Discussion:
[GNU/consensus] Call for Papers: Decentralizing the Commons
Samer
2015-12-13 19:29:07 UTC
Permalink
Dear all,

I think that the following call might be of interest to some members of the
list. Please, feel free to disseminate it (thanks!):



Call for Papers: Decentralizing the Commons

We are witnessing today a steady growth in the impact of user-generated
content and peer-production on the so-called sharing or collaborative
economy. These emergent practices are an indicator of radical changes in
the mode of production in an age of ‘prosumerism’, characterized by two
main trends. On the one hand, corporations such as Google, Uber or Facebook
are capturing the value created by the actors contributing to the
collaborative economy, in a way that has been described by some scholars as
an exploitation of free labour. On the other hand, projects such as
Wikipedia or GNU/Linux are emblematic of a new model of production that
relies on the contribution of many individuals collaborating to a
collective project that is not owned by any given entity but rather by the
community as a whole (Commons-Based Peer Production or CBPP). These
individuals organise themselves without relying on traditional
hierarchical and mercantile organisational structures, to produce a set of
commons resources which are made freely available to the public for use and
reuse. In the last few years, CBPP has expanded beyond the field of
software and encyclopedias to also cover the realms of information
(OpenStreetMap, Wikihow), hardware (FabLabs, Open Source Ecology),
accommodation (Couchsurfing, BeWelcome) and currency (Bitcoin, Altcoins).

The concept of decentralisation is a key requisite for the protection of
thesecommons — from their governance system, including the allocation of
power and functions in the organisation of labour; to the characteristics
of the socio-technical means of collaboration, in terms of both the
underlying technical infrastructure and the ownership structure of such
infrastructure. Despite the original design of the Internet as a
decentralized network, with the advent of the Web 2.0, centralized (and
often proprietary) platforms — typically driven by corporate interests —
have progressively taken over the web. These centralized choke-points can
be used by governments to increase surveillance (as disclosed by the
Snowden revelations), to blackout the Internet (e.g. Egypt, Syria, or San
Francisco’s BART), or to restrict the activities of activist organizations
(such as Wikileaks). It has now become clear that it is not enough to
develop free/libre/open source (FLOSS)alternatives, if we do not as well
endeavor to re-decentralize the Internet. Newdecentralized software tools
may ultimately be useful to support the operation and the long-term
sustainability of CBPP communities.

In view of this, we organised the second FLOSS4P2P workshop
<http://www.p2pvalue.eu/2nd-floss4p2p-workshop> (@Fablab London, supported
by P2Pvalue <http://p2pvalue.eu/>), gathering a wide spectrum of people
working ondecentralized FLOSS projects that could help or support the
activities of peer production communities. Given the success of the workshop
<http://p2pvalue.eu/floss4p2p-workshop-agenda>, we would like to prepare a
book in collaboration with the Institute of Network Cultures
<http://networkcultures.org/> (on the model of the former MoneyLab Reader
<http://networkcultures.org/blog/publication/moneylab-reader-an-intervention-in-digital-economy/>)
to explore the topic of decentralisation in thecommons sector.

We welcome proposals from academics, activists, researchers and
practitioners interested in exploring the topic from a wide set of
perspectives, ranging from computer science, engineering, sociology,
philosophy, organisational theory, cultural studies, digital studies, etc.
Contributions can cover a variety of topics, including tools for grassroots
communities, commons-based peer production, both online and offline wikis,
maker culture, activism, hacktivism, free culture, citizen science and
hospitality exchange. Contributions can take a variety of formats, e.g. a
story, a sci-fi tale, a comicstrip, a manifesto, a critical essay, an
interview, a study, a poem, a conversation, a debate, a combination of the
former
 we would like you to experiment and surprise us!

We invite you to submit an initial abstract (max. 750w; count each image as
200w, if any) explaining your idea by January 30, 2016. Examples of
possible topics are:


-

Dynamics of (de)centralization in CBPP communities
-

Decentralized software applications for online/offline communities
-

Decentralized solutions to tackle specific communities concerns
-

Guidelines for developers and/or researchers
-

Comparison of centralized/decentralized processes in CBPP (e.g.
decision-making, infrastructure ownership, value generation, value
distribution)
-

Practical experiences around centralized/decentralized structures (in
the form of stories, research, interview, etc.)


The more compelling ideas will be selected to be included in the book.

