Differences Between “Open Source” and “Open Currency”: Why Cyclos is not sufficiently Open

I had asked the people of the Metacurrency Project, via a comment on their blog, why they critiqued the Cyclos alternative currency software as not being sufficiently open. A combination of two subsequent blog posts provides the answer. In the first, Arthur Brock reiterates the important distinctions and similarities between open source software, and the… Continue reading

Case study: Ubuntu and Debian

Interesting 3-page case study at H online magazine, which discusses the relationship between the free software community Debian and its more commercially oriented Ubuntu. An excerpt from the longer article: “Ubuntu is explicitly based on Debian, but this doesn’t come without its problems. From the beginning Canonical, Ubuntu’s holding company, employed a core of key… Continue reading

Gus diZerega on The Tragedy of Classical Liberalism

This is a continuation of our coverage of emergent order studies, initiated by Gus diRezega. In a as yet unpublished but privately circulated essay, Gus describes “The Tragedy of Classical Liberalism”, that resulted from its alliances with the neo-conservative forces, started in the 1980’s. The paper ends with this assessment of the crisis: “Classical liberalism… Continue reading

The emergence of social energy tracking systems

“Open Shaspa makes energy consumption even more Web 2.0 with its “Social Energy Meter”, which publishes power usage online so it can be tracked and analyzed on Facebook, Google, Twitter, and more. Tweet-a-Watt pioneered the attempts to build free software based and socially connected home energy monitoring devices. In Fast Company, Ariel Schwartz comments on… Continue reading

Open Source in Government: status report

The May 2009 issue of the Open Source Business Resource is dedicated to Open Source in Government: “Gijs Hillenius, news editor of the Open Source Observatory and Repository, provides an overview of recent advancements and setbacks in the implementation of open source and open standards by public administrations in the 27 member states of the… Continue reading

Announcement: Let’s complete Anders’s project

Via Tino Rizzo: “Let’s complete Anders’s project” is a P2P contest aimed to complete Anders Simonsen’s research on mass culture, consumption, and decadence in post-socialist countries in Europe See: http://www.presstletter.com/articolo.asp?articolo=2044 This will be one of the first experiments in P2P media-art research. I hope you will be proud to take part on it and, therefore,… Continue reading

Charter of Knowledge Workers Rights

On May 1, 2009, Precario.org published the following Manifesto: “When knowledge, information and culture become commodities, then knowledge workers are doomed to sink into disownment, weakness and occupational blackmailing. Italy has declared war to intelligence. This concept was launched in France in the recent past: Intelligence has been sacrificed on the altar of market economy… Continue reading

From tactical media to counter-networks

Geert Lovink was invited to participate “to discuss the whereabouts of tactical media in the age of the financial meltdown“, through a Skype conference organized from Ljubljana. The description of the discussion would seem to indicate that the artivist communities are ready to engage in the more long term building of counter-networks that has been… Continue reading