Amy Alexander on Tue, 7 Aug 2001 13:39:25 -0700 (PDT) |
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Syndicate: Re: The Multi-Missions of Syndicate (was [ot] [!nt] \n2+0\) |
On Tue, 7 Aug 2001, Igor wrote: > If I remember correctly (it's > questionable, naturally) the list was created to 'serve' for two purposes. > The first one was creation of informational place/space for exchange of > announcements, reports, info on what happens; and the second one was to > create a space/place for dialogues focused on the specific > needs/theories/practices of CEE/East Europe/Whatever art practitioners and > theoreticians. I am not a sociologist, and certainly will not made huge > analysis, but I will dare to say that the first idea is merely reduced to > announcements (with few exceptions), and the second one resting in peace. If > we compare syndicate with the nettime (one of the models for the initial > group back in the '96), result is ruinous. i'm glad you brought this up, because i've been wondering this myself, as a mostly-lurking subscriber on this list. maybe some discussion/clarification would help, if there are others thinking about the same questions... what i've been wondering is - primarily in terms of the first purpose you mention of the list: how does/should syndicate differ from nettime? it seems to me that discussion threads on syndicate do arise with respect to eastern european political issues, and on that front, the discussions on syndicate seem more personal than on nettime and with more interaction - so there i do see the difference between the lists. however, with regard to other sorts of topics, e.g. art, cyberpolitics/culture etc., there seem to be announcements but very little in terms of discussion threads going on. (except for the self-fulfilling "too much attention to NN" threads - dang, it's like trying not to scratch a rash, isn't it? ;-) ) so anyway, sometimes when i have something to post i wonder, "if i post this on both syndicate and nettime am i being redundant or (unintentionally) offtopic?" so usually these days i'll post discussion-type posts more to nettime than syndicate, not because i like nettime better, but because i'm less sure what fits in on syndicate and don't want to be redundant by attempting to start threads on both lists. (of course i realize that moderation is a big difference between the two lists also.) but i remember a couple years ago thinking that nettime lacked discussion threads too - it seemed to be postings of essays and articles to which nobody ever responded. then somehow, that seemed to change, and discussion threads emerged, but i'm not sure how. so maybe we can clarify/discuss all that some? meanwhile, to do my part and add some content to this otherwise "meta" post: <content> 1) dmitry skylarov is now out of US prison on $50,000 bail awaiting trial. however, he is not allowed to leave northern california, and still faces prison if convicted of writing software at his job in russia: software which is legal in russia. for anyone who isn't familiar with the story, this bust comes to dmitry courtesy of Adobe corp, under the amazingly ludicrous US legislation DMCA, which is now being used as a model for "anti-hacker" legislation all over the world. http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=01/08/06/1941228&mode=thread 2) this one may not have as many implications outside the US (i hope), but has had less press, so for those who missed it: David McOwen faces 15 years in prison and $415,000 in fines for participating in a distributed computing project (sort of like seti@home but different) on machines he administered at his job at a public college in Georgia. essentially, the state of Georgia is trying to bill him for time they spent working on prosecuting the case - a shamelessly overt case of for-profit law enforcemnt. http://slashdot.org/yro/01/07/08/2153206.shtml 3) the US government, in partnership with microsoft, overhyped the heck out of the "code red" worm. http://www.time.com/time/columnist/taylor/article/0,9565,169678,00.html (to be fair, above link is probably an overreaction in the other direction, but... ) http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=01/08/03/1211229&mode=thread 4) look for the US federal and state governments, and probably the local government of wherever you live, to push through even more orwellian anti-cybercrime legislation in the very near future, in the name of stopping all these nasty hacker folks like skylarov, mcowen, and [your name here?] </content> feel free to start a discussion on any of the above. :-) ciao for now, -@ -- plagiarist.org Recontextualizing script-kiddyism as net-art for over 1/20 of a century. -----Syndicate mailinglist-------------------- Syndicate network for media culture and media art information and archive: http://www.v2.nl/syndicate to post to the Syndicate list: <syndicate@eg-r.isp-eg.de> to unsubscribe, write to <majordomo@eg-r.isp-eg.de>, in the body of the msg: unsubscribe syndicate your@email.adress