Please upload your contribution using the following Easychair link:

https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=floss4p2p

If you have further questions about the expected content, format, etc. do
not hesitate to let us know. We look forward to hearing about your ideas!


Primavera De Filippi

Samer Hassan
David Rozas
--
Samer | @sh3v3k <http://twitter.com/sh3v3k> | http://samer.hassan.name

"We are the ones we have been waiting for" (June Jordan)
Svetlina Dragova
2015-12-15 13:12:44 UTC
Permalink
Hi Samer,

Thanks for sharing this great initiative. Are you going to participate on the CCC conference in Hamburg between 27-30Dec this year?
I'd be happy to speak with you.

You could attend to this self-oranized session: https://events.ccc.de/congress/2015/wiki/Session:Bringing_free-as-in-freedom_to_social_networks:_what,_why,_and_how
and also organize your own session.

I want to ask you something - is it possible to have an internship in your organization via this program:
http://www.erasmus-entrepreneurs.eu/index.php
with ideas like this: https://decentralizedmodel.wordpress.com/2014/10/15/the-decentralization-roadmap/

Best Regards,
Svetlina


--------------------------------------------
On Sun, 12/13/15, Samer <***@fdi.ucm.es> wrote:

Subject: [GNU/consensus] Call for Papers: Decentralizing the Commons
To: ***@gnu.org
Date: Sunday, December 13, 2015, 9:29 PM

Dear
all,

I think that the
following call might be of interest to some members of the
list. Please, feel free to disseminate it
(thanks!):



Call
for Papers: Decentralizing the Commons
We
are witnessing today a steady growth in the impact of
user-generated content and peer-production on the so-called
sharing or collaborative economy. These emergent practices
are an indicator of radical changes in the mode of
production in an age of ‘prosumerism’, characterized by
two main trends. On the one hand, corporations such as
Google, Uber or Facebook are capturing the value created by
the actors contributing to the collaborative economy, in a
way that has been described by some scholars as an
exploitation of free labour. On the other hand, projects
such as Wikipedia or GNU/Linux are emblematic of a new model
of production that relies on the contribution of many
individuals collaborating to a collective project that is
not owned by any given entity but rather by the community as
a whole (Commons-Based
Peer Production or CBPP). These individuals organise
themselves  without relying on traditional hierarchical and
mercantile organisational structures, to produce a set
of commons resources
which are made freely available to the public for use and
reuse. In the last few years, CBPP has expanded beyond the
field of software and encyclopedias to also cover the realms
of  information (OpenStreetMap, Wikihow), hardware
(FabLabs, Open Source Ecology), accommodation (Couchsurfing,
BeWelcome) and currency (Bitcoin, Altcoins).
The
concept of decentralisation is a key
requisite for the protection of thesecommons — from their
governance system, including the allocation  of power and
functions in the organisation of labour; to the
characteristics of the socio-technical means  of
collaboration, in terms of both the underlying technical
infrastructure and the ownership structure of such
infrastructure. Despite the original design of the Internet
as a decentralized network, with
the advent of the Web 2.0, centralized
(and often proprietary) platforms — typically driven by
corporate interests —  have progressively taken over the
web.
These centralized choke-points can be used by governments to
increase surveillance (as disclosed by the Snowden
revelations), to blackout the Internet (e.g. Egypt, Syria,
or San Francisco’s BART), or to restrict the activities of
activist organizations (such as Wikileaks). It has now
become clear that it is not enough to develop
free/libre/open source (FLOSS)alternatives,
if we do not as well endeavor to re-decentralize the
Internet.
Newdecentralized software tools
may ultimately be useful to support the operation and the
long-term sustainability of CBPP communities.
In
view of this, we organised the second FLOSS4P2P
workshop (@Fablab
London, supported by P2Pvalue),
gathering a wide spectrum of people working ondecentralized FLOSS projects
that could help or support the activities of peer production
communities.
Given the success
of the workshop,
we would like to prepare a book in collaboration with
the Institute
of Network Cultures (on
the model of the former MoneyLab
Reader)
to explore the topic of decentralisation in thecommons sector.
We
welcome proposals from academics, activists, researchers and
practitioners interested in exploring the topic from a wide
set of perspectives, ranging  from computer science,
engineering, sociology, philosophy, organisational theory,
cultural studies, digital studies, etc. Contributions can
cover a variety of topics, including tools for grassroots
communities, commons-based peer production,
both online and offline wikis, maker culture, activism,
hacktivism, free culture, citizen science and hospitality
exchange. Contributions can take a variety of formats, e.g.
a story, a sci-fi tale, a comicstrip, a manifesto, a
critical essay, an interview, a study, a poem, a
conversation, a debate, a combination of the
former… we
would like you to experiment and surprise us!
We
invite you to submit
an initial abstract (max.
750w; count each image as 200w, if any) explaining your idea
by January
30, 2016.
Examples of possible topics are:
Dynamics
of (de)centralization in
CBPP communitiesDecentralized software
applications for online/offline
communitiesDecentralized solutions to
tackle specific communities concernsGuidelines
for developers and/or researchersComparison
of centralized/decentralized processes in
CBPP (e.g. decision-making, infrastructure ownership, value
generation, value distribution)Practical
experiences around centralized/decentralized structures (in
the form of stories, research, interview,
etc.)
The
more compelling ideas will be selected to be included in the
book.
Please upload
your contribution using the following Easychair
link:https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=floss4p2p
If
you have further questions about the expected content,
format, etc. do not hesitate to let us know. We look forward
to hearing about your ideas!

