[Air-L] Self-determined publics
Jack Harris
jackharris999 at gmail.com
Wed Jul 31 04:40:11 PDT 2013
The Occupy movement, especially OccupySandy meets your broad definition.
On Jul 31, 2013 7:24 AM, "Michael Allan" <mike at zelea.com> wrote:
Hi folks, a request for pointers,
Below I define what I call "self-determined publics". Has anything
similar been attempted before?
A self-determined public is an open community that stakes out the
definitive bounds of its own communications. The boundary stakes
are formed as a timely sequence of references (e.g. web links) each
pointing to a communication of the public, such that all references
together define the total of that public's communications in time
and space. For example:
Ago Place Title (click to visit thread)
------- --------- ------------------------------------------
17 min r/Foo How do we attach the doohickey?
5 hr Foo-L The problem with so and so's proposal.
1 day FuBarz Who are these Foos, anyway?
1 day r/Foo This, that, and the next thing.
2 days FooStack What's the best thingamy for such and such?
. . . and so on
The staked boundary is similar in form to a conventional news feed.
It concerns a specific topic, or style, or other quality of
communication. The differences are in a) the exclusion of mass
communications, b) the claim to totality, and c) the self-determin-
ation that redeems that claim. (a) A principle criterion for the
inclusion of a boundary reference is that one may immediately join
the referenced communication and reply in kind, as a peer.
Unidirectional, mass communications are excluded.
(b) The staked boundary is asserted to cover the entire public
discussion of the topic across all communication media and sites;
or the entire public dialogue in the style of the community; and so
forth. It claims to be the most complete, accurate and up-to-date
outline of the extended dialogue that is available anywhere.
(c) This claim is redeemed by the public members themselves who
continually submit the boundary references, self-organize the
necessary labour, and self-constitute the necessary government.
No aspect of this redeeming self-determination is limited by an
external authority, not even by the authority of their own, past
decisions.
I'm looking for brief pointers, please. I don't know of any actual
implementations of this, or projects that are working on it. I'll
share what's found with the list. Pointers so far: Heather Marsh
(Concentric groups, knowledge bridges and epistemic communities);
Chris Kelty (Two bits, recursive publics); Anthony Cohen (Symbolic
construction of community); and Sebastian Benthall (Weird Twitter).
https://mailman.stanford.edu/pipermail/liberationtech/2013-July/thread.html#10399
Apologies if you received this message twice,
--
Michael Allan
Toronto, +1 416-699-9528
http://zelea.com/
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