Been a lurker on here for about 2 years. I am constantly thrilled by the
names I see  popping up on this listserv. Seems like there are many members
on here who write or create things I admire. The conversations can be a bit
intimidating sometimes, but mostly I avoid chiming in because I tend to
make egregious typos & grammatical mistakes that I don't catch until it's
about a week later.

Anyways, just wanted to say hello!

Renée
http://www.reneereizman.com


On Sun, Jun 9, 2019 at 9:51 AM <nettime-l-requ...@mail.kein.org> wrote:

> Send nettime-l mailing list submissions to
>         nettime-l@mail.kein.org
>
> To subscribe or unsubscribe via the World Wide Web, visit
>         http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l
> or, via email, send a message with subject or body 'help' to
>         nettime-l-requ...@mail.kein.org
>
> You can reach the person managing the list at
>         nettime-l-ow...@mail.kein.org
>
> When replying, please edit your Subject line so it is more specific
> than "Re: Contents of nettime-l digest..."
>
>
> Today's Topics:
>
>    1. Re: Nettime is in bad shape. Let's see if we can change   it.
>       (v...@voyd.com)
>
>
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Message: 1
> Date: Sun, 09 Jun 2019 12:47:10 -0400
> From: v...@voyd.com
> To: nettime-l@mail.kein.org
> Subject: Re: <nettime> Nettime is in bad shape. Let's see if we can
>         change  it.
> Message-ID:
>         <1560098830.vqwx9ks2884g4...@hostingemail.digitalspace.net>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
>
>
>
>
>
> Thanks, Sean and all for these salient replies.
> I have often been active here, but had been offline more than I like
> related to living in Arabia; some things you'd imagine, others not. More
> than anything else, I have been creating a VR research center and doing a
> snowstorm of paperwork. My intentions are to be here more, as my research
> is revving up again.
>
> I value Nettime a great deal in that it remains one of the places where a
> high concentration of fine minds, whether they pop in or out like virtual
> particles int he cyber-aether, usually pop out clear thought.
>
> Another thing is that for the past three years, I have been traveling into
> Central Asia, Married an Iranian, coming to know the Eastern Hemisphere,
> and seeing what Geert Lovink and I had long discussions on here in Abu
> Dhabi relating the slide of Krokerian Bimodernism to American global
> colonial war capitalism under the Plan for the New American Century to the
> collapse into spheres of influence with the rise of Trump.&nbsp; Actually a
> lot more than this, but the flood of understanding has taken a while to
> coalesce.
>
> Looking forward to more conversation.
>
>
> On Sat, 8 Jun 2019 15:21:58 +0000, Sean Cubitt  wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
> I've been active long ago, and lurking for a decade or more, with only
> sporadic comments and adds: this look like a good prod to get us silent
> majority out of the closet.
>
> &nbsp;
>
> the thing that keeps nettime valuable is a) the
> contributors,&nbsp;timeliness, and&nbsp;swift smart dialogues and b) that
> there still seems to be a common purpose.&nbsp;
>
> &nbsp;
>
> social media start taking the forefront about ten years ago. The
> neo-populist right begins to replace the neo-liberal right about ten years
> ago. Is there some shared diagram?&nbsp;
>
> &nbsp;
>
> Other lists died for their own reasons: one because it seemed like
> everything interesting was on blogs, back when the blogosphere was a thing.
> Another because a concept / art movement / political trajectory could be
> exhausted so fast it scarcely seemed worth inventing new concepts etc.&nbsp;
>
> &nbsp;
>
> Mailing lists are asynchronous, which is great: more time to think; less
> kudos for fast reaction times. More consideration in every sense of the word
>
> &nbsp;
>
> in a few days I'll try to post something closer than this reflection on
> the medium to what I think this list is for: the aesthetics,&nbsp;politics
> and&nbsp;aesthetic&nbsp;politics of the early C21st --&nbsp;consideration,
> wonder and hope
>
> &nbsp;
>
>
>
> Sean
>
> &nbsp;
>
> &nbsp;
>
>
>
>
>
> From: nettime-l-boun...@mail.kein.org &lt;nettime-l-boun...@mail.kein.org&gt;
> on behalf of nettime-l-requ...@mail.kein.org &
> lt;nettime-l-requ...@mail.kein.org&gt;
> Sent: 08 June 2019 15:45
> To: nettime-l@mail.kein.org
> Subject: nettime-l Digest, Vol 141, Issue 11
>
> &nbsp;
>
>
>
> Send nettime-l mailing list submissions to
> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; nettime-l@mail.kein.org
>
> To subscribe or unsubscribe via the World Wide Web, visit
> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
> http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l
>
>
>
>
>
>
>                         &nbsp;
>
>                         nettime-l Info Page - mx.kein.org
>
>                         mx.kein.org
>
>                         -- a moderated mailing list for net criticism
> &lt;nettime&gt; is not just a mailing list but an effort to formulate an
> international, networked discourse that neither promotes a dominant
> euphoria (to sell products) nor continues the cynical pessimism, spread by
> journalists and intellectuals in the 'old' media who generalize about 'new'
> media with no clear understanding of their communication aspects ...
