Two ways for the state to adapt to networks

While networks on their own might be democratising, equalising, liberating – the hybrid forms are not, because they inject aspects of command at key points as substitutes for voluntary agency. Very interesting contribution by Andy Robinson: “I think part of the crisis since the 70s has to do with networks and hierarchies. The “old” system… Continue reading

What is a P2P Mensch?

A meditation on P2P ethics by Ryan Lanham: A mensch is a person of integrity and honor. These are very old age words. Can they be applied to a new age media phenomenon like P2P? Speed, zip, bang. The web invents brevity and tolerates partial and ill-formed, ill-spelled, slang, emotives, emoticons, and poly-participation. It doesn’t… Continue reading

The Peer Production of Public Policy

A new p2p-research project by Matt Cooperrider. Matt: I’ve recently been exploring how peer production methods can be used to build smarter public policy. One benefit of this approach is that the community that drafted the policy would then become a political force urging its passage. Such a scenario might provide a means to counteract… Continue reading

Conditions for the next long wave

This is a somewhat more fleshed out version of my previous thoughts on the conditions for a next long wave. Text: This is a general presentation of the nature of the present crisis, and how we can realistically expect a renewed period of growth, and on the role that peer production can play in this… Continue reading

Losing control of the information landscape

The study highlights how in a moment of major, unexpected crisis the institutions of power – whether political, governmental, military or corporate – face a new, acute vulnerability of both their influence and effectiveness. Report: ‘Skyful of Lies’ & Black Swans: The new tyranny of shifting information power in crises’ by Nik Gowing. Reuters Institute… Continue reading

The trap of an infinite growth economy

I often argue that it is necessary to divorce the workings of markets, one of the means to allocate and exchange scarce resource, from the particular infinite growth system they are embedded in for the moment. Thomas L. Wayburn, a ‘thermo-economist’, who sees economics through the lens of energy expenditures and flows, reprints a contribution… Continue reading

P2P as the “New Socialism?”

In a recent Wired Article entitled  The New Socialism:  Global Collective Society is Coming Online Kevin Kelly considers peer production as part of a new kind of socialism optimized for the digital era: The type of communism with which Gates hoped to tar the creators of Linux was born in an era of enforced borders,… Continue reading