A very important essay: * Frase, Peter. Four futures. Jacobin. 2012 Winter; 5:27–34. “Frase considers the endgame of our current political struggles, locating future scenarios along two axes: scarcity versus abundance, and social hierarchy versus equality. This yields four possibilities: * communism (abundance with equality), * rentism (abundance with hierarchy), * socialism (scarcity with equality),… Continue reading