Douglas Schuler on Sat, 5 Jun 2010 10:54:36 +0200 (CEST) |
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Re: <nettime> [iDC] A movement of unemployed teachers |
The film about the movement in Oaxaca, Mexico, Un Poquito de Tana Verdad tells the story about a similar movement in Mexico. http://www.corrugate.org/un_poquito_de_tanta_verdad/un_poquito_de_tanta_verdad It's a pretty amazing documentary. -- Doug On Jun 3, 2010, at 11:25 AM, micha cárdenas wrote: > Again I'm not sorry for my genuine rage, but this is all compounded by > the collapse of the educational system where so many of us are being > presented with our expulsion from academia. We need a Movement of > Unemployed Teachers like the unemployed workers movement in Argentina > (if any hope of a movement is still possible, or which may be possible > again now that we all have os much time on our hands). Just in sheer > numbers, so many of us are being laid off, having tenure threatened, > watching adjunct jobs disappear, that we must have the combined energy > to DO SOMETHING in response... The coming insurrection sounds more and > more like sweet music that makes so much sense as we're all told that > we have no futures left... > > > 2010/6/3 micha cárdenas <azdelslade@gmail.com>: >> As I walk around campus today, I have the urge to peaches' I DONT >> GIVE >> A FUCK song, because I'm so pissed about losing aaaarg.org. This is >> TOO MUCH. When will we all finally reach our limit? It is my hope >> that >> a million aaaarg mirrors will spring up... >> >> Of course a lot of us have been brewing these dreams of escaping >> social networks for a long time... >> (http://bang.calit2.net/tts/category/facebook/) but it seems that now >> we need to organize, we need a distributed strategy, to both help >> efforts to develop new autonomous networks like elgg, identi.ca, >> opensim and diaspora, but also to infiltrate and disrupt networks >> like >> facebook, twitter and second life. In fact, second life is a perfect >> case study of the horror of what these network owners imagine, a >> whole >> world where everything you own, everything that is you, every bit of >> your body and identity resides on their servers, and everyday new >> Linden Labs licensing restrictions come out to legally bind people >> into the system and prevent escape at all turns. >> >> Personally, I've been invested for quite a while in trying to develop >> new networks, including networks such as radical porn sites, just one >> example of the parts of ourselves and our lives that are excluded and >> stripped from us in these corporate spaces. Actually my book calling >> for the development of new autonomous networks stemming out of the >> demand for the ability to change my identity constantly and at will >> just came out (http://www.amazon.com/Trans-Desire-Affective-Cyborgs-C%C3%A1rdenas/dp/0982530994/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1275588562&sr=8-1 >> ). >> >> Still, even as we need to develop our own networks and software, we >> also have to move to developing our own infrastructure >> (http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2009/06/22/18603456.php)! We can no >> longer rely on phone companies to provide our connections to each >> other! We need to be in control of the very hardware itself, and we >> all have routers in our homes that we can switch for just this >> purpose! >> >> As the case of ricardo dominguez and the bang.lab shows, university >> networks are no longer any haven for free thought and radical >> experimentation, we need to seriously dedicate our own resources and >> lives to these struggles before WIPO controls all of our daily >> interactions... >> >> Sorry for the rant, I just can't take it anymore... >> >> >> >> 2010/5/28 Sean Dockray <sean@e-rat.org>: >>> >>> i'm not sure if I'm doing this (sending a message to the list in >>> response to Geert) right, but here goes nothing. >>> there's a few too many question marks and exclamation points and >>> strident claims, but the form got the better of me. >>> sean >>> >>> -- >>> FACEBOOK SUICIDE (BOMB) MANIFESTO >>> >>> Everyone now wants to know how to remove themselves from social >>> networks. It has become absolutely clear that our relationships to >>> others are mere points in the aggregation of marketing data. >>> Political >>> campaigns, the sale of commodities, the promotion of entertainment – >>> this is the outcome of our expression of likes and affinities. And >>> at >>> what cost? The reward is obvious: we no longer have to tolerate >>> advertisements for things for which we have no interest. Instead our >>> social relations are saturated with public relations. But at least >>> it >>> is all *interesting*! >>> >>> Unlike the old days, when we could invent online identities daily, >>> our >>> social networks today require fidelity between our physical self and >>> our online self. The situation is unbearable. >>> >>> The frightening consequence of it all is that we believe in the >>> value >>> of these networks. We understand perfectly well that our privacy is >>> being renegotiated without our consent; the rules are changing in >>> plain view; but we still participate! It is like a new form of >>> money, >>> something we realize is a myth, but we act like it is real and >>> that is >>> its power. We can’t leave because everyone else is there! Or because >>> we are invested in the myth ourselves. >>> >>> The question is how do we extract ourselves from this predicament? >>> >>> Recently, some programmers figured out how to