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> or, via email, send a message with subject or body 'help' to
> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; nettime-l-requ...@mail.kein.org
>
> You can reach the person managing the list at
> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; nettime-l-ow...@mail.kein.org
>
> When replying, please edit your Subject line so it is more specific
> than "Re: Contents of nettime-l digest..."
>
>
> Today's Topics:
>
> &nbsp;&nbsp; 1. Re: Nettime is in bad shape. Let's see if we can
> change&nbsp;&nbsp; it.
> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; (John Preston)
> &nbsp;&nbsp; 2. The Maker Movement is abandoned by its corporate sponsors;
> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; throws in the towel (Bruce Sterling)
> &nbsp;&nbsp; 3. Re: Nettime is in bad shape. Let's see if we can
> change&nbsp;&nbsp; it.
> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; (John Preston)
>
>
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Message: 1
> Date: Sat, 08 Jun 2019 15:06:56 +0100
> From: John Preston &lt;wcerf...@riseup.net&gt;
> To: nettime-l@mail.kein.org
> Subject: Re: &lt;nettime&gt; Nettime is in bad shape. Let's see if we can
> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; change&nbsp; it.
> Message-ID: &lt;07a59428-bf8f-419b-841a-ea06bddb2...@riseup.net&gt;
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
>
> Just forwarding this up.
>
>
> -------- Original Message --------
> From: Karim Brohi &lt;ka...@trauma.org&gt;
> Sent: 8 June 2019 14:35:45 BST
> To: John Preston &lt;wcerf...@riseup.net&gt;
> Subject: Re: &lt;nettime&gt; Nettime is in bad shape. Let's see if we can
> change it.
>
> Nettime is in bad shape - as are most (all?) of the email based discussion
> groups on the Interwebs now.
> I run another mailing list, started in 1995 in a medical specialty area- -
> which finds itself in the same state.&nbsp; Back then email was
> cool.&nbsp; Now, for
> most, email tends to be a flood of work stuff and a pseudo todo list.
> Drafting an email is now work, and not associated with pleasure or pure
> intellectual pursuit.
>
> But there's no other suitable medium either.&nbsp; Social media platforms
> are
> too brief to develop ideas.&nbsp; Too easy to fire back "your idea is
> stupid".
> Blog posts and newsletters are too one-sided.&nbsp; Developed/owned by a
> specific individual/group of individuals, Comments never have the same
> precedence as the original post.&nbsp; The post 'belongs' to the
> originator, not
> to the community.
>
> Maybe usenet/google groups comes close, but nobody uses them - perhaps
> because there's no (effective) 'app for that', and there has to be an
> active process of logging in.&nbsp; (Email alerts end up in... email).
>
> In brief - I think it's the medium not the message.&nbsp; The whole
> Internet
> needs a new medium that encourages long-form discourse and thereby deep
> community.&nbsp; That was email, but now it isn't email.&nbsp; I don't
> know what&nbsp; is
> now.
>
> Karim
>
>
>
>
>
> On Fri, 7 Jun 2019 at 21:34, John Preston &lt;wcerf...@riseup.net&gt;
> wrote:
>
> &gt; Just adding my two cents, as per the call. :)
> &gt;
> &gt; I only discovered nettime in the last few months. I'm a
> computer-child,
> &gt; I've grown up on the net, and one of the people who now take a more
> &gt; conservative or critical approach to tech. I came here because I am
> trying
> &gt; to develop as an artist, working with the net as a medium and
> reflecting
> &gt; critically on the net and its constituent parts. I don't post in to
> every
> &gt; thread because a lot of the time I don't have anything worthwhile to
> add,
> &gt; but I appreciate reading: most of the contributions on this list are
> really
> &gt; insightful.
