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| Geert Lovink on Mon, 16 Feb 2009 16:12:16 +0100 (CET) |
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| <nettime> Winter Camp 09: How Would You Organize Your Network? |
(Dear nettimers, in two weeks we're organizing a networks-of-networks
event in Amsterdam called Wintercamp. It looks a bit like Hybrid
WorkSpace in 1997 or Temp MediaLab in 1999 but then it is 12 networks
gathering at the same time, for five days. Around 150 participants
were invited to come to Amsterdam. Like a decade ago it is a mix of
artists, hackers, activists and researchers, but the topics are, of
course, different -- and so are the people. It's the biggest event so
far in the five years existence of the Institute of Network Cultures.
Attached are two intro texts and the program. Please note, this not a
conference. There are some plenary sessions, though, that are open to
the public, in particular the closing session on Saturday afternoon
where the results of all the networks and the event as such will be
presented. There is a group of bloggers that will post their reports
on the main INC website during the week, and video interviews with
participants will be posted on the Net. A so-called meta-group is in
charge of the plenaries and the documentation. We'll keep you updated!
Ciao, Geert)
See also: http://www.networkcultures.org/wintercamp
Participating networks: Blender, Bricolabs, Creative Labour, Dyne.org,
Edufactory, Floss Manuals, freeDimensional Network, Genderchangers,
GOTO10, Microvolunteerism, MyCreativity, Upgrade!
--
Winter Camp 09 Introduction
If we take network technologies seriously, we have to ask ourselves:
What’s next after the initial excitement? What happens after we have
linked up, found old classmates, become friends and even meet up? Will
networking be seen as an additional loose level of social interaction
or will the ties become more serious? What do networks do to our
culture in the long term? Will we constantly move from one platform to
the next initiative, following the global swarm? Do we really wish to
carry our social network with us, wherever we go? How do you cope with
Web 2.0 hype? Are the constant requests to be linked a plague, and
should we see those sites as a modern telephone book or rather as
something that fosters new forms of cooperation? Will we return to our
busy everyday life after the fashion is over or go for a deep
commitment to the virtual? As artists, researchers and cultural
workers are drawn into the network paradigm, it seems pertinent to
collectively inquire into what happens when networks become driving
forces. How can networks maintain their critical edge while aiming for
professional status? Doesn’t everyone want to get paid for their ‘free
labour’?
When a network settles down, and is suddenly not so new anymore, it
can be quite a challenge to maintain the level of initial activity.
Should a network then transform into a so-called ‘organized network’?
Organizing a network does not mean canceling spontaneity and making
way for rules and hierarchy: it can provide a place for sustainable
knowledge sharing and production. As Ned Rossiter argues in his book
Organized Networks (2006), face-to face meetings are crucial ‘if the
network is to maintain momentum, revitalize energy, consolidate old
friendships and discover new ones, recast ideas, undertake further
planning activities, and so on’. This event is therefore meant for
those networks and (potential) network members that cry for support to
gather in real life, conspire, discuss and make the necessary steps
forward. Winter Camp does not have an (academic) educational or
training component, even if there is a lot to learn.
The political concept of organized networks is clear: the invention of
new institutional forms immanent to the logic of networks. The Winter
Camp is an exploration in how to do that, what such institutions might
looks like, what they might do, how they might operate in different
geopolitical contexts, how they are financed, speculate and reassess
what their relation is to other institutions and each other, etc. As a
meta-network, the event aims to produce an overview of network
strategies that hold a combinatory potential for trans-network
collaborations. This is the scalar dimension of organizing networks:
how can we scale and keep-up, not become introverted and not only
invent and innovate but, in the end, use the network form in the
implementation of changes that we envision on a society-wide level?
With the Winter Camp, the Institute of Network Cultures intends to
facilitate this transformation for a dozen existing and new networks
around the topic of new media, art and culture. Some have emerged
within the context of the INC, such as Video Vortex and MyCreativity,
others have existed beforehand (Incommunicado) or are on the verge of
becoming a network (Bricolabs). The format is a mix of a conference
and workshop with the emphasis on getting things done. We hope to find
a balance between intense sessions of groups, plenary sessions, mid-
size meetings and lots of possibilities for informal gatherings.
The Winter Camp is mainly focused on theorists, artists, producers,
researchers, curators, activists and other new media experts and
interested people.