computationally do >>> exactly this. By entering in your username and password, the >>> software >>> would delete as much information as possible, ultimately removing >>> the >>> account itself. It was a radical enough idea to attract the legal >>> attention of Facebook. >>> >>> This software did not go far enough! >>> >>> When someone disappears from Facebook, does anyone notice? Does this >>> software retroactively invalidate all of the marketing data that has >>> been collected from the account? Has this person de-dividuated >>> themselves? No, silence has not disrupted the system in the >>> slightest! >>> >>> Social networks need a social suicide. In the same way that >>> 99.99999% >>> of users on Facebook don’t exist within the cloistered world of >>> one’s >>> home page, an invisible user – one who has committed suicide – is >>> simply a non-factor in the constant and regular computational >>> logic of >>> the thing. The answer isn’t silence, but noise! >>> >>> Suicide on a social network is a matter of introducing noise into >>> the >>> system. It spreads viruses and misinformation. It makes things less >>> interesting for others. It disrupts the finely calibrated >>> advertising >>> algorithms on which suggestions are made – for friends, groups, >>> institutions, ideas, and so on. Social networking captures, >>> quantifies, and capitalizes on positive feedback. It records and >>> reproduces similarity. Oh yes, everyone is not watching one of three >>> mass-produced choices; but beneath all of the possibilities there is >>> only one choice! The one for you! >>> >>> A roadmap for an effective Facebook suicide should do some of the >>> following: catching as many viruses as possible; click on as many >>> “Like” buttons as possible; join as many groups as possible; request >>> as many friends as possible. Wherever there is the possibility for >>> action, take it, and take it without any thought whatsoever. >>> Become a >>> machine for clicking! Every click dissolves the virtual double that >>> Facebook has created for you. It disperses you into the digital >>> lives >>> of others you hadn’t thought of communicating with. It confuses your >>> friends. It pulls all those parts of the world that your social >>> network refuses to engage with back into focus, makes it present >>> again. >>> >>> Invisibility comes in many forms, and on social networks it is the >>> form of a radical overload of information – a maximum participation. >>> No more thought, because every considered click adds to the >>> collaborative filtering algorithms that makes sure everyone >>> continues >>> to like what they like, but in slightly modified form. Click >>> everywhere, click often, and don’t stop until you have disappeared >>> beneath a flood of meaninglessness. >>> >>> This is a call for suicide, for the abandonment of seriousness and >>> belief. It is a call to reclaim ourselves from the sad version of >>> ourselves that lives in that bloodless village. Don’t become >>> nothing, >>> the singular point defined by an absence, become everything, with >>> everyone else. Drown the system in data and make a new world in the >>> ruins that remain! >>> _______________________________________________ >>> iDC -- mailing list of the Institute for Distributed Creativity >>> (distributedcreativity.org) >>> iDC@mailman.thing.net >>> https://mailman.thing.net/mailman/listinfo/idc >>> >>> List Archive: >>> http://mailman.thing.net/pipermail/idc/ >>> >>> iDC Photo Stream: >>> http://www.flickr.com/photos/tags/idcnetwork/ >>> >>> RSS feed: >>> http://rss.gmane.org/gmane.culture.media.idc >>> >>> iDC Chat on Facebook: >>> http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=2457237647 >>> >>> Share relevant URLs on Del.icio.us by adding the tag iDCref >>> >> >> >> >> -- >> micha cárdenas / azdel slade >> >> Lecturer, Visual Arts Department, University of California, San Diego >> Lecturer, Critical Gender Studies Program, University of >> California, San Diego >> Artist/Researcher, UCSD Medical Education >> Artist/Theorist, bang.lab, http://bang.calit2.net >> >> blog: http://transreal.org >> > > > > -- > micha cárdenas / azdel slade > > Lecturer, Visual Arts Department, University of California, San Diego > Lecturer, Critical Gender Studies Program, University of California, > San Diego > Artist/Researcher, UCSD Medical Education > Artist/Theorist, bang.lab, http://bang.calit2.net > > blog: http://transreal.org > _______________________________________________ > iDC -- mailing list of the Institute for Distributed Creativity > (distributedcreativity.org) > iDC@mailman.thing.net > https://mailman.thing.net/mailman/listinfo/idc > > List Archive: > http://mailman.thing.net/pipermail/idc/ > > iDC Photo Stream: > http://www.flickr.com/photos/tags/idcnetwork/ > > RSS feed: > http://rss.gmane.org/gmane.culture.media.idc > > iDC Chat on Facebook: > http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=2457237647 > > Share relevant URLs on Del.icio.us by adding the tag iDCref Douglas Schuler douglas@publicsphereproject.org ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Public Sphere Project http://www.publicsphereproject.org/ Liberating Voices! A Pattern Language for Communication Revolution (project) http://www.publicsphereproject.org/patterns/ Liberating Voices! A Pattern Language for Communication Revolution (book) http://mitpress.mit.edu/catalog/item/default.asp?ttype=2&tid=11601 # 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: http://mail.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org