Chicago Workers Open New Cooperatively Owned Factory Five Years After Republic Windows ... - 0 views
Bitcoin and the dangerous fantasy of 'apolitical' money | Yanis Varoufakis - 0 views
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What is, however, genuinely novel and unique about bitcoin is that no ‘one’ institution or company is safeguarding the so-called Ledger: the record of transactions that ensures that, when you have spent one unit of currency, there is one less unit of currency in your (digital) wallet.
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The great challenge of creating a non-physical, wholly digital, currency is the pressing question: If a currency unit is a string of zeros and ones on my hard disk, who can stop me from taking that string, copying and pasting it as often as I want and become infinitely ‘moneyed’
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Bitcoin was born the day in 2008 some anonymous computer geek, using an unlikely Japanese pseudonym (aka Nakamoto), posted an algorithm (on some obscure listserve website) that made something remarkable possible: It could generate a string of zeros and ones that was unique, ensuring that, before it could be transferred from one computer or device to another, a minimum number of other users had to trace its transfer and verify that it left the device of the seller (of some good or service) before moving to the device of the buyer.
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ZCommunications | Occupy Homes, One Year On And Growing Daily by Laura Gottesdiener | Z... - 0 views
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On December 6, the one-year anniversary of the Occupy Homes movement, Meusa and Wheeler were only two among thousands of people who gathered for coordinated direct actions focused on the human right to housing. Building on a year filled with eviction blockades, house takeovers, bank protest and singing auction blockades, the anniversary of Occupy Homes demonstrated that the groups were still committed to risking arrest to keep people sheltered. Yet, even more significantly, the day’s events demonstrated a crystallization of the movement’s central message: that decent and dignified housing should be a human right in the United States.
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The actions appear to be snowballing. In Atlanta, Occupy our Homes took over a second house on December 8. In Minneapolis, the group opened up another house on December 23 in an action led by Carrie Martinez, who refused to celebrate Christmas with her partner and 12-year-old son in the car where they’d been living since their eviction in October.
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Like the first Occupy Homes day of action on December 6, 2011, the events demonstrated a high level of coordination and communication among housing groups in various cities — this time drawing on the language and tactics that had been successful throughout the past year.
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Up to half of all food is wasted: agri-industry and supermarkets are culpable... - 0 views
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Between 30% and 50% of all food produced – 1.2-2 billion tonnes/year – is wasted or lost, a report by the Institution of Mechanical Engineers (IME) says. It argues that the waste is caused mainly by marketing techniques in rich countries, along with poor practice and/or insufficient investment in harvesting, storage and transportation.
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The report, published last week, highlights the vast amounts of farmland, energy, fertilisers and water swallowed up by the production of food that is thrown away or left to rot.
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in poor countries, “wastage tends to occur primarily at the farmer-producer end of the supply chain”. Inefficient farming, and poor transportation and infrastructure mean that food is “frequently handled inappropriately and stored under unsuitable farm site conditions”. Almost all of what reaches households is eaten, though.
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Is cooperation what's missing? - 0 views
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We’re often amazed when someone tells us that “we need more cooperation and less competition,” and all the more when they present the market as the antithesis of cooperation.
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“But it’s obviously just the opposite!!” we say.
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The car, any car, symbol of the decentralized world, is a radical example of cooperation. And if you open up a monitor, a computer, a telephone, or a simple appliance and analyze the components that are placed on the motherboard, you’ll see another example
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Peer to peer production as the alternative to capitalism: A new communist hor... - 0 views
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This article argues that a section of knowledge workers have already created a new mode of production termed Peer to Peer Production (P2P) which is a viable alternative to capitalism. Although still in its emerging phase and dominated by capitalism, P2P clearly displays the main contours of an egalitarian society.
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This mode of production is very similar to what Marx (1978 a, 1978b) described as advanced communism.
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Commons have existed since the inception of humanity in various forms and among various civilizations (Marx, 1965; Polanyi, 1992; Ostrom, 1990). But all of them, except commons of knowledge, have always been territorialized, belonging to particular communities, tribes, or states. Hence, as a rule, outsiders were excluded. The GPL created a globally de-territorialized, almost all-inclusive commons. It only excluded those users who would refuse to release their own products under the GPL license
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Strengthen the Commons - Now! - Democracy - Heinrich Böll Foundation - 0 views
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By Yochai Benkler “Commons are institutional spaces in which we are free.” Yochai Benkler
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How the crisis reveals the fabric of our Commons
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Over the last two hundred years, the explosion of knowledge, technology, and productivity has enabled an unprecedented increase of private wealth. This has improved our quality of life in numerous ways. At the same time, however, we have permitted the depletion of resources and the dwindling of societal wealth. This is brought to our attention by current, interrelated crises in finance, the economy, nutrition, energy, and in the fundamental ecological systems of life.
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Tutkijaryhmä ennakoi biosfäärin olotilamuutosta ympäristöongelmista johtuen -... - 1 views
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Torstaina 7.6.2012 ilmestyvässä Nature-tiedelehdessä 22 tutkijaa julkaisee katsauksen, jossa uusimman tiedon ja teorian valossa arvioidaan todennäköisyyttä sille, että maapallon biosfääri lähestyy olotilan muutosta. He myös esittävät ajankohtaa tällaiselle muutokselle. Nykyisen ilmaston häviämisen estämisen keskeiseksi tavoitteeksi tutkijat nostavat ihmiskunnan koon ja resurssien käytön kasvun hillitsemisen. Helsingin yliopistosta kirjoittajana on evoluutiopaleontologian professori Mikael Fortelius.