Winter Camp 09 will be a week-long program of workspaces/workgroups
and plenary presentations, in which 12 groups can work on specific
current topics. The maximum capacity is 150 participants. Experiences
with temporary media labs go back to the 1990s (for instance Hybrid
WorkSpace/Documenta X and Temp Media Lab/Kiasma). The Wintercamp 09
format was inspired by the special card box architecture, built by
Paco Gonzalez for the 10th edition of the Zemos98 festival in Sevilla,
Spain, in March 2008. Here, unlike the Hybrid WorkSpace, where groups
showed up one after the other during a three months period, in Sevilla
10 groups worked for 5 days in groups of 10 participants under the
guidance of a 'professor' (workshop leader) on contemporary web 2.0/
new media topics, accompanied by a plenary program.
The Winter Camp is framed around parallel workshops that convene once
a day for (public) lectures and debates. The outcomes will vary from
code and interfaces to research proposals and manifestoes. Plenary
sessions will be held during this working conference as
contextualization as well as a dialogue or debate about the limits and
possibilities of the networks at hand. For the moment it is not
completely clear what that will be like. The program will probably end
with a public session where results of the workgroups will be
presented, varying from wikis to maps and interventions, and from
radio stations to performances.
Crucial to the concept of the Winter Camp is the intention of
'antagonistic encounters'. Existing and emerging networks will be
challenged and interrupted by polemic contributions from outsiders,
either online or in real-life. Self-referential ghettoization is the
last thing that has to happen. The preparation and programming stage
of this event will develop a collaborative database that adopts
negation and difference as a productive principle. In this way, we
begin to contour the borders of networks and in so doing establish the
materiality of collaborative potentials. There is no single model for
networks to become sustainable. To get all the options on the table is
a first necessary step in order to move to the next step. Networks,
Get Organized!
Given the constraints of participation – limited numbers – the format
of the Winter Camp places an immediate organizational challenge upon
networks: who participates? The issue of ‘governance’ and openness is
one that each network at some stage has to address. The process of
building a network of networks thus begins well before the time of the
Winter Camp meeting, and will be incorporated into the discussions
before, during and after the event.
Along with a great curiosity about how networks do what they do, one
of our key motivations in putting this event together has been the
question of institutions. Whether we like it or not, institutions are
part of our daily life. Just as economic globalization has massively
transformed the world on a seemingly annual basis, so too have
institutions as we usually understand them – those whose foundations
are built from concrete and steel, bricks and mortar – been subject to
considerable change in the age of electronic networks. While many
primary institutions of social and political life (the state, firms,
unions, universities) have struggled to adapt to changing
circumstances, they have nonetheless made recognizable and frequently
substantive changes. Indeed, many have reinvented themselves as
‘networked organizations’.
Having said that, the prime focus of Winter Camp 09 is not on those
established organizations and how networks are used to increase, and
optimize, inter-institutional exchanges. While it could be said that
such institutions have undergone a crisis – both in terms of
legitimacy and ontology – it would be a serious mistake to suggest
their hegemony has diminished. Counter-sites of power are needed to
contest the assumption that once a dominant institution becomes
networked it somehow operates in a more soft, benign mode. Network
surveillance through data-mining and user-profiling is only becoming
more sophisticated as a biopolitical technology of control.
At the same time, and particularly with the advent of the neoliberal
state over the past 30 or so years, space has been created for new
institutional players. Witness the renewed role of religious
organizations in the management and provision of social services, or
the rise of NGOs and community organizations. Civil society has not so
much ‘withered’, as Michael Hardt once put it, but rather proliferated
due, in part, to the economic logic of outsourcing.
Where, then, does all this leave the culture of networks? This, in
many ways, is one of the guiding questions that has shaped the
organization of this event. It seems perfectly sensible and strategic
to us that the organization of networks is a process of instituting
new social-technical relations that have unique and special capacities
to do things in the world, to effect change and transform
subjectivities. How might networks take advantage of this new
institutional condition, retaining their strengths – which include the
culture of free distribution and sharing – while securing (or, more
likely, inventing) the possibility of real sustainability of social
and economic life?
