A few links that might add to the debate
An example of a people based open model for creating work in the
performing arts ........Here at body>data>space we work with an
interauthorship process that we have used successfully for many
projects over the years ( since 1990 as shinkansen and Future
Physical) to aid non hierarchical group processes, allow equal input
and modification in a peer2peer development mode and to enable
natural emergent dynamics .....see this Group process Brief at
http://www.rescen.net/Ghislaine_Boddington/theweave/item3.html
This process is discussed in the essays on the same site. At present
we are running our Post Me_New ID project with this methodology too.
It is used alongside virtual networking, can be adapted for non
performance projects and we have several operational templates we use
as part of the process.
Also
NODE:London is an open organisational model
In order to raise the visibility of media arts practice in and around
the capital, NODE.London [Networked, Open, Distributed, Events.
London] has worked as an open organisation, using consensus decision-
making and pooling ideas, resources and even people. It has sought to
fortify existing media arts networks and to encourage production and
experimentation, whilst assisting in the articulation of such
innovative artistry to a wider audience.
http://www.nodel.org/
http://wiki.nodel.org/index.php/Main_Page
NODE.London is calling a seasonal gathering of media art, showing how
London is budding with fresh exhibitions, discussions, musical events
and participatory projects.
This website will soon be filling with an ongoing programme from
Spring 2008. Until then, you can browse the archive of the first
NODE.London season of media arts in March 2006.
NODE.London is open to any person or group who wants to help spread
media art and related activity around London and beyond! If you would
like to get involved, please check the NODE.London wiki and come to
one of our regular meetings and introduce yourself.
also
Upgrade International
is I understand also run in an open way
http://www.theupgrade.net/
Ghislaine Boddington
Creative Director
body>data>space
On 25 Apr 2008, at 15:12, Al Larsen wrote:
> The Ladyfest arts festivals could be seen as an example of open
> source principles
> in community organizing.
>
> 1) The notes of the development process of the first festival
> (Olympia, WA, 2000)
> were posted online to serve as a resource for others who would want
> to organize
> similar events. This included minutes of meetings, budgets,
> committee structure,
> etc.
>
> 2) The name was offered up for any other groups to use. As I
> understand it, the
> only condition was that no city or town host a Ladyfest festival
> more than once.
> (This rule was broken in 2005 when another Ladyfest festival took
> place in Olympia.)
>
> More than 100 festivals have taken place since 2000... all over the
> US and the
> world (Sweden, Brazil, Mexico, Italy, South Africa, etc).
>
>
> This is the statement from the first Ladyfest festival:
>
> Ladyfest is a non-profit, community-based event designed by and for
> women to
> showcase, celebrate and encourage the artistic, organizational and
> political work
> and talents of women. It will feature performances by bands, spoken
> word artists,
> authors, visual artists and more!!! It will include workshops,
> panels, and dance
> parties. This is a woman-run event but all are welcome to attend.
>
>
>
>
>> Hi Janet,
>>
>> Thanks for you reply.
>>
>>>> I would be interested if anyone on this list has concrete
>>>> examples where
>>>> FLOSS has been used to model a non digital project/community/
>>>> organisation,
>>>> beyond the simple inspiration that can provide the openness
>>>> suggested by
>>>> FLOSS models and the simple use of FLOSS for production/admin
>>>> tasks.
>>>
>>> Zittrain has been talking about the generative internet
>>> http://www.isoc-ny.org/\?p=195
>>> These are all projects where people make in ways which are
>>> generative.
>>> http:/wikipedia.org
>>> http://www.wikia.com/wiki/Wikia
>>> http://en.wikiversity.org/
>>> http://barcamp.org/
>>> http://www.ted.com/talks/view/id/54
>>> http://ccmixter.org/
>>> http://commons.org/
>>> http://icommons.org/
>>> http://creativecommons.org/
>>
>> I think you misunderstood my question, I was more interested in
>> learning
>> about projects and organisations in which the structure of the
>> organisation is modeled after FLOSS development models, not the
>> content
>> that the organisation if occupied with or the tools they use or
>> develop.
>>
>>
>>> I think there is a correlation between the idea of making in a
>>> generative way and
>>> the kinds of freedoms which are explicit in GNU/Linux free software.
>>
>> By the way, I assume that you meant the freedoms in the GPL license.
>> In my opinion you cannot compare the freedoms explicit in the GPL
>> license and at the same time give examples with CC licensed content.
>> GPL is a workaround to copyright, CC is simplification of copyright.
>> These are 2 very different things in terms of freedom and ideology.
>>
>>
>> a.
>>
>
>
> ------
> Al Larsen
> MFA Candidate and Instructor
> Department of Media Study, University at Buffalo
>
> http://www.propertyistheft.com/
> http://www.propertyistheft.com/poppingtheseams/
> http://www.propertyistheft.com/courses/
>
>
>
>
> On Fri Apr 25 6:13 , aymeric mansoux sent:
>
>> Hi Janet,
>>
>> Thanks for you reply.
>>
>>>> I would be interested if anyone on this list has concrete
>>>> examples where
>>>> FLOSS has been used to model a non digital project/community/
>>>> organisation,
>>>> beyond the simple inspiration that can provide the openness
>>>> suggested by
>>>> FLOSS models and the simple use of FLOSS for production/admin
>>>> tasks.
>>>
>>> Zittrain has been talking about the generative internet
>>> http://www.isoc-ny.org/\?p=195
>>> These are all projects where people make in ways which are
>>> generative.
>>> http:/wikipedia.org
>>> http://www.wikia.com/wiki/Wikia
>>> http://en.wikiversity.org/
>>> http://barcamp.org/
>>> http://www.ted.com/talks/view/id/54
>>> http://ccmixter.org/
>>> http://commons.org/
>>> http://icommons.org/
>>> http://creativecommons.org/
>>
>> I think you misunderstood my question, I was more interested in
>> learning
>> about projects and organisations in which the structure of the
>> organisation is modeled after FLOSS development models, not the
>> content
>> that the organisation if occupied with or the tools they use or
>> develop.
>>
>>
>>> I think there is a correlation between the idea of making in a
>>> generative way and
>>> the kinds of freedoms which are explicit in GNU/Linux free software.
>>
>> By the way, I assume that you meant the freedoms in the GPL license.
>> In my opinion you cannot compare the freedoms explicit in the GPL
>> license and at the same time give examples with CC licensed content.
>> GPL is a workaround to copyright, CC is simplification of copyright.
>> These are 2 very different things in terms of freedom and ideology.
>>
>>
>> a.
>>
>
>
> ------
> Al Larsen
> MFA Candidate and Instructor
> Department of Media Study, University at Buffalo
>
> http://www.propertyistheft.com/
> http://www.propertyistheft.com/poppingtheseams/
> http://www.propertyistheft.com/courses/
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