> &gt;
> &gt; The fact that people are posting meta threads like this is a good
> sign to
> &gt; me, I appreciate a community that can take a critical view of itself.
> If
> &gt; nettime does rap up, let me know where you all go, I'd like to talk
> more. :)
> &gt;
> &gt; John
> &gt;
> &gt; On 7 June 2019 18:38:46 BST, nettime mod squad &lt;nett...@kein.org&gt;
> wrote:
> &gt;&gt;
> &gt;&gt; Nettime is in bad shape, don't you think?
> &gt;&gt;
> &gt;&gt; It has still a lot of goodwill, and more generally there's renewed
> &gt;&gt; interest in formats of exchange and collective thinking that
> &gt;&gt; aren't defined by the logic of social media. But the dynamics that
> &gt;&gt; social media companies exploit are hardly limited to a handful of
> &gt;&gt; platforms. For example, nettime has its own 'influencers' -- a 1%,
> &gt;&gt; so to speak -- who generate the vast majority of list traffic.
> &gt;&gt; That's been true for years. The discussions they sustain may
> &gt;&gt; variously seem interesting or annoying, but either way they've
> &gt;&gt; become somewhat formulaic. An attentive reader knows more or less
> &gt;&gt; what to expect based solely the subject and the sender; and even
> &gt;&gt; meta-discussions about whether the list is dominated or by this or
> &gt;&gt; that tendency are largely dominated by the same few people.
> &gt;&gt;
> &gt;&gt; Some might argue the debates that have animated nettime over the
> &gt;&gt; last year -- the trajectories of postwar society, neoliberalism,
> &gt;&gt; the 'digital,' complexity, surveillance and big tech, Brexit,
> &gt;&gt; media and elections, Assange, even the Anthropocene in all its
> &gt;&gt; terrifying inclusiveness -- are the defining issues of the day.
> &gt;&gt; Maybe so. But if the nettime project had settled for a consensus
> &gt;&gt; model of the defining issues of the mid-'90s, it would never have
> &gt;&gt; gotten off the ground, and it certainly wouldn't exist almost 25
> &gt;&gt; years later. The challenge, we think, is to maintain a space that
> &gt;&gt; attracts ill-defined ideas and uncertain issues -- things and
> &gt;&gt; not-things that don't quite exist yet and yet haven't been buried
> &gt;&gt; under torrents of authority and theory.
> &gt;&gt;
> &gt;&gt; So, what can we do?
> &gt;&gt;
> &gt;&gt; In the past, we've asked people to think about outreach -- say,
> &gt;&gt; inviting new people from new contexts. It seems like that's had
> &gt;&gt; limited success; but at a time when nettime has been limping
> &gt;&gt; along, it's hard to get excited about inviting people to join an
> &gt;&gt; environment so heavily defined by habit. We've also joked that
> &gt;&gt; shutting it down before it fades into complete senescence might be
> &gt;&gt; best. But that joke wasn't really funny, in part because it wasn't
> &gt;&gt; meant to be: it was a way of expressing serious concerns about the
> &gt;&gt; list's increasingly parochial status.
> &gt;&gt;
> &gt;&gt; Now, we have a simple proposal: let's switch roles.
> &gt;&gt;
> &gt;&gt; It goes like this:
> &gt;&gt;
> &gt;&gt; If you've posted more than others to the list in the last 60 or 90
> &gt;&gt; or 120 or 180 days -- the math matters less than the spirit --
> take
> &gt;&gt; a break. Let others define nettime, a space made up of nearly 5000
> &gt;&gt; subscribers.
> &gt;&gt;
> &gt;&gt; If you haven't posted to the list -- say, because it seemed like
> &gt;&gt; your ideas, concerns, or whatever you want to share wouldn't fit
> &gt;&gt; with nettime's habits -- maybe that will change.
> &gt;&gt;
> &gt;&gt; Think of it as an un-grand experiment: a way to see what else
> &gt;&gt; might happen, who else might speak, what less familiar ideas,
> &gt;&gt; perspectives, or styles might spring up. Maybe the list will fade
> &gt;&gt; into silence, and we'll be left with a paradoxical object, a list
> &gt;&gt; composed *entirely* of lurkers -- not such a bad non-end for
> &gt;&gt; nettime. Or maybe not. There might be many ways to find out. For
> &gt;&gt; now, rather than the 1% debating how narrowly to define good
> &gt;&gt; manners, let's see if a different 'we' can change things.
