digital commons
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a [[place]].
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#pull [[knowledge commons]] [[digital]] [[commons]]
- the [[internet]] provides us with the ability to construct an essentially infinite number of [[digital commons]] by definition as long and as far as you allow (that is, do not encumber) [[copying]].
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#pull [[knowledge commons]] [[digital]] [[commons]]
- a [[list]].
Digital commons
Stuff like information, data, culture and knowledge which are maintained as a shared resource by an online community.
For example, projects in the area of:
- [[free software]]
- [[free culture]]
- [[open data]]
- [[open access]]
Wikipedia is a well known one.
What is a digital commons?
Digital commons are a subset of the commons, where the resources are data, information, culture and knowledge which are created and/or maintained online.
The digital [[commons]] are a form of commons involving the distribution and communal ownership of informational resources and technology.
Distribution and communal ownership of informational resources and technology. That could cover a lot of stuffβ¦
Resources are typically designed to be used by the community by which they are created.
^ that's true of commons in general, but seems like it wouldn't need to be quite the case for digital commons⦠in that they are easier to be used beyond the community that creates them.
The distinction between digital commons and other digital resources is that the community of people building them can intervene in the governing of their interaction processes and of their shared resources.
Digital commons is a (the?) commons centred on digital media and digital devices - might include many kinds of automation, guidance of material systems, provisioning and transportation of material goods etc. bringing a major focus on the digital capability and literacy of the commoners. It's a material commons of code, devices, media, enabled and stewarded by cultural capability (aka skill)
β [[Mike Hales]] https://social.coop/@mike_hales/107430505867111451
Examples of digital commons
The [[free software]] movement in general is called a digital commons (by Wikipedia at least).
Examples of the digital commons include wikis, open-source software, and open-source licensing.
[[Free culture]], [[public domain]], [[open data]] and [[open access]] are mentioned in [[dulongderosnay2020: Digital commons]].
This research publication from [[IPPR]] seems to focus on data as a digital commons:
It requires a broader understanding of data as a public resource, but one of an exceptional kind: that there is space for market-based approaches, and for some direct state regulation, but that data will increasingly often require the creation of new forms of ownership and control, out of the hands of either market or state institutions.
β [[Creating a digital commons]]
Commoning a digital commons
Social life of a digital commons
Stewarding a digital commons
How would you protect it from enclosure? i.e. how would you [[Actively Thwart Enclosure & Cooptation]] in a digital commons?
Typically, information created in the digital commons is designed to stay in the digital commons by using various forms of licensing, including the [[GNU General Public License]] and various [[Creative Commons]] licenses.
Provisioning a digital commons
Compared to knowledge commons
I wonder how digital commons compares to [[knowledge commons]]? Perhaps just that some knowledge commons are digital commmons, and some digital commons are knowledge commons?
Issues
It is also worth noting that a commons can get the mix of collective control and individualism wrong. A group may exert a suffocating presence on the individual, or on certain types of individuals. Patriarchy is a problem in many subsistence and digital commons despite womenβs significant role in commoning.
β [[Free, Fair and Alive]]
[[Tragedy of the digital commons]]? (there's a paper on it, not read it though)
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a [[place]].
- #pull [[elinor ostrom]]
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alternatively, a [[device]].
- The [[Agora of Flancia]] is a [[knowledge commons]].
- #go https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Commons
- In all matters pertaining the Commons I consider [[doubleloop]] ~ [[@neil]] the steward of this Agora.
- The following picks from his notes below:
- "beyond [[market]] and [[state]]"
- I sometimes think of them as [[embedding]] and thus potentially [[regulating]] markets.
- recommended [[free, fair and alive]], it's great. from his notes below:
- [[commons]] are [[social organisms]], [[social systems]], [[social forms]]
- a [[commons]] is not only about [[sharing]] but about creating [[systems]] that produce [[shareable things]]
- they enable [[self organized problem solving]]
- through social processes that build on the sharing of knowledge and physical resources
- they are [[spaces]] that are born out of the impulse to [[help others]]
- they bring together solutions to social, political and economic challenges into an integrated whole
- [[pull]] [[commoning]] [[ontology]]
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[[vera]] (from wiki below)
- "The commons is the cultural and natural [[resources]] [[accessible to all]] members of a society, including natural materials such as air, water, and a habitable earth. These resources are held in common, [[not owned privately]]."