Organized networks move between informality and structure, and it is
this yet unexplored terrain that Winter Camp would like to
investigate. There could be events that are totally ‘structure’ free
but for us that would defeat a central purpose of this meeting, namely
the cross-pollination of ideas and practices across the various
networks, most of whom do not know each other, and who the organizers
also do not know. The study of network cultures is, as the name
already indicates, the core business of the Institute of Network
Cultures, the initiator and organizer of Winter Camp 09. It is in this
light that we would like to gather both practical and conceptual
knowledge from networks themselves, document these ideas and make them
accessible to an ever-growing range of groups and individuals that
have started to work under the ‘network condition’.
There are many more questions to ask, critiques to be made, and
agendas to be tested. No doubt, this will be the stuff of the Winter
Camp and beyond. For now, we just wish to register the connection
between the culture of networks and the need for new institutional
arrangements in which networks can play a vital role.
--
Framing Thoughts by the Winter Camp Meta-Group
The Winter Camp Meta-Group is responsible for the programming and
production details of the event. This group of researchers will report
and reflect on the Winter Camp project, and the network dynamics that
unfold during the event. The Meta-Group is responsible for producing a
comprehensive documentation in the months following the Winter Camp so
that those who did not attend can also benefit from its outcomes.
The research of the Meta-Group revolves around the two aims of Winter
Camp: giving existing (online) networks the possibility to come
together and work on their own issues and collectively developing
sustainable network models. The group will facilitate the collective
debates and further theorize the pitfalls and possibilities of the
'networked condition'. In addition to critical concepts such as
organized networks (new institutions), the Meta-Group would like to
address a range of practical and theoretical issues along the
following lines:
• Scaling up or down: To stay active and vibrant, should a network
scale up? What does growth mean to the core of dedicated contributors?
Sometimes, for no obvious reason, networks remain too small. But is
expansion always the answer to a stagnated network? What procedures
and policies should groups institute, if at all, to integrate new
participants? What role do conferences and face-to-face gatherings
play in allowing networks to scale? Sometimes networks just need time,
often years to find their productive synergy. One of the reasons for
this might be the early age of the topics we're dealing with. However,
the massive involvement in Web 2.0 platforms and social networks
indicates that the critical mass is reached much earlier, compared to
five or ten years ago. Internet culture is now mainstream culture.
Social mobilization is done so much easier these days. Networks can be
fooled by the erratic ruptures of today's online engagement. Is the
size of 150 members still the ideal size of a network? Are networked
conversations in which more than 500 users participate doomed to fall
apart, as stated in the past? Would 'small is beautiful' be the right
response to the Facebook masses?
• Dealing with Conflict: Networks can get caught up in recurring
instances of social conflict between participants (flamewars,
territoriality, etc.), which can lead to the collapse of the larger
network. How do we overcome such obstacles? Is it enough to let time
pass? Is it a good idea to bring in new people, in the hope of over-
ruling the ongoing differences? What role might codes of conduct or
other procedures play in mitigating these types of interpersonal
conflicts?
• Collaborations: How do these organizations form alliances and
collaborations with other like-minded groups? What coalitions are
possible? How to relate to the brick and mortar institutions? Is
membership an option? How does this relate back to the question of
finance and legal structures, but also the modes of relation that
define the network?
• Let's talk financial matters and legal structures. Suppose you take
your network VERY seriously. It's fun and you all develop the right
vibe. There are tonnes of plans. Would writing a grant proposal be the
way to go? But for that you need to become a legal body. Most networks
do not have a legal structure, but in order to enter the money economy
or funding systems, this might be necessary. Online networks also have
to deal with money, even if it’s just site hosting and the cost of a
domain name. It is a farce to believe everything can and will be for
free (meaning gratis). What, then, are the most suitable legal forms
for distributed collaboration? What if you don't want a board, or a
director? Or on the contrary, what if you are tired of the 'terror of
the casual'? Is the legal road a way out or the perfect recipe for
disaster? Are there ways out such predicaments? Would it be possible
to operate as a parasite institute? Piggyback on an existing NGO? Or
even snatch a (dead) legal body? Perhaps there's unexpected
opportunities in the society of fakes?
• What role might culture – conceived loosely – play in the
constitution of networks? F/OSS emerges from and helps consolidate
geek culture, whose history precedes this mode of production and which
may account for the strength of these particular networks. Are similar
dynamics at play (or not) with other networks? Then there is the
related question of the political culture of these networks, which
range from anarchist/left to liberal/reformist. How do these political
philosophies shape the constitution of these networks?
