"ÃzgÃr k." on Thu, 12 Jun 2014 01:18:07 +0200 (CEST) |
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Re: <nettime> a free letter to cultural institutions |
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 dear nettimers, thanks to olivier, jaromil and marc for responding to this so qucikly, which encourages me to elaborate on the issue more. i find free art license of the copyleft attiude very important since it is (AFAIK) the first and consistent implementation of the free software ideas to the field of culture. however it has been rendered invisible by the neo-liberal politics of creative commons(cc) creating a simulacr of free culture with non-commercial(nc) and non-derivative(nd) licenses. i will not go into the detail here but i have been experiencing the confusion cc created among people about the free culture in all my discussions. so thanks for referring to free art license, the politics of which is the one i appreciate most among the "legal" free culture licenses also listed in freedomdefined.org. even though the politics i appreciate the most is the libre commons of libre society, which is not based on law but ethical values. i have a personal experience with the work of furtherfield that showed me how valuable the support of such an institution is as a bonus encouragement for someone working on fc. i will not share it here but would like to take this opportunity to marc garret for their work and politics at furtherfield. i totally share jaromil's points, whose works and politics i also adore, and i think the problem with the common practice like you and all of us who share similar world views and trying to make a living in harmony with those views have been experiencing is because of the perception/not perception of free culture by those who are not familiar with it. and in the context of this post, those who are addressed here are the decision makers in cultural institutions who are not familiar with/not interested in the politics and ethics of free culture. unlike many people, i believe everybody in this list knows that free refers to freedom here, not the price, referring to the free software definition. i believe that free/libre culture (fc) promises the possibility of an alternative economics based on free/libre donation.* for example if there are two books i am interested in; one is a free cultural work and the other is non-free cultural one asking me to pay a predetermined price to read it while not even giving me the freedom to build on it, i choose the fc work but i also donate the author of it by hearth, double the price i would pay for the proprietary one. not because i am rich, but because i share the ethics of fc and respect the author of the fc work more. so i choose to spend willing on 1 fc work instead of paying doubtfully/unwillingly for 2 non-fc work. if i can do/afford this, a cultural institution would also, if they are aware and share the philosophy of fc. it is unfortunately true that most people working for/with cultural institutions are precarious. while spending great amounts of their funds to publicity etc, many cultural institutions employ interns without paying them, artists (no matter their work is fc or not) are not always paid etc... even though those institutions are part of the culture industry, i do not believe in that all the directors of these institutions share the ethics of profit driven capitalists. if they have funding for 2 works, they would choose to fund 1 fc work instead of 2 non-fc work, if they are aware and share the politics of fc. if i can do it, they can also do it.. if they are aware and share the politics of fc. new models can be developed; for example they can start with founding a free culture branch along with their existing infrastructure. in this branch, they would only fund/exhibit/distribute/promote fc works and donate the author at least (better double:)) what they pay for other artists. if they really want to show a work from an artist whose practice is non-fc, then they would negotiate to show it only if the artist licenses the work with a fc license (preferably donating them less than what they would donate to a fc artist:)). there are many artists who would be ok with this if they want to take a chance to work with that institution. would this also cause another precarious situation for the artist? if it does not for a free culture artist, then it wouldn't for them either. the point is, some intuitions are really powerful and they would use their power in favour of free culture instead of culture industry. not directly translatable to this situation, but richard stallman, the founder of free software movement explains the relation between power and freedom in the copyleft attitude here: http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/freedom-or-power.html this is just a small detail about the philosophy of free software but my experience shows me that, to understand fc, one should first understand the free software philosophy in detail. then these ideas can be translated into culture and i hope eventually they would inspire our socio-economical life in general..(if you appreciate what stallman writes, which is under a free culture license, you may consider donating to fsf:)) https://crm.fsf.org/civicrm/contribute/transact?reset=1&id=14 a third situation is, if the institution would really really really want to show a non-fc work since they think it is culturally very important work and everyone (everyone is, everyone as an artist:)) should be encouraged to build on it, they would even make the economic negotiations with the artist to acquire the work by licensing it with a fc license. for example buying all editions of that work by covering artist's all future economic expectations from it. but if you share the (at least my:)) ethics of free culture, then you wouldn't "pay" this artist more than you would donate to a fc artist. no? so? if all the funds of an institution goes to this non-fc artist, without leaving a space for fc artists, who should be ashamed? what should be done? in fact this situation demonstrates a part of the current problem regarding to the cultural institutions. in fact before the role of the cultural institutions, fc is the responsibility of the artists. we cannot blame walter benjamin for not publishing his essay on the political promises of the availability of mechanical reproduction of artworks for being have to cooperate with what adorno&horkheimer later conceptualized as the "culture industry", which required it to be copyrighted, to make the wide reproduction and distribution of that text possible. but we can (and also should) question someone talking about similar ideas like benjamin today but producing non-fc works. culture industry for the communication of cultural works to wider audience was the issue before the possibilities of information technologies which now renders useless the intermediation of culture industry for a work that can be produced and multiplicated/distributed as free/libre digital information in a p2p way.