Date archives "July 2013"

Project of the Day: the Bucky Box

The Bucky Box is a web application which supports the local food movement. Enabling vege box schemes, community supported agriculture & food hubs through automating subscriptions, billing and delivery. More details: “(Will) Lau has now created a web-based application, Bucky Box, for food box delivery companies like Ooooby (Auckland) to take care of the IT,… Continue reading

Enlivenment: Towards a Fundamental Shift in the Concepts of Nature, Culture, and Politics

* Essay, Enlivenment: Towards a Fundamental Shift in the Concepts of Nature, Culture, and Politics. Heinrich Boell Foundation, 2012 (please note we discussed our critique of this approach on the 17th) “Our mono-cultural worldview is literally preventing us from understanding the deeper causes of our multiple crises. Author Andreas Weber gives us a glimpse of… Continue reading

Book of the Day: Squatting in Europe

* Book: Squatting in Europe: Radical Spaces, Urban Struggles. Edited by the Squatting Europe Kollective. 2013 Essays by Miguel Martínez, Gianni Piazza, Hans Pruijt, Pierpaolo Mudu, Claudio Cattaneo, Andre Holm, Armin Kuhn, Linus Owens, Florence Bouillon, Thomas Aguilera, and ETC Dee: “Squatting offers a radical but simple solution to the crises of housing, homelessness, and… Continue reading

Response to Natalia Fernandez on the history of cooperativism (2), by Robin Murray

As a reminder, Natalia’s key thesis (see the article published on the 16th) is: – By severing cooperativism from its communal origins and and focusing on consumption, British cooperativism … caused lasting damage to the transformative capacity of cooperativism, which we should not repeat today in the debate between the economy of the commons and… Continue reading

Defining Journalism in a Network Age

Excerpted from Jeff Jarvis: (on the occasion of the Bradley-Manning trial and the testimony of Yochai Benkler) “As Benkler explained to the court, journalism is now a network – a “network ‘fourth estate’”. In this network, there are many roles that can be linked together: witnessing, gathering, selecting, authenticating, explaining, distributing. Each can be an… Continue reading

A critique of Andreas Weber’s Enlivenment thesis as reverse social darwinism

In a subsequent post, we will republish Andreas Weber’s beautiful and interesting essay, * “Enlivenment: Towards a Fundamental Shift in the Concepts of Nature, Culture, and Politics. Heinrich Boell Foundation, 2012 I have no problem with the above text, and fully agree with the thrust of it: we need to recognize the subjective aspects of… Continue reading

Tiberius Brastaviceanu: A Pragmatic Critique of the Peer Production License

Republished from Tiberius Brastaviceanu: Why I still don’t believe in the p2p license A license for a technology is a limitation of use of that technology. A newly created technology is not a scare city by nature, because it is something that lives in the realm of knowledge, which has very low distribution costs. It… Continue reading

Book of the Day: The Making Of The Indebted Man

How do we extricate ourselves from this impossible situation? How do we escape the neoliberal condition of the indebted man? Lazzarato argues that we will have to recognize that there is no simple technical, economic, or financial solution. We must instead radically challenge the fundamental social relation structuring capitalism: the system of debt. * Book:… Continue reading

The debate of the Economics of the Commons vs. Sharing Economics in the context of 19th century cooperativism

By severing cooperativism from its communal origins and and focusing on consumption, British cooperativism … caused lasting damage to the transformative capacity of cooperativism, which we should not repeat today in the debate between the economy of the commons and collaborative consumption. Excerpted from Natalia Fernández: “A “School of Sharing Economics,” or a “School of… Continue reading

Jeri Ellsworth on Problems with the Flat Management Structure at Valve

Republished from Philippa Warr: “Former Valve employee Jeri Ellsworth has spoken of the company’s famous flat management structure, calling out several shortcomings as part of an interview for the Grey Area podcast. Because of Valve’s success and profitability, the unconventional management structure — or, more accurately, the lack of one — has achieved a kind… Continue reading