Felix Stalder via Nettime-tmp on Sat, 27 May 2023 18:03:28 +0200 (CEST)


[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]

Re: <nettime> process reporting?


I totally agree with Ted here (not very surprising but still worth stating).

The question is, as Florian put it, conceptual: that is, a particular configuration of technical and social, arranged for becoming and evolution of a shared idea.

All three elements need to come together: people, technology and a shared idea.

So, who are the people who are willing to care nettime-l?

What is their idea for nettime-l? Ideally, something they are interest-in in the long-term and something other nettimers are interested in as well. It could well be, keep it as it is.

And, then, what is the technical infrastructure accessible to them and adequate to the idea?

These dimensions are naturally connected and, given that nettime is run entirely on goodwill, requires social trust and a culture of collaboration.

Half a year ago, some of us looked at these issues and decided to test out a new idea, a new technical infrastructure (mastodon/hometown) and a somewhat different, though overlapping group of people have become interested in this since. Will it survive in the long term? We will see.

tldr.nettime.org is not a new, or better nettime-l, but something different. But it still leaves the question: What do you want nettime-l to be now?

Felix






On 27.05.23 17:21, Ted Byfield wrote:
Hi, all —

First: MANY thanks to Kein for many years of supporting the list (as
well as such else besides), and apologies for the shorthand
description of the conceptual and technical problems surrounding this
list. Personally, I like to keep expressions like thanks and
apologies as clear as possible — unencumbered with "ifs" or "ands,"
and not bundled together — but that didn't happen in this case.
Nettime, and many other projects, have always depended on the
non-obvious care and long-term commitment of people like Florian;
those efforts should be acknowledged as such. Maybe putting it
personally is best: it's a very rare privilege — really one of the
great rewards of my life — to have worked with people like Felix and
Florian over such a sustained period. That's better.

It's important to note that Felix and I decided to move the nettime-l
not just for "technical" (or, as Florian rightly says, *conceptual*)
reasons related to mail delivery. Over the years, nettime — which
includes several lists, domains, etc — has had many homes, *all* of
them thanks to the generosity of others, always on the basis of
personal friendships. So handing this list over to others isn't just
technical or conceptual, it's above all *social*. Felix and I believe
that whoever takes over the list should bring their own
infrastructure, for a number of reasons.

At a minimum, the list will be stronger when everyone involved in
supporting it, visibly and invisibly, has made that commitment in an
active and coordinated way. But, more maximally, I think it's clear
that the list needs some kind of renewal — more expansive thinking
about ways to include new contexts, make it more responsive, find new
urgencies. There's a good chance that more expansive  ideas about
nettime will need more than just reliable mailing-list support.

All this noise about DNS, Google, Mailman configs, etc matters; but
it's also a sign that the days of open, unmoderated mailing lists are
coming to an end. So: whither nettime?

As Felix noted, we don't really have a positive "process" for this,
and we don't need one, imo. What we do have — I hope — is the
collective trust, accrued over 25 years, that we'll handle this
transition as well as we can, as we always have. But, really, the
focus shouldn't be on us or our non/process, it should be on YOU
ALL.

Here's the challenge: If you care about nettime(-l?) and want it to
continue, you should think of it as an active project, not as a
passive service. Talk amongst yourselves and come up with ideas that
*you* can and will make happen. Not the quasi-monarchic "let's do X"
or "we should do Y," which invariably mean someone else will be doing
the doing. I mean something that you and a team of others will commit
to supporting, nurturing, and imaging in the long term.

It seems inevitable that someone will ask well, what about Menno's
proposal? I'd prefer that Felix and I don't critique proposals in
public, but in this case it seems like an exception is OK. As I said
several says ago, I *know* "that two of the people named for a
moderation team never agreed to any such thing." I don't want to
elevate that to the level of some ad-hoc principle, but it seems
reasonable to say that *voluntelling* unwitting third parties isn't,
let's say, a "best practice."

But let's shift the focus from what shouldn't be to what *could* be.

Cheers, Ted

On 27 May 2023, at 5:50, Felix Stalder via Nettime-tmp wrote:

hi everyone,

On 26.05.23 16:53, John Hopkins via Nettime-tmp wrote:
Will we hear anything more about the processes that are perhaps
going on in the background? This may be a task for the new
moderators, to let subscribers know what's going on ...

there isn't really a process at this point. So let's try to
establish one.

* We had to move nettime away from kein.org, after being generously
supported by kein.org and Florian Schneider in particular for an
extremely long time, because Google blocked kein in nasty ways and
we couldn't fix it easily. Email is a pain these days and Google
regards spoofing headers (which is, technically, what mailman does)
as spam by default. If you happen to one of the blocked accounts,
you can read here what you were missing:

https://nettime.org/Lists-Archives/nettime-l-2305/threads.html


* tl'dr version: We (Ted Byfield and myself) announced that after
15 years, we were longer willing to maintain the list and would
either hand it over to people who can do the technical task of
hosting and social task of janitoring (nettime hasn't been
moderated for subscribers for many years, but still needs care), or
close down the list.

* There seems to be a consensus that the list still holds value
(which I share) so closing it seems not the best option.

* A few people came forward to say that, in very general terms,
they (or others!) would be contribute, but that hasn't coalesced
into anything concrete.

* As far as I can tell, the most concrete offer came from The Waag
for hosting the list and the web-archive. But maybe Henk can say
something about this?

* Thanks to the support of Luka Frelih, we are now hosted by
Ljudmila which couldn't be better.

* But as the name of the list indicates, this is only a temporary
solution. While Luka hasn't imposed a deadline, I will: end of
June.

* So, we have about one month to find a new technical
infrastructure for the list (2000 subscribers as of now) and the
webarchive (mid 1990s MHonArc), and a new team of janitors. Both
aspects, the technical and the social, are not very difficult or
onerous, but they require continuous attention and long-term care.
I'm happy to elaborate what that meant so far, if somebody cares.

So, let's get this done and let's do it on the list.

--
| |||||||||||||||| http://felix.openflows.com |
| for secure communication, please use signal |
#  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: https://mail.ljudmila.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-tmp
#  archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org
#  @nettime_bot tweets mail w/ sender unless #ANON is in Subject: