Where are we looking? A Possible Path for Repoliticizing Technologyhttps://mayfirst.coop/files/where-are-we-looking.pdfI am currently reading through
Governable Spaces: Democratic Design for Online Life by Nathan Schneider. It's about his thoughts on how most online spaces are the 'digital fiefdoms' of their owners and how communities can instead utilize technology to democratically govern in a way that's representative of the community. In the specific portion I'm reading, he basically argues that you can't have that if you're using platforms and technology that have been designed based on top-down or corporate control. Earlier in the book, he gives a brief history of how this came to be, starting with BBSes in the 70s and 80s that were hosted on computers that physically sit in the host's home at a time when hosts were also legally responsible for the content their users posted. Based on those considerations the systems were designed so that the host had full control, which they could delegate portions of to other people to assist them.
He mentions a virtual cooperative that he's a part of called
May First Movement Technology. I've been fascinated with this community model for some time now...it's basically a system where people invest themselves into the cooperative in some way (in this case it's paying $50/year membership dues, but in other cases it may be made up of people who work on a project, people who live together, etc.) and in exchange they get a say in how the organization is ran, including the group of people who are in charge (in this case a board elected by its members, although some decisions require direct approval of members too). In this case, they also get the opportunity to be involved with like-minded people (technologists who lead, are involved with, or support social justice movements) and to serve in advancing the organization and its causes by joining committees. For an additional charge, members can also use cooperative-owned website hosting.
That is where in turn I found this document, which is an English translation that was originally posted in Spanish, which further discusses some of these issues. It contains a number of links that I haven't had a chance to check out yet (it's taking a while to get through this book because it references other things, which references other things, which references other things...I can already see this is a space that's abundant in substance), but it raises questions of what sort of technology and practices would best allow for democratic, bottom-up community governance. It references how May First declared itself an Apartheid Free Zone through the bottom-up efforts of its members, then closes by restating the need for the technologies we use to reflect the communities they inhabit (in this case, to be "places of bonding, affection, and resistance" through technologies that "bet on the reproduction of life").
Wintermoot's ThoughtsLike I said earlier, I've become fascinated with the cooperative model...I think partly because it's based on people coming together and
investing themselves into something. I think social media and a lot of modern websites train people to passively consume rather than become involved...at best people just respond to things. I think that's one reason why new and younger people struggle with NationStates when they join. They're used to consuming content on websites, and once they've consumed the issues, the WA, the dispatches, etc they're like "that's it?", when the truly rich experience comes from becoming involved with a regional community.
Don't worry, I'm not about to suggest that Citizens start paying membership dues lol. But I think even the current discussion on requiring Citizens to make a single post during some timeframe to maintain Citizenship is a recognition that ultimately members who aren't involved are just members on paper. I don't necessarily think the cooperative model is appropriate for Wintreath...I think here that model would disadvantage people who don't have the time or interest to be involved in governance, which I would wager is a majority of our community. But there is something appealing in this day and age of people coming together and investing themselves to build something that's greater than any one person (as opposed to traditional models where everything revolves around its owner, root admin, CEO, etc.)
One of the revelations I had recently when reading
The Quiet Damage: QAnon and the Destruction of the American Family is that everybody wants to be a soldier in some cause...to invest themselves in, advocate for, and fight for...to have a purpose beyond themselves. It's one of the ways movements like QAnon further entrap people by meeting this deep emotional need. In some way, everyone wants to invest themselves in something, but I believe many people don't know how to do that given that they've been trained by social media to consume rather than to become involved. I suspect the cooperative model may be a healthier way to meet those needs online, too.