I consider Alan Sondheim's work an example of list-dependent practice. It's not trolling or flaming but some might consider it spam. If you belong to Netbehaviour be ready to receive at least one (perhaps a few) emails a day from Alan. I find them generally interesting and sometimes illuminating. Every now and then they are very affecting. Some lists would (and did) kick Alan off for this activity but most members of Netbehaviour seem to welcome his posts.
best
Simon
On 8 Oct 2013, at 06:29, Charlotte Frost <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
> Watching the comments on my Facebook page alone let alone discussion here
> I am conscious that there are parts of the histories of lists that might
> never be untangled. Certainly the Syndicate demise caused a lot of pain and
> I have no wish to drag all that up. Perhaps I can swerve the conversation by
> asking if anyone thinks there has ever been/is an art to spamming, flaming
> and trolling? I'll put this question on Facebook and Twitter too to see what
> comes upŠ
>
> Charlotte
>
Simon Biggs
[log in to unmask]
http://www.littlepig.org.uk @SimonBiggsUK http://amazon.com/author/simonbiggs
[log in to unmask] Edinburgh College of Art, University of Edinburgh
http://www.ed.ac.uk/schools-departments/edinburgh-college-art/school-of-art/staff/staff?person_id=182&cw_xml=profile.php
http://www.research.ed.ac.uk/portal/en/persons/simon-biggs%285dfcaf34-56b1-4452-9100-aaab96935e31%29.html
http://www.eca.ac.uk/circle/ http://www.elmcip.net/ http://www.movingtargets.org.uk/ http://designinaction.com/
MSc by Research in Interdisciplinary Creative Practices http://www.ed.ac.uk/studying/postgraduate/degrees?id=656&cw_xml=details.php
|