Primavera De FilippiSamer
HassanDavid
Rozas

-- 
Samer | @sh3v3k | http://samer.hassan.name
"We are the ones we have been waiting
for" (June
Jordan)
Samer
2015-12-15 18:17:19 UTC
Permalink
Hey Svetlina,
Post by Svetlina Dragova
Thanks for sharing this great initiative.
Glad you are interested!
Post by Svetlina Dragova
Are you going to participate on the CCC conference in Hamburg between
27-30Dec this year?
I'd be happy to speak with you.
I'm sorry, I won't be in CCC this year. I'm now in Madrid and from February
I'll be in Boston.
Post by Svetlina Dragova
https://events.ccc.de/congress/2015/wiki/Session:Bringing_free-as-in-freedom_to_social_networks:_what,_why,_and_how
and also organize your own session.
I want to ask you something - is it possible to have an internship in your
http://www.erasmus-entrepreneurs.eu/index.php
https://decentralizedmodel.wordpress.com/2014/10/15/the-decentralization-roadmap/
My organization is a nonprofit public university, and I'm afraid that
program is just for enterprises.

Cheers!

--------------------------------------------
Post by Svetlina Dragova
Subject: [GNU/consensus] Call for Papers: Decentralizing the Commons
Date: Sunday, December 13, 2015, 9:29 PM
Dear
all,
I think that the
following call might be of interest to some members of the
list. Please, feel free to disseminate it
Call
for Papers: Decentralizing the Commons
We
are witnessing today a steady growth in the impact of
user-generated content and peer-production on the so-called
sharing or collaborative economy. These emergent practices
are an indicator of radical changes in the mode of
production in an age of ‘prosumerism’, characterized by
two main trends. On the one hand, corporations such as
Google, Uber or Facebook are capturing the value created by
the actors contributing to the collaborative economy, in a
way that has been described by some scholars as an
exploitation of free labour. On the other hand, projects
such as Wikipedia or GNU/Linux are emblematic of a new model
of production that relies on the contribution of many
individuals collaborating to a collective project that is
not owned by any given entity but rather by the community as
a whole (Commons-Based
Peer Production or CBPP). These individuals organise
themselves without relying on traditional hierarchical and
mercantile organisational structures, to produce a set
of commons resources
which are made freely available to the public for use and
reuse. In the last few years, CBPP has expanded beyond the
field of software and encyclopedias to also cover the realms
of information (OpenStreetMap, Wikihow), hardware
(FabLabs, Open Source Ecology), accommodation (Couchsurfing,
BeWelcome) and currency (Bitcoin, Altcoins).
The
concept of decentralisation is a key
requisite for the protection of thesecommons — from their
governance system, including the allocation of power and
functions in the organisation of labour; to the
characteristics of the socio-technical means of
collaboration, in terms of both the underlying technical
infrastructure and the ownership structure of such
infrastructure. Despite the original design of the Internet
as a decentralized network, with
the advent of the Web 2.0, centralized
(and often proprietary) platforms — typically driven by
corporate interests — have progressively taken over the
web.
These centralized choke-points can be used by governments to
increase surveillance (as disclosed by the Snowden
revelations), to blackout the Internet (e.g. Egypt, Syria,
or San Francisco’s BART), or to restrict the activities of
activist organizations (such as Wikileaks). It has now
become clear that it is not enough to develop
free/libre/open source (FLOSS)alternatives,
if we do not as well endeavor to re-decentralize the
Internet.
Newdecentralized software tools
may ultimately be useful to support the operation and the
long-term sustainability of CBPP communities.
In
view of this, we organised the second FLOSS4P2P
London, supported by P2Pvalue),
gathering a wide spectrum of people working ondecentralized FLOSS projects
that could help or support the activities of peer production
communities.
Given the success
of the workshop,
we would like to prepare a book in collaboration with
the Institute
of Network Cultures (on
the model of the former MoneyLab
Reader)
to explore the topic of decentralisation in thecommons sector.
We
welcome proposals from academics, activists, researchers and
practitioners interested in exploring the topic from a wide
set of perspectives, ranging from computer science,
engineering, sociology, philosophy, organisational theory,
cultural studies, digital studies, etc. Contributions can
cover a variety of topics, including tools for grassroots
communities, commons-based peer production,
both online and offline wikis, maker culture, activism,
hacktivism, free culture, citizen science and hospitality
exchange. Contributions can take a variety of formats, e.g.
a story, a sci-fi tale, a comicstrip, a manifesto, a
critical essay, an interview, a study, a poem, a
conversation, a debate, a combination of the
former
 we
would like you to experiment and surprise us!
We
invite you to submit
an initial abstract (max.
750w; count each image as 200w, if any) explaining your idea
by January
30, 2016.
Dynamics
of (de)centralization in
CBPP communitiesDecentralized software
applications for online/offline
communitiesDecentralized solutions to
tackle specific communities concernsGuidelines
for developers and/or researchersComparison
of centralized/decentralized processes in
CBPP (e.g. decision-making, infrastructure ownership, value
generation, value distribution)Practical
experiences around centralized/decentralized structures (in
the form of stories, research, interview,
etc.)
The
more compelling ideas will be selected to be included in the
book.
Please upload
your contribution using the following Easychair
link:https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=floss4p2p
If
you have further questions about the expected content,
format, etc. do not hesitate to let us know. We look forward
to hearing about your ideas!
Primavera De FilippiSamer
HassanDavid
Rozas
--
"We are the ones we have been waiting
for" (June
Jordan)
--
Samer | @sh3v3k <http://twitter.com/sh3v3k> | http://samer.hassan.name

