197 lines
9.7 KiB
Plaintext
197 lines
9.7 KiB
Plaintext
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Anarchy in the U.K.: Computer Networking workshops
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Introduction
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Three of these were held
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1. an introduction to computer networking
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2. a discussion with publishers about electronic publishing
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3. a discussion about BBSes and networking among those already#
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using it.
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The themes of the workshop were good, and they were to a large extent
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successful; preparation was difficult, as the organisers were a collection
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of net people who had not had the opportunity to meet previously. In
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fact, only one was resident in London, compounding the difficulty in
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organisation.
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Myself, Mitzi Waltz from Extreme Books in Portland, Oregon, Matt Fuller
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from Fast Breeder BBS in London, Andrew Flood from the WSM in Dublin, Iain
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McKay from Glasgow, and Chris Hutton from Edinburgh were involved. A
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big thanks to all of them - particularly Mitzi - for their hard work.
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Very little was organised by myself beforehand, despite my suggesting
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the themes, and the hassles I had meant that I relied upon people stepping
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in to take over, which they did. Overall, it was very useful.
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We arrranged to meet the day before at the levitation of parliament - too
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vague an arrangement to work. Next time, I would choose somewhere away
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from the main events, and a specific time. Setting up a mailing list
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to coordinate workshops from afar beforehand - and starting some months
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before - would help.
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We could have compiled a list of organisers' phone numbers so that
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we could communicate over the period of the festival. The first two workshops
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occurred on the same day - too much of a rush to change over; I would choose
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separate days.
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It was valuable to have plenty of time, particularly for the first
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workshop, which ran over about four hours. Explaining technology
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cannot be done in a hurry.
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It is probably worth choosing a facilitator and someone to write up
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the workshops beforehand. I ended (semi-) facilitating each workshop
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and Mitzi wrote them up. I had a 2 year old child with me which
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added to various organisational problems (including losing a whole
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load of stuff the night before the first workshop); if I have to
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bring a child, I'd prefer to take a back seat. Different facilitators
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would be a good idea for each workshop.
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We could have involved the non-Internet BBS community more centrally
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(one of them should have run the third workshop), as I get the
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feeling they feel slightly marginalised. Also, note the problems
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with Spanish speakers discussed in <reference>. It would be worthwhile to
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run workshops in both languages, and arrange as good an interpretation
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as possible. At least, separate workshops could have been held in
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English and Spanish, with both reporting back. (We have Spunk Press material
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in other languages and I omitted to bring it!).
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The hall was not perfect. There were several exhibitions which
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filled the walls; people wandered in - at one point playing music.
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We held the last two workshops in a pub nearby. As they involved
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smaller numbers of people, this wasn't bad. This depends on the
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pub, though.
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Reporting on workshops would be easier if online access was
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available - particularly for something lasting a week or more.
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There's usually some kind of college nearby, and this could have been
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arranged.
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Introduction to Computer Networking workshop
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This attracted about 50 or 60 people. It was very informal owing to
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my total lack of preparation. Luckily the eight or so of us with
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net access were able to collaborate. After a short introduction
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the workshop just followed the questions of the audience. We
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concentrated on the positive uses of networking and practical advice
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rather than technical details. More information for people wanting
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to get connected would be useful. There were useful comments from
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others about the problems with the extent of information on the net
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- how do you know what is interesting once you are connected?
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We all described our different perspectives, a useful spread from
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Spunk Press (electronic publishing on the net), Extreme Books
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(anarchist BBS, catalogues and internet access), Fast Breeder
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(local BBS), WSM (use of the net by anarchist group). We then
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split into smaller groups - *very* useful and maybe worth doing
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earlier, and actually planning the different themes.
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Demonstration was tricky; we only had a portable Macintosh. It
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was possible with small groups. A neat offline demo of WWW set up
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by Jack Jansen was aborted as I lost the disks the night before.
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People seemed more interested in discussing the technology. A
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rather impressive write up of the workshop appeared in one of the
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daily bulletins by someone there
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Publishers workshop
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The discussion with publishers took place in the Dolphin
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Pub on Tuesday afternoon. A K Press from Edinburgh, and
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their London office, Working Press, DS4, Extreme Books,
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Workers Soldiarity (WSM), Scottish Anarchist and Spunk Press were present.