- [[pragmatix]]
- [[garrett hardin]]
- [[1968]] [[the tragedy of the commons]]
- [[1833]] [[william forster lloyd]] herders overusing land
- [[tragedy of the fishers]]
- [[frank van laerhoven]] and [[elinor ostrom]]: Hardin essentially invented the term commons
- of course Ostrom's work shows there are ways to avert this tragedy all around us
- in Britain, land [[enclosure]] worked over centuries to erode the commons
- [[peter barnes]] [[sky trust]]
- [[notable theoreists]] list is a banger
- [[contemporary commons movements]] too
- [[there is no commons without commoning]]
- [[international journal of the commons]]
- #pull [[frontiers of commoning]]
- a [[list]].
Commons
[[I like commons]].
In a nutshell: 'a commons' is a shared thing between a bunch of people that they actively maintain together.
The idea is that they are "beyond market and state".
Commons can be found in all kinds of walks of life - the environment (grazing lands, fisheries, community forests), culture, digital realm, knowledge commons.
There's a lot to unpack. My favourite book on commons and commoning is [[Free, Fair and Alive]].
The logic of the commons is the logic of a common humanity that has realized that all humans should be equal participants and beneficiaries in society (see Dyer-Witheford 1999, 2007, 2009; Fuchs 2011b; Hardt and Negri 2009; Ε½iΕΎek 2010).
What is a commons?
Also what's the difference between 'the Commons' and 'a commons'?
The Commons is a means of provisioning and governance that generally doesn't need the permission of legislatures or courts to move forward.
β [[David Bollier]], [[Stir to Action]] Issue 30
The commons are cared for by the those that directly inhabit and gain from its wealth.
β [[Seeding the Wild]]
Despite vivid differences among commons focused on natural resources, digital systems, and social mutuality, they all share structural and social similarities.
β [[Free, Fair and Alive]]
So instead of conceiving of commons as closed systems of common property managed by a βclub,β it is more productive to see them as social organisms who, thanks to their [[semi-permeable membrane]]s, can interact with larger forces of life β communities, ecosystems, other commons.
β [[Free, Fair and Alive]]
The commons is not simply about βsharing,β as it happens in countless areas of life. It is about sharing and bringing into being durable social systems for producing shareable things and activities.
β [[Free, Fair and Alive]]
Commons are living social systems through which people address their shared problems in self-organized ways.
β [[Free, Fair and Alive]]
The commons is a robust class of self-organized social practices for meeting needs in fair, inclusive ways.
β [[Free, Fair and Alive]]
Each commons depends on social processes, the sharing of knowledge, and physical resources. Each shares challenges in bringing together the social, the political (governance), and the economic (provisioning) into an integrated whole.
β [[Free, Fair and Alive]]
The elemental human impulse that we are born with β to help others, to improve existing practices β ripens into a stable social form with countless variations: a commons.
β [[Free, Fair and Alive]]
How big is a commons?
In a commons, the resource can be small and serve a tiny group (the family refrigerator), it can be community-level (sidewalks, playgrounds, libraries, and so on), or it can extend to international and global levels (deep seas, the atmosphere, the Internet, and scientific knowledge).
The commons can be well bounded (a community park or library); transboundary (the Danube River, migrating wildlife, the Internet); or without clear boundaries (knowledge, the ozone layer).
Why?
the commons is not just about small-scale projects for improving everyday life. It is a germinal vision for reimagining our future together and reinventing social organization, economics, infrastructure, politics, and state power itself.
β [[Free, Fair and Alive]]
The commons is a social form that enables people to enjoy freedom without repressing others, enact fairness without bureaucratic control, foster togetherness without compulsion, and assert sovereignty without nationalism.
β [[Free, Fair and Alive]]
A commons β¦ gives community life a clear focus. It depends on democracy in its truest form. It destroys inequality. It provides an incentive to protect the living world. It creates, in sum, a politics of belonging.β
β [[Free, Fair and Alive]]
The virtue of the commons as a mode of thought and action isnβt simply that it provides for the scaled management of pooled resources, but that it spurs us to envision a way of life founded in interdependence, mutuality and shared responsibility for the outcomes experienced by others. Any situation organized in this way offers us a way to get outside of ourselves, a scaffolding for the development of intersubjectivity.
β [[Radical Technologies]]
Where market logics generally seek to collectivize risk and privatize gain, adherents to the principles of the commons believe that the greatest degree of sustainable benefit is derived from resources when they are held jointly, and managed democratically for the good of all.
β [[Radical Technologies]]
Politics of it
The world of commoning represents a profound challenge to capitalism because it is based on a very different ontology.
β [[Free, Fair and Alive]]
Difficulties for commons
Potential problems in the use, governance, and sustainability of a commons can be caused by some characteristic human behaviors that lead to social dilemmas such as competition for use, free riding, and over- harvesting. Typical threats to knowledge commons are commodification or enclosure, pollution and degradation, and nonsustainability.
Related
Digital
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a [[book]]
- by [[elinor ostrom]]
- [[1990]]
- [[wp]] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:BookSources/978-0-521-40599-7
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[[hypothesis]] https://via.hypothes.is/https://www.actu-environnement.com/media/pdf/ostrom_1990.pdf
- [[go]] [[hypothesis]]
- [[google books]] https://books.google.ch/books?id=4xg6oUobMz4C&printsec=frontcover&dq=isbn:9780521405997&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwiU5ZfmhczwAhWEuaQKHVnnCEwQ6AEwAHoECAAQAg#v=onepage&q&f=false
https://twitter.com/flancian/status/1401146586013618183 https://twitter.com/flancian/status/1400884449949126663
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[[book]]
- [[author]] [[elinor ostrom]]
- [[common pool resource]] [[cpr]]
- [[tragedy of the commons]]
- [[prisoner's dilemma]]
- [[collective action]]
- [[leviathan]]
- [[new institutionalism]]
- [[self-organized governance]]
Governing the Commons
[[Elinor Ostrom]].
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a [[thing]].
- [[list]]
- [[go]] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Knowledge_commons
- [[pull]] [[understanding knowledge as a commons]]
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[[flancia]] is the revolution of an altruist [[knowledge commons]]
- [[pull]] [[towards a knowledge commons]]
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[[commons]]
- [[collective ownership]]
- [[collective intelligence]]
- [[intellectual property]]
- [[information resource]]
- [[open science]]
- [[noosphere]]
- [[pull]] [[governing the commons]]
knowledge commons
"the mutualization of productive knowledge"
The term "knowledge commons" refers to information, data, and content that is collectively owned and managed by a community of users, particularly over the Internet.
Examples of knowledge commons
The knowledge commons is a model for a number of domains, including Open Educational Resources such as the MIT OpenCourseWare, free digital media such as Wikipedia,[4] Creative Commons βlicensed art, open-source research,[5] and open scientific collections such as the Public Library of Science or the Science Commons, free software and Open Design.[6][7]
- [[Open Educational Resources]]
- [[Wikipedia]]
- [[Creative Commons]]
- [[Public Library of Science]]
- [[Science Commons]]
- [[Free software]]
Knowledge commoning
Once again, the promise of a knowledge commons is best made evident in the disagreements and difficulties in determining who and how it should be managed
Knowledge commons is a misnomer bcos there is no such thing as knowledge. (!!)
What there IS/ARE is/are practices of knowing, communicating and organising.
So a 'knowledge commons' is a commons of literacy and (collective) labour power, thro which commoners are able to capably understand and organise their practical life as a commons, in a world of commons. It's a cultural commons.
β [[Mike Hales]] https://social.coop/@mike_hales/107430510590782176
Resources
- public document at doc.anagora.org/digital-commons
- video call at meet.jit.si/digital-commons
2021 12 04
2021 12 05
2021 12 11
2021 12 30
2022 01 08
agora pkg chapter
commons based peer production
compost
david bollier p2p models interview on digital commons
deepen communion with nature
digital garden
future histories
glam
industry terms
node club
review future histories
the care manifesto
towards a knowledge commons
whats the difference between digital commons and knowledge commons
actively thwart enclosure & cooptation
agora
commons
copying
copyright
creating a digital commons
creative commons
digital
digital commons
dulongderosnay2020 digital commons
free culture
free fair and alive
free libre open source software
free software
gnu general public license
governing the commons
internet
ippr
knowledge commons
list
mike hales
open access
open course
open course ware
open data
place
public domain
pull
stoa
tragedy of the digital commons