** so, the artists don't to play with the rules of the culture industry anymore to communicate their works, if they have a problem with culture industry: the culture being an industry operation according to the capitalist mode of production). the institutions which are ok with the cultural industry and would like to continue to be a part of it are out of the target of this post. sorry for taking time of the decision makers of those institutions. but if the perspective of your institution is to be a "progressive" one, and one of your concerns is the culture industry and proprietary/permission/fan culture, and even though you are already doing some works on these issues, i would also ask you to consider the call on this free letter. with my respect to cultural institutions which are already operating with a free culture perspective. - - *i also feel an urgency to discuss the politics of the donation. with donation i do not refer to the charity practice, if we take it as the powerful helping the needy, but a non-hierarchical, even non-reciprocal, even anonymous giving practice which is a sign of appreciation. letting the authors know that there is someone who appreciates their work, even if they do not know who, even if that donation wouldn't be enough to cover their living. i also find micro funding practice, which would benefit from the long tail, important, but micro donations require a mechanism to minimize transaction costs, like that of flattr. or the digital currencies are promising, like the first phase of bitcoin along with its anonymizing capabilities. the hype of the so called crowdfunding requires discussing the politic of donation. why do people fund a work with a non-fc license, where they wouldn't have crucial freedoms on the resulting work? as the idea of crowdsourcing depoliticized the commons-based peer production, the idea of crowdfunding depoliticized the idea of what i would like to call peer-funding. not public, nor private funding. peer-funding where the peers who appreciate the idea do fund by donations and where the resulting work would be a free cultural work for everybody, who would find to show the way of their appreciation to the author and initial peer-funders later on. **when the information became communicateble independent of physical means for the first time in history in the form of the software, hackers very among the first who realized, another mode of production than the capitalist and even all previous existing ones, was possible. i prefer calling this peer production as conceptualized by michel bauwens. neither private, nor public and also not commons, which originally referred not to something produced by human against nature, but to refer to naturally available resources. calling it commons-based peer production is ok to make an anology for those who are not familiar with the nature of possibilities which were implied to be "impossible" since last 30 years. but these new possibilities require new vocabulary and concepts to discuss, like in the example of p2p. p2p renders a new form of gift economy, what derrida deconstructed as "the impoosible", possible. shortly, p2p is a social contract as highlighted by marcel mauss for the gift concept. there is a conciousness of giving and taking but there is no personal obligation to reciprocate. you are anonymous if you reciprocate, but you still do. this is the possibility, even the practice, of the pure gift today, even though derrida deconstructed it as "the impossible" for that time. but he might have still put it that way today unless he is aware of the practice and politics of p2p, i believe. On 06/11/2014 12:38 PM, Jaromil wrote: > > dear Ozgur, > > On Tue, 10 Jun 2014, ozgur k. wrote: > >> a free letter to cultural institutions, >> >> please do not fund/exhibit/distribute/promote any non-free >> cultural works.(see freedomdefined.org for the definition of free >> cultural works) >> >> please approach your audience as peers and give them the freedom >> to build on what you make them experience. >> >> please mediate building a free/libre culture where everyone is >> an artist. do not promote proprietary/permission/fan culture. >> >> >> http://httpdot.net/txt/AFreeLetterToCulturalInstitutions.txt > > This is a very good mission and focus. I've been (almost > literally) preaching this to public institutions in EU (cultural > sector) and also NGOs (snake pits) for the past 15 years of my > life. As a result: I've been included inside these very > institutions (mostly at an inferior payroll because "free > culture"...) and ultimately flushed by financial cuts after > devoting more than a young decade of my life to them. > > Such institutions need to be able to move on to "the next topic", > being their final goal that of catering the masses, which justifies > most means to reach them with the help of some irony and tapestry. > After all, most people on earth are made consumers: they don't care > if they can study re-use re-adapt re-distribute something - and the > demand public sector faces is not exempt by this logic, not even > academy is. Paradoxically, the best people to support "free > culture" are the very private companies that can re-use the > results, yet their tax money can't be directly related to free > culture policies. > > Today I'm not so faithful anymore that is really possible to > change existing public institutions to make the principles of "free > culture" as part of their constituency, no matter how rational that > is. You can lobby for it, sure, but that's part of the game and > your higher selfless goals will consume you in there. Maybe we > really need "new institutions based on new forms of rationality". > And while waiting for an API for that :^) "free culture" has been > best cultivated in those private sector initiatives that have used > it also to their own advantage (mostly predating it) and creating > new forms of capitalism in which the very act of re-sharing is > itself an asset. > > By criticising specifically the latter as "free culture" I believe > Geert Loving misses the point. Yet this is the most visible outcome > of it, while public institutions are weaker and weaker and they are > made to serve the private interest rather than the public. > > My recommendation is to "play free" :^) and look for and help > create new alliances (subjectivity, constituencies) that can > operate in a transversal way across contexts and most importantly > can vehicule the potential of free culture to the masses (tools, > not just ideals, and direct access): the masses will eventually > read the manual and know what to do with it. > > ciao > > p.s. speaking of which, this is what I'm left with these days: > http://dyne.org/chest rate up those project if you can, that will > help the cause :^) pity the website registration is all borked and > the login with facebook app will access all your contact lists. > kind of weird for a public sector initiative isn't it? > - -- ÃzgÃr k. gpg:A3E6 57AD E14D 1F66 A546 6101 BA42 0724 E750 C5AE -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.11 (GNU/Linux) iQEcBAEBAgAGBQJTmGiVAAoJELpCByTnUMWu99kIALAFc/efnalrt00XiCpNafoC coRVeU2eU3z4EkIrLAMlezjzMZ3ib3SL5P0kRW5SdZjytGduyYyuqBTFJiIqHEMD 3lduY5DYRzWlQ2aUMU/oCxnPlxkDIB45zx6fx8qjEUB37wxY6/rsScG0S7/dKG/F yJ2RA67YD9lXYc70ccL2BR1OUUu56YtELjC2xr8c2Ne/vYvVCWQxVDYeb2HtHc1M 2R+ojkVmiB32vE8cSF4cQlcngm9iql19/f4QdUYmlf7T6oaRA4WPm2lqcWfx04Do mk1IIIWQBbraS/EsyUDlE7MmlE6s5GFUa2VdmcFPIRxHX5P6/Lws8Im/GMVh2L0= =OCh6 -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- # 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://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org