Date archives "August 2013"

Video of the Day: Green Gold – Permaculture

On Ecosystem Regeneration (a remarkable video on actual studies) John D. Liu, Videographer From the website: “It’s possible to rehabilitate large-scale damaged ecosystems with the use of permaculture design principles and techniques.” Environmental film maker John D. Liu documents large-scale ecosystem restoration projects in China, Africa, South America and the Middle East, highlighting the enormous… Continue reading

A contract worker writes to Jeff Bezos on the conditions at Amazon.com

Republished from Steve Barker: “Dear Jeff Bezos, In your position, I imagine that you rarely have an opportunity to receive feedback from one of your temporary-contract employees. I thought you should have some input. I hope you find this useful. Having just completed my maximum of eleven months of contract work Amazon allows, I thought… Continue reading

Citizens’ consultation on the commons in Europe

This consultation on the commons was organised by European Alternatives and brought together representatives of social mobilisations and civil society organisations to debate issues related to the commons in Romania and the EU. Here are the findings, the result of a World Cafe style of process: “Discussions focussed on various examples of commons, such as… Continue reading

Call to fund research on an easy and COMPLETE alternative to Gmail, Facebook etc…

update 2013/09/22: the project described below now has its own home page at per-cloud.com (important: I originally posted this call here. Please also check that page to know what the status is, as I can’t guarantee that this copy will be regularly updated!) I have been using my own email service and self-hosted blogs since… Continue reading

Fighting surveillance through decentralised networks that rely on encryption by default

Hal Hodson describes Hyperboria: “After the extent of the NSA’s clandestine PRISM program was revealed, privacy advocates like the Electronic Frontier Foundation urged users to start using relatively simple email encryption programs like Pretty Good Privacy and GNU Privacy Guard. But even those can be daunting to set up. A better idea would be a… Continue reading

An update on the interoperability of complementary currency software systems

From Matthew Slater: “There is a lot happening right now, and I sense that for coordination purposes it needs presenting more widely. It is always tempting to plough our own solitary and often unyielding furrows, but I believe we should be looking around more and appreciating supporting and connecting to what works. Complementary currency activists… Continue reading

The history and future of the Indie Web Movement

Packed into a small conference room, this rag-tag band of software developers has an outsized digital pedigree, and they have a mission to match. They hope to jailbreak the internet. They call it the Indie Web movement, an effort to create a web that’s not so dependent on tech giants like Facebook, Twitter, and, yes,… Continue reading

An overview of the (older) critiques on the Fora do Eixo model (1)

Fora do Eixo, on which we reported before, is in the spotlight in Brazil and receiving a new wave of critique, on which we hope to report soon. This is an interesting overview of the older wave of critiques, from Shannon Garland: “Bands performing at Fora do Eixo events, however, may forfeit payment in legal… Continue reading

Red Plenty Platforms (2): The ecological problem and contemporary cybernetic planning

We continue our treatment (2nd and last part) of the important essay by Nick Dyer-Witheford: “An abundant communist society of high automation, free software, and in-home replicators might, however, as Fraise (2011) suggests, need planning more than ever – not to overcome scarcity but to address the problems of plenty, which perversely today threaten shortages… Continue reading

Douglas Rushkoff on understanding the good and the bad of Presentism

Willie Osterweil of Shareable did a great interview about Doug’s latest book, Present Shock: * Willie Osterweil: Throughout the book and your writings you talk about how ideas germinate over long periods of time. How did you first come up with the concept of Present Shock? Is this an idea that has been building slowly,… Continue reading

Launch of the Track Off anti-surveillance campaign

Below is a trailer for a forthcoming documentary about online privacy that launches an action campaign against surveillance called Track Off: “Recent news makes shockingly clear the extent to which Americans are being tracked by websites and surveilled by law enforcement agencies. But it’s become evident that even our policymakers don’t understand the breadth of… Continue reading

Why you should read the essay, Red Plenty Platforms

Nick Dyer-Whiteford, in an extended review of Red Plenty, discusses the renewed possibilities for cybernetic planning. In this first installment, we present the history and present forms of this economic thought movement. This is a very informative and thoughtful essay. * Article: RED PLENTY PLATFORMS. By Nick Dyer-Witheford. CULTURE MACHINE VOL 14 • 2013 From… Continue reading

The Supercell Autonomous Team Model

Walter Chen describes the governance model of the Supercell gaming company: “Supercell, a remarkable Finnish company that’s making $2.5 million dollars every day and has been described as “the fastest growing company ever.” Supercell CEO Ilkka Paananen, calls himself “the world’s least powerful CEO”, and that’s not the surprising part. What’s incredible is that Paananen… Continue reading