"We are the ones we have been waiting for" (June Jordan)
Svetlina Dragova
2015-12-15 19:42:37 UTC
Permalink
Thanks for your quick reply!

The program is applicable for NGOs as well.

BR,
Svetlina

--------------------------------------------
On Tue, 12/15/15, Samer <***@fdi.ucm.es> wrote:

Subject: Re: [GNU/consensus] Call for Papers: Decentralizing the Commons
To: "Svetlina Dragova" <***@yahoo.com>
Cc: ***@gnu.org
Date: Tuesday, December 15, 2015, 8:17 PM

Hey
Svetlina,
 Thanks
for sharing this great initiative.
Glad you are
interested! Are you
going to participate on the CCC conference in Hamburg
between 27-30Dec this year?

I'd be happy to speak with you.

I'm sorry, I won't be in CCC
this year. I'm now in Madrid and from February I'll
be in Boston.  You could
attend to this self-oranized session: https://events.ccc.de/congress/2015/wiki/Session:Bringing_free-as-in-freedom_to_social_networks:_what,_why,_and_how

and also organize your own session.



I want to ask you something - is it possible to have an
internship in your organization via this program:

http://www.erasmus-entrepreneurs.eu/index.php

with ideas like this: https://decentralizedmodel.wordpress.com/2014/10/15/the-decentralization-roadmap/
My organization is a nonprofit
public university, and I'm afraid that program is just
for
enterprises.  Cheers!

--------------------------------------------

On Sun, 12/13/15, Samer <***@fdi.ucm.es>
wrote:



 Subject: [GNU/consensus] Call for Papers: Decentralizing
the Commons

 To: ***@gnu.org

 Date: Sunday, December 13, 2015, 9:29 PM



 Dear

 all,



 I think that the

 following call might be of interest to some members of
the

 list. Please, feel free to disseminate it

 (thanks!):