• Ownership and copyright: While there are current alternatives to
copyright (such as copyleft licenses and those of Creative Commons),
what are the limits, pitfalls, and problems in using these or any
legal solution for creative and knowledge production? The core lies at
the level of the individual participant, and the ownership over his or
her ideas. If the network accepts the idiom of intellectual property,
what are models of IP that allow personal attribution as well as
recognition for the group effort? Is it is a major conflict for the
network to have legal discourses inscribed upon their mode of
production?
• Software and the Technology Fix: What are suitable tools for
collaboration? What are the limits of current communication protocols
(email, mailing lists, web pages, social networking sites)? What new
tools are being created to address these needs? How to keep the
network together without getting caught up in difficult or
differentiated channels of communication? How does a network of non-
experts learn a new language of programming? Is this an opportunity to
expand the network, invite in the experts, or is this an occasion of
getting down to the labour of acquiring new skills? Perhaps both are
necessary. Either way, it seems the software question has to be
addressed for those networks wishing to enter the world of open source
cultural production and political invention.
• Dissemination: What type of publications and series can be
developed? Without much trouble, networks jump into the grey zone
between print and online publications – what are the opportunities here?
• Winter Camp's overall aim is to strengthen the network(ed) form of
organization. It might also be important in this context to go back to
basics and to ask how an (organized) network defines itself. What
could a network institution look like? What are its dynamics and how
might it become a source of power vis-à-vis the production of new
standards and social relations? What forms of self-reflexivity and
translation are part of these modes of relation? How does the network
learn to institute sharing, democratize its own production of
expertise, establish collaborative forms of decision-making and
address the question of borders?
Meta-Group:
from Amsterdam:
Margreet Riphagen (INC, producer)
Minke Kampman (INC, assistant producer)
Sabine Niederer (INC, producer & researcher)
Anne Helmond (INC, blogging coordinator) & 6 bloggers
Annet Wolfsberger (external member, Virtual Platform, Amsterdam)
Geert Lovink (INC, researcher)
from elsewhere:
Ned Rossiter (external member, Ningbo-Shanghai/China)
Soenke Zehle (external member, Saarbruecken/Germany)
Gabriella Coleman (external member, NY/USA)
--
PROGRAM WINTER CAMP 09
Monday 2st of March
WHOLE DAY ARRIVAL GUESTS / STAYOKAY
17.00 – 19.00 COORDINATORS MEETING / HOGESCHOOL VAN AMSTERDAM,
RAADZAAL
Tuesday 3rd of March
WHOLE DAY ARRIVAL GUESTS / STAYOKAY
11.00 – 13.00 META GROUP MEETING / RESTAURANT STAYOKAY
13.00 – 14.00 LUNCH / RESTAURANT STAYOKAY
14.30 – 17.30 REGISTRATION, Q&A / STUDIO K INFORMATIONPOINT
14.30 – 17.30 PREPARATION WORKSHOP ROOM / WORKSHOP SPACE
18.30 – 20.00 DINNER / RESTAURANT STAYOKAY
20.00 – 22.30 OFFICIAL OPENING BY GEERT LOVINK, INTRODUCTION
‘ORGANIZED NETWORKS’ NED ROSSITER, INTRODUCTION NETWORKS BY
MODERATOR / STUDIO K / SK1
Wednesday 4th of March
08.30 – 09.30 REGISTRATION / STUDIO K INFORMATIONPOINT
08.30 – 09.30 COFFEE AND TEA / STAYOKAY
09.30 – 13.00 WORKSHOP, 1ST ROUND / WORKSHOP SPACE
13.00 – 14.00 LUNCH / RESTAURANT STAYOKAY
14.00 – 17.00 WORKSHOP, 2ND ROUND / WORKSHOP SPACE
17.00 – 18.30 PLENARY SESSION / STUDIO K / SK1
18.30 – 20.30 DINNER / RESTAURANT STAYOKAY
20.30 – 22.30 EVENING PROGRAM / CINEMA / STUDIO K / SK1
Thursday 5th of March
08.30 – 09.30 DOORS OPEN, COFFEE AND TEA / STAYOKAY
09.30 – 13.00 WORKSHOP, 3RD ROUND / WORKSHOP SPACE
13.00 – 14.00 LUNCH / RESTAURANT STAYOKAY
14.00 – 17.00 WORKSHOP, 4TH ROUND / WORKSHOP SPACE
17.00 – 18