Reflections on Rio+20 (Part 1)

Who are we to judge failure or success and from what perspective? By Daniel Christian Wahl (www.danielchristianwahl.com)   The consensus in the international press, the NGO sector, and with most scientists seems to be that Rio+20 was a failure.  I beg to differ. I think it is too early to tell.  What difference did a… Continue reading

Michael Huesemann on the Dangers of Technological Optimism

Source: Extraenvironmentalist “Are you optimistic about technology? Let’s talk about why. Could the majority of our proposed technological solutions be doing little more than kicking the can down the road towards ecological collapse? Politicians and economists speak of the ability for technological innovation to boost and grow economies, yet where does their techno optimism come from?… Continue reading

How to support open value creation?

On the occasion of the call for an Open Innovation support agenda by the Greens/EFA group at the European Parliament, I republish an older proposal of mine, on a set of interlocking institutions that could support open value creation. The P2P Foundation policy material can be found here. Here’s my proposal, a set of 3… Continue reading

Building a global coalition of alter forces

A strong initiative is calling old, new, newer and newest progressive social movements to come together, join forces, reject financial dictatorship and enforce just, human and peaceful ‘real alternatives’  from today! With a dozen of associated networks and calls, we are joining many associative, citizen, cultural, trade union and political forces that refuse the current… Continue reading

A Critique of Open Core business model

Excerpted from a much loner article by Simon Phipps on Open Source Software Communities and their dynamics: “The idea of open core is simple enough. Here’s a modified quote from a business leader in a company that depends on an open core business-model. He said: “We deliver a fully functional production with our community edition…. Continue reading

Michael Hudson: Financialized neoliberalism as a weapon against free markets and industry

Excerpted from a longer and brilliant analysis of European vs. Anglosaxon responses to the meltdown, from Michael Hudson: “The term “neoliberalism” misrepresents and even inverts the classical liberal idea of free markets. It is a weaponization of economic theory, kidnapping the original liberal ethic that sought to defend against special privilege and unearned income. To… Continue reading