 Call

 for Papers: Decentralizing the Commons

 We

 are witnessing today a steady growth in the impact of

 user-generated content and peer-production on the
so-called

 sharing or collaborative economy. These emergent
practices

 are an indicator of radical changes in the mode of

 production in an age of ‘prosumerism’, characterized
by

 two main trends. On the one hand, corporations such as

 Google, Uber or Facebook are capturing the value created
by

 the actors contributing to the collaborative economy, in
a

 way that has been described by some scholars as an

 exploitation of free labour. On the other hand,
projects

 such as Wikipedia or GNU/Linux are emblematic of a new
model

 of production that relies on the contribution of many

 individuals collaborating to a collective project that
is

 not owned by any given entity but rather by the community
as

 a whole (Commons-Based

 Peer Production or CBPP). These individuals organise

 themselves  without relying on traditional hierarchical
and

 mercantile organisational structures, to produce a set

 of commons resources

 which are made freely available to the public for use
and

 reuse. In the last few years, CBPP has expanded beyond
the

 field of software and encyclopedias to also cover the
realms

 of  information (OpenStreetMap, Wikihow), hardware

 (FabLabs, Open Source Ecology), accommodation
(Couchsurfing,

 BeWelcome) and currency (Bitcoin, Altcoins).

 The

 concept of decentralisation is a key

 requisite for the protection of thesecommons — from
their

 governance system, including the allocation  of power
and

 functions in the organisation of labour; to the

 characteristics of the socio-technical means  of

 collaboration, in terms of both the underlying
technical

 infrastructure and the ownership structure of such

 infrastructure. Despite the original design of the
Internet

 as a decentralized network, with

 the advent of the Web 2.0, centralized

 (and often proprietary) platforms — typically driven
by

 corporate interests —  have progressively taken over
the

 web.

 These centralized choke-points can be used by governments
to

 increase surveillance (as disclosed by the Snowden

 revelations), to blackout the Internet (e.g. Egypt,
Syria,

 or San Francisco’s BART), or to restrict the activities
of

 activist organizations (such as Wikileaks). It has now

 become clear that it is not enough to develop

 free/libre/open source (FLOSS)alternatives,

 if we do not as well endeavor to re-decentralize the

 Internet.

 Newdecentralized software tools

 may ultimately be useful to support the operation and
the

 long-term sustainability of CBPP communities.

 In

 view of this, we organised the second FLOSS4P2P

 workshop (@Fablab

 London, supported by P2Pvalue),

 gathering a wide spectrum of people working
ondecentralized FLOSS projects

 that could help or support the activities of peer
production

 communities.

 Given the success

 of the workshop,

 we would like to prepare a book in collaboration with

 the Institute

 of Network Cultures (on

 the model of the former MoneyLab

 Reader)

 to explore the topic of decentralisation in
thecommons sector.

 We

 welcome proposals from academics, activists, researchers
and

 practitioners interested in exploring the topic from a
wide

 set of perspectives, ranging  from computer science,

 engineering, sociology, philosophy, organisational
theory,

 cultural studies, digital studies, etc. Contributions
can

 cover a variety of topics, including tools for
grassroots

 communities, commons-based peer production,

 both online and offline wikis, maker culture, activism,

 hacktivism, free culture, citizen science and
hospitality

 exchange. Contributions can take a variety of formats,
e.g.

 a story, a sci-fi tale, a comicstrip, a manifesto, a

 critical essay, an interview, a study, a poem, a

 conversation, a debate, a combination of the

 former… we

 would like you to experiment and surprise us!

 We

 invite you to submit

 an initial abstract (max.

 750w; count each image as 200w, if any) explaining your
idea

 by January

 30, 2016.

 Examples of possible topics are:

 Dynamics

 of (de)centralization in

 CBPP communitiesDecentralized software

 applications for online/offline

 communitiesDecentralized solutions to

 tackle specific communities
concernsGuidelines

 for developers and/or researchersComparison

 of centralized/decentralized processes in

 CBPP (e.g. decision-making, infrastructure ownership,
value

 generation, value distribution)Practical

 experiences around centralized/decentralized structures
(in

 the form of stories, research, interview,

 etc.)

 The

 more compelling ideas will be selected to be included in
the

 book.

 Please upload

 your contribution using the following Easychair

 link:https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=floss4p2p

 If

 you have further questions about the expected content,

 format, etc. do not hesitate to let us know. We look
forward

 to hearing about your ideas!



 Primavera De FilippiSamer

 HassanDavid

 Rozas



 -- 

 Samer | @sh3v3k | http://samer.hassan.name

 "We are the ones we have been waiting

 for" (June

 Jordan)




--

Samer | @sh3v3k | http://samer.hassan.name
"We are the ones we have been
waiting for" (June Jordan)

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