> &gt;&gt;
> &gt;&gt;
> &gt;&gt; -- the mod squad (Ted and Felix)
> &gt;&gt;
> &gt;&gt; #&nbsp; distributed via &lt;nettime&gt;: no commercial use
> without permission
> &gt;&gt; #&nbsp; &lt;nettime&gt;&nbsp; is a moderated mailing list for net
> criticism,
> &gt;&gt; #&nbsp; collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the
> nets
> &gt;&gt; #&nbsp; more info:  http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l
> &gt;&gt <http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l&gt;&gt>; #&nbsp;
> archive:  http://www.nettime.org contact: nett...@kein.org
> &gt;&gt; #&nbsp; @nettime_bot tweets mail w/ sender unless #ANON is in
> Subject:
> &gt;&gt;
> &gt;&gt; #&nbsp; distributed via &lt;nettime&gt;: no commercial use
> without permission
> &gt; #&nbsp; &lt;nettime&gt;&nbsp; is a moderated mailing list for net
> criticism,
> &gt; #&nbsp; collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets
> &gt; #&nbsp; more info:  http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l
> &gt <http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l&gt>; #&nbsp; archive:
> http://www.nettime.org contact: nett...@kein.org
> &gt; #&nbsp; @nettime_bot tweets mail w/ sender unless #ANON is in Subject:
> -------------- next part --------------
> An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
> URL: &lt;
> http://mx.kein.org/pipermail/nettime-l/attachments/20190608/490390ed/attachment-0001.html&gt
> ;
>
> ------------------------------
>
> Message: 2
> Date: Sat, 8 Jun 2019 16:21:37 +0200
> From: Bruce Sterling &lt;bru...@well.com&gt;
> To: nettim...@kein.org
> Subject: &lt;nettime&gt; The Maker Movement is abandoned by its corporate
> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; sponsors; throws in the towel
> Message-ID: &lt;a342ce24-4f26-441e-bdbe-38f833458...@well.com&gt;
> Content-Type: text/plain;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; charset=utf-8
>
> *Well, so much for the O?Reilly Web 2.0 version of popular
> mechanics.&nbsp; Fifteen years is not too bad a run by the standards of an
> increasingly jittery California Ideology.&nbsp; Now what? ? Bruce S
>
>
> Maker Media goes broke
> https://hackaday.com/2019/06/07/maker-media-ceases-operations/
>
> Over the years we?ve had the dubious honor of bidding farewell to numerous
> companies that held a special place in the hearts of hackers and makers.
> We?ve borne witness to the demise of Radio Shack, TechShop, and PrintrBot,
> and even shed a tear or two when Toys ?R? Us shut their doors. But as much
> as it hurt to see those companies go, nothing quite compares to this. Today
> we?ve learned that Maker Media has ceased operations.
>
> Between the first issue of Make magazine in 2005 and the inaugural Maker
> Faire a year later, Maker Media deftly cultured the public face of the
> ?maker movement? for over a decade. They didn?t create maker culture, but
> there?s no question that they put a spotlight on this part of the larger
> tech world. In fact, it?s not an exaggeration to say that the shuttering of
> Maker Media could have far reaching consequences that we won?t fully
> understand for years.
>
> While this news will surely come as a crushing blow to many in the
> community, Maker Media founder and CEO Dale Dougherty says they?re still
> trying to put the pieces together. ?I started the magazine and I?m
> committed to keeping that going because it means something to a lot of
> people and means something to me.? At this point, Dale tells us that Maker
> Media is officially in a state of insolvency. This is an important
> distinction, and means that the company still has a chance to right the
> ship before being forced to declare outright bankruptcy.
>
> In layman?s terms, the fate of Make magazine and Maker Faire is currently
> uncertain?
>
> ***
>
> https://techcrunch.com/2019/06/07/make-magazine-maker-media-layoffs/
>
> Financial troubles have forced Maker Media, the company behind crafting
> publication MAKE: magazine as well as the science and art festival Maker
> Faire, to lay off its entire staff of 22 and pause all operations.