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Ihmiskunnasta on tullut planetaarisen mittakaavan vaikuttaja, joka uhkaa jo maapallon kykyä elättää sekä meitä itseämme että muita lajeja, arvioivat luonnontieteen alan tutkijat. Ihmiskunta käyttää nyt 20-40 prosenttia maapallon perustuotannosta omiin tarpeisiinsa. Noin 43 prosenttia maapallon maa-pinta-alasta on maanviljelyskäytössä tai rakennettua aluetta, suuri osa jäljelle jäävästä on tieverkostojen läpäisemää. Joidenkin arvioiden mukaan yli 80 prosenttia viljelykelpoisesta pinta-alasta on jo käytössä.
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Sadan vuoden kuluessa nykyinen ilmasto tulee häviämään arviolta 10-48 prosentilta maapallon pintaa ja korvautumaan jollakin, jota maapallon nykyiset lajit eivät olemassaolonsa aikana ole kohdanneet.
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Communisation theory and the question of fascism - Cherry Angioma | libcom.org - 0 views
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A critical look at some assumptions of communisation theorists - considering that their often determinist historical predictions are not the only possible outcomes.
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In the search for new road maps to navigate crisis and the possibilities of life beyond capitalism, the concept of ‘communisation’ has become an increasing focus of discussion.
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The word itself has been around since the early days of the communist movement. The English utopian Goodwyn Barmby, credited with the being the first person to use the term communist in the English language, wrote a text as early as 1841 entitled ‘The Outlines of Communism, Associality and Communisation’
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From the theory of peer production to the production of peer production theor... - 0 views
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The object of this article is to give an interpretation of the ideological positioning of various movements and intellectual groupings and individuals within the ‘left field’ of peer to peer theory production.
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What we understand under the concept of “the Production of Peer Production Theory” are the various attempts to make sense of peer production, both in terms of its place in the current dominant economic system of capitalism, and in terms of its future potential.
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1. Yochai Benkler: peer production as an adjunct to the market
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Taistelu koodin vapauttamiseksi - 0 views
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Avoimen lähdekoodin historia juontaa juurensa toisen maailmansodan ajoilta.
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Nykyinen avoimen lähdekoodin ajattelu ei ole aivan uutta. Itse asiassa tietokoneiden alkuaikoina se oli yleisesti vallalla oleva käytäntö. Alkuaikojen ohjelmoijat ajattelivat tekevänsä tiedettä. Tieteen tuloksien pitää olla universaalisti jaettavissa.
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Tällaisessa avoimen lähdekoodin ympäristössä toimi esimerkiksi C-ohjelmointikielen kehittänyt Dennis Ritchie,
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Exploring the commons by Marco Berlinguer | OpenDemocracy | Social Network Unionism - 0 views
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Today’s rediscovery of the notion of the commons stems directly from the need to regulate and to explore how to enable the collaborative action of a multiplicity of protagonists who are autonomous
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Transform! started work in 2004 on the project ‘Networked Politics’, through which we explored
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new organisational forms of collective action and the implications of an economy increasingly based on information, knowledge and communication.
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The Boom of Commons-Based Peer Production - keimform.de - 0 views
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In 1991, an undergraduate Finnish computer science student, Linus Torvalds, had a surprising idea: he began to write a new operating system on his PC.
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He announced his work on the Internet and asked for feedback about features that people would like to see. Some weeks later, he put the software online.
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Only two years later, more than 100 people were helping develop the software now called Linux (a wordplay on “Linus” and “Unix”). Richard Stallman’s GNU Project was another initiative that had already developed a number of useful system components. The combination of the GNU tools with the Linux kernel resulted in an operating system that was both useful and free.
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Commons-based peer production - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views
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Commons-based peer production is a term coined by Harvard Law School professor Yochai Benkler.[1] It describes a new model of socio-economic production in which the creative energy of large numbers of people is coordinated (usually with the aid of the Internet) into large, meaningful projects mostly without traditional hierarchical organization.
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Yochai Benkler contrasts commons-based peer production with firm production (in which tasks are delegated based on a central decision-making process) and market-based production (in which tagging different prices to different tasks serves as an incentive to anyone interested in performing a task).
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The term was first introduced and described in Yochai Benkler's seminal paper "Coase's Penguin, or Linux and the Nature of the Firm".[2] Yochai Benkler's 2006 book, The Wealth of Networks, expands significantly on these ideas.
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Solidarity economy - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views
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The definition of "solidarity economy" is widely contested.
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abolition of capitalism
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practical solidarity with disadvantaged groups of people
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Public Services & Democracy | Unleashing the creativity of labour - 1 views
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Something interesting is going on in the city of Stuttgart, one of the regional success stories of the German system of Mitbestimmung, or ‘co-determination’, where workers have a role in the management of companies. The dominant trend in Germany is of co‐determination becoming ‘crisis corporatism’, in which the unions concede low wages and increases in hours, ostensibly to save jobs. But in Germany’s southern manufacturing centre, in contrast, trade unionists are holding out for workers having real control over the conditions and hours of work – and over the purpose of their labour too.
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In Stuttgart’s public services, the union Verdi has combined a strong fight over wages and conditions with an effective and popular campaign to improve and defend public services. In response, the city government – a coalition of the SPD, Green, Die Linke and local party Stuttgart Ökologisch Sozial – is re‐municipalising several services that the previous CDU city government sold off.
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Meanwhile, among the 20,000 workers at the Daimler Mercedes factories, a radical grouping in the IG Metall union is also looking beyond bargaining over the price of labour, instead holding out for shorter working hours and an alternative view of the future of the car industry. ‘We have a huge amount of intelligence in this factory,’ says works council member Tom Adler, also an active member of Stuttgart Ökologisch Sozial. ‘It’s not beyond the capacity of our designers and engineers to think beyond the motor car.’
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