t byfield on Sun, 28 Sep 2003 00:21:53 +0200 (CEST) |
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Re: <nettime> Request to Nettime to be part of DISTRIBUTED CREATIVITY online forum with Eyebeam |
areflagan@transcodex.net (Sat 09/27/03 at 01:01 PM +0200): > > So, please tell me if Nettime is interested in this for one week in > > November/December. > Who would actually decide and how, on what grounds, would they -- or she or > he -- decide? Or will this be the first (?) vote in nettimeocracy? Or will > it be polled on the basis of yeah or nay from the focus group of whoever > opines on the subject? Or will the gateway moderators ultimately weigh in to > speak for and on behalf of the subscribers? Or will the founding fathers > invoke their constitution to join this proposed union? Your presumptions > voiced in the one sentence above raise many questions about the nature of > community, about distribution versus hierarchy and, even, creativity. backstory: beth sent me an invitation for nettime to participate, under the reasonable assumption that nettime is more or less like other organ- izations 'in this space,' as they say: an entity that, if not legally then at least logically, is corporate -- with a head or group of heads capable of making decisions for the whole. my response was that if eye- beam wanted to invite me and state that i'm one of nettime's moderators, that'd be fine because it's a mere statement of fact; but neither i nor any (or all) of the mods could make any executive decision on behalf of nettime beyond deferring to nettimers themselves. thus, if eyebeam's goal was to invite nettime, then they'd have to ask nettime. she was a bit perplexed by this, and not because she didn't 'get it'; on the contrary, she did get it -- and recognized how quizzical it was to make a request of a group of people that's defined by some collective activity yet has no defined mechanism for acting as a corporate entity. who do you ask? all of them. what if some say yes, some say maybe, and some say no? well, that's what it is. (i'm not literally recounting our conversation.) lest it sound like i'm making nettime out to be some utopian TAZ that 'just works' with the imaginary frictionlessness of the 'markets' or the blogawful's 'the conversation' or whatever -- it certainly isn't any such thing -- i did stake out some basic territorial issues. for example, one concern was that, if 'nettime' somehow agreed to participate, there was a risk that it could be (seen as having been) temporarily 'hijacked' as an eyebeam communications channel. over time we've adopted some pretty flexible ways of negotiating the variable tension between being ~focus- less, on the one hand, and ephemeral focuses, on the other: mutably named digests that tacitly steer away from 'threadlock,' open, ad-hoc pseudonyms (like the roving_reporter), *ograms (ivograms, etc), the new, autonomous nettime-ann announcer list, and so on. so, i said, it might make sense to digest the eyebeam cross-traffic, either from the very beginning or on an ad-hoc basis. so, to answer your question, yes, a 'gateway moderator' already did (but not 'ultimately') weigh in to speak for -- but not on behalf of -- the subscribers; but to say, in the main, 'ask them.' as to the 'founding fathers,' i don't know, except it seems that nettime has evolved a con- stitution closer to the british model than the american paper-fetishist model. the downside is, of course, that it relies on a kind of benign de- spotism -- though benign janitorialism would be more accurate. the (bleh) 'upside' is that the paranoiac fears of control expressed so vigorously by critics of moderation several years ago seem -- i'm biased, of course (duh) -- to have said more about the limits of their imagination than any real threat. what went largely unspoken when the 'mod wars' dominated the list was the context, which was a trend (e.g., among amsterdam net.lumin- aries) to 'privatize' purportedly 'public' forums in the service of, for example, careerism. i suppose it's debatable whether the 'nettime project' has in fact 'transgressed into an ordinary majordomo mailinglist,' though i'd be more inclined to debate the 'transgressed' bit. but there was never any guarantee that those critics who so zealously spoke 'on behalf of' nettimers wouldn't have continued to do so -- and turned it into an entity with a for-sale sign hung around its neck like a stuf^W i mean *archived* albatross. as things stand, it can't be sold: the buyer would have to make the check out to 'nettime,' which in a very real sense doesn't even exist. cheers, t # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net