> TechCrunch was tipped off to Maker Media?s unfortunate situation which was
> then confirmed by the company?s founder and CEO Dale Dougherty.
>
> For 15 years, MAKE: guided adults and children through step-by-step
> do-it-yourself crafting and science projects, and it was central to the
> maker movement. Since 2006, Maker Faire?s 200 owned and licensed events per
> year in over 40 countries let attendees wander amidst giant, inspiring art
> and engineering installations?.
>
> ?Maker Media Inc ceased operations this week and let go of all of its
> employees ? about 22 employees? Dougherty tells TechCrunch. ?I started this
> 15 years ago and it?s always been a struggle as a business to make this
> work. Print publishing is not a great business for anybody, but it
> works?barely. Events are hard ? there was a drop off in corporate
> sponsorship.? Microsoft and Autodesk failed to sponsor this year?s flagship
> Bay Area Maker Faire?.
>
>
>
> ------------------------------
>
> Message: 3
> Date: Sat, 08 Jun 2019 07:45:08 -0700
> From: John Preston &lt;wcerf...@riseup.net&gt;
> To: nettime-l@mail.kein.org
> Subject: Re: &lt;nettime&gt; Nettime is in bad shape. Let's see if we can
> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; change&nbsp; it.
> Message-ID: &lt;f8f8006bb46447a36e1e1a7d5171f...@riseup.net&gt;
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
>
> Each medium of communication has a different quality and bandwidth about
> it, and we can use a multitude of media -- nettime doesn't have to be
> /just/ a mailing list. Some of us might be better able to contribute via
> IRC or other more real-time media.
>
> John
>
> On 2019-06-08 15:06, John Preston wrote:
>
> &gt; Just forwarding this up.
> &gt;
> &gt; -------------------------
> &gt; FROM: Karim Brohi &lt;ka...@trauma.org&gt;
> &gt; SENT: 8 June 2019 14:35:45 BST
> &gt; TO: John Preston &lt;wcerf...@riseup.net&gt;
> &gt; SUBJECT: Re: &lt;nettime&gt; Nettime is in bad shape. Let's see if we
> can change it.
> &gt;
> &gt; Nettime is in bad shape - as are most (all?) of the email based
> discussion groups on the Interwebs now.
> &gt; I run another mailing list, started in 1995 in a medical specialty
> area- - which finds itself in the same state.&nbsp; Back then email was
> cool.&nbsp; Now, for most, email tends to be a flood of work stuff and a
> pseudo todo list.&nbsp; Drafting an email is now work, and not associated
> with pleasure or pure intellectual pursuit.
> &gt;
> &gt; But there's no other suitable medium either.&nbsp; Social media
> platforms are too brief to develop ideas.&nbsp; Too easy to fire back "your
> idea is stupid".&nbsp; Blog posts and newsletters are too one-sided.&nbsp;
> Developed/owned by a specific individual/group of individuals, Comments
> never have the same precedence as the original post.&nbsp; The post
> 'belongs' to the originator, not to the community.
> &gt;
> &gt; Maybe usenet/google groups comes close, but nobody uses them -
> perhaps because there's no (effective) 'app for that', and there has to be
> an active process of logging in.&nbsp; (Email alerts end up in... email).
> &gt;
> &gt; In brief - I think it's the medium not the message.&nbsp; The whole
> Internet needs a new medium that encourages long-form discourse and thereby
> deep community.&nbsp; That was email, but now it isn't email.&nbsp; I don't
> know what&nbsp; is now.
> &gt;
> &gt; Karim
> &gt;
> &gt; On Fri, 7 Jun 2019 at 21:34, John Preston &lt;wcerf...@riseup.net&gt;
> wrote:
> &gt; Just adding my two cents, as per the call. :)
> &gt;
> &gt; I only discovered nettime in the last few months. I'm a
> computer-child, I've grown up on the net, and one of the people who now
> take a more conservative or critical approach to tech. I came here because
> I am trying to develop as an artist, working with the net as a medium and
> reflecting critically on the net and its constituent parts. I don't post in
> to every thread because a lot of the time I don't have anything worthwhile
> to add, but I appreciate reading: most of the contributions on this list
> are really insightful.