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The discussion was very useful, if rather brief owing to
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organisational hiccups.
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Stefan from Working Press made the point that, for those
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without net contacts, there was no feedback from Spunk Press.
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The idea of local user groups was discussed. We decided that
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a regular newsletter from Spunk Press would increase communication.
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Statistics on accesses to a publishers section in Spunk Press
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would give feedback on usage (currently WWW accesses can be monitored
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at 140 a day for the Spunk Press home page).
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One obstacle facing publishers is simply lack of time to get disks
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converted. Help might be needed here.
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WWW and graphics were discussed. This - and sound, for DS4, who
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carry records - had great interest. As usual, no one has the time
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to get into HTML and the technology. We should assist publishers
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once we have a handle on it.
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The usefulness of cross referencing within the archive was pointed
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out. A way of encouraging those submitting to provide this kind
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of information - a questionaire perhaps - would be useful.
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We discussed the impact of free electronic access on book and
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magazine sales. Mitzi and I made the point that most people
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don't like either reading from a screen or a pile of A4 printouts.
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Though Hakim Bey's TAZ is in the archive, I will go and buy it
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to read it properly. WWW is more pleasant to read online or
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print out, but larger items are unlikely to be read online.
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In any case, it is at least worth publishers putting their
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catalogues into the archive, and excerpts from publications to
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stimulate interest. This cropped up just before the workshop
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during a discussion between myself and people from Freedom,
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who were concerned about loss of revenue. Everyone else felt
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this was a negative attitude - A K Press pointed out that this
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could be used as a justification for closing libraries. Well,
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Freedom are the conservative end of the anarchist movement here..
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We agreed that meeting up at the annual anarchist bookfair in
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September would maintain contacts, and that Spunk Press would
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try and arrange this.
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BBS and networking workshop
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This was attended by people from ECN (London and Berlin), BBSes in
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Barcelona, the WSM, Extreme Books, Spunk Press (others?).
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Some of the discussion was about Spunk Press. We made our commitment
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clear to take material in any language, and explained that all groups
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were autonomous in that we had no editorial policy; all information
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is accepted - though ephemeral information is not so appropriate.
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Disk space is not an issue, as we can find as much as is needed on
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machines on the internet; the Spunk Press archive is distributed to
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BBSes, and on PC disks, and the recipients can choose how much of the
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archive to keep. We are committed [ I think? subject to discussion ]
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to accepting as wide a range of anarchist material as possible (someone
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asked if we would take Class War - of course).
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Chris from ECN London was interested in technical help in getting connected;
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currently they have to wait for ECN Berlin to come over to London! We
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agreed the need for a resource to help with practical advice; also the
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wider distribution of anarchist contacts for people to acccess when
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they need advice (before and once connected to the net). A modified
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form of the Spunk Press contact list would help people sift out useful
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contacts and information. This needs some kind of non-net contact
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by phone or letter, and available from some address - perhaps published
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by A K Press?
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The point was made by ECN Berlin that the distribution of information in
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this way does not connect to activism; indeed that the use of the internet
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to coordinate activities, e.g. around the Chiapas rising, isn't much use
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when local movements are too weak to act on the information. We distinguished
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Spunk Press as an educational organisation with a necessarily narrow focus.
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ECN Berlin made the most interesting point that Internet mailing lists and
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newsgroups are of little use when they do not involve people who are
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already working together. The setting up of mailing lists around specific
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issues (thanks Andrew from WSM) and in geographically localised areas
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- e.g. for the Scottish Anarchist Federation, or over the U.K. - would
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address this. Essentially, I think we have become too attached to the
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Internet as a global entity; while useful for information retrieval,
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communication is better achieved over smaller distances, or over
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single issues. This requires more people to set up and maintain mailing lists.
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We can learn from the BBS world, who are necessarily slanted towards
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local contacts. Addition of BBSes to the anarchist net contact list
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(or maintenance of a separate list) would help redress this (I personally
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am going to dial in to more BBSes without internet contact to shed some
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of my Internetcentrism).
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Manuelo from Barcelona described the anarchist networking in Spain; two internet
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nodes in Madrid and Barcelona and some BBSes. ECN Berlin described
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their network.
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Ian Heavens, Spunk Press Scotland
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