> &gt;
> &gt; The fact that people are posting meta threads like this is a good
> sign to me, I appreciate a community that can take a critical view of
> itself. If nettime does rap up, let me know where you all go, I'd like to
> talk more. :)
> &gt;
> &gt; John
> &gt;
> &gt; On 7 June 2019 18:38:46 BST, nettime mod squad &lt;nett...@kein.org&gt;
> wrote:
> &gt;
> &gt; Nettime is in bad shape, don't you think?
> &gt;
> &gt; It has still a lot of goodwill, and more generally there's renewed
> &gt; interest in formats of exchange and collective thinking that
> &gt; aren't defined by the logic of social media. But the dynamics that
> &gt; social media companies exploit are hardly limited to a handful of
> &gt; platforms. For example, nettime has its own 'influencers' -- a 1%,
> &gt; so to speak -- who generate the vast majority of list traffic.
> &gt; That's been true for years. The discussions they sustain may
> &gt; variously seem interesting or annoying, but either way they've
> &gt; become somewhat formulaic. An attentive reader knows more or less
> &gt; what to expect based solely the subject and the sender; and even
> &gt; meta-discussions about whether the list is dominated or by this or
> &gt; that tendency are largely dominated by the same few people.
> &gt;
> &gt; Some might argue the debates that have animated nettime over the
> &gt; last year -- the trajectories of postwar society, neoliberalism,
> &gt; the 'digital,' complexity, surveillance and big tech, Brexit,
> &gt; media and elections, Assange, even the Anthropocene in all its
> &gt; terrifying inclusiveness -- are the defining issues of the day.
> &gt; Maybe so. But if the nettime project had settled for a consensus
> &gt; model of the defining issues of the mid-'90s, it would never have
> &gt; gotten off the ground, and it certainly wouldn't exist almost 25
> &gt; years later. The challenge, we think, is to maintain a space that
> &gt; attracts ill-defined ideas and uncertain issues -- things and
> &gt; not-things that don't quite exist yet and yet haven't been buried
> &gt; under torrents of authority and theory.
> &gt;
> &gt; So, what can we do?
> &gt;
> &gt; In the past, we've asked people to think about outreach -- say,
> &gt; inviting new people from new contexts. It seems like that's had
> &gt; limited success; but at a time when nettime has been limping
> &gt; along, it's hard to get excited about inviting people to join an
> &gt; environment so heavily defined by habit. We've also joked that
> &gt; shutting it down before it fades into complete senescence might be
> &gt; best. But that joke wasn't really funny, in part because it wasn't
> &gt; meant to be: it was a way of expressing serious concerns about the
> &gt; list's increasingly parochial status.
> &gt;
> &gt; Now, we have a simple proposal: let's switch roles.
> &gt;
> &gt; It goes like this:
> &gt;
> &gt; If you've posted more than others to the list in the last 60 or 90
> &gt; or 120 or 180 days -- the math matters less than the spirit -- take
> &gt; a break. Let others define nettime, a space made up of nearly 5000
> &gt; subscribers.
> &gt;
> &gt; If you haven't posted to the list -- say, because it seemed like
> &gt; your ideas, concerns, or whatever you want to share wouldn't fit
> &gt; with nettime's habits -- maybe that will change.
> &gt;
> &gt; Think of it as an un-grand experiment: a way to see what else
> &gt; might happen, who else might speak, what less familiar ideas,
> &gt; perspectives, or styles might spring up. Maybe the list will fade
> &gt; into silence, and we'll be left with a paradoxical object, a list
> &gt; composed *entirely* of lurkers -- not such a bad non-end for
> &gt; nettime. Or maybe not. There might be many ways to find out. For
> &gt; now, rather than the 1% debating how narrowly to define good
> &gt; manners, let's see if a different 'we' can change things.
> &gt;
> &gt; -- the mod squad (Ted and Felix)
> &gt;
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> #&nbsp; distributed via &lt;nettime&gt;: no commercial use without
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> #&nbsp; &lt;nettime&gt;&nbsp; is a moderated mailing list for net
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>
> ------------------------------
>
> #&nbsp; distributed via &lt;nettime&gt;: no commercial use without
> permission
> #&nbsp; &lt;nettime&gt;&nbsp; is a moderated mailing list for net
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> #&nbsp; collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets
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>
> End of nettime-l Digest, Vol 141, Issue 11
> ******************************************
>
>
>
> # distributed via : no commercial use without permission
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> #  distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission
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> End of nettime-l Digest, Vol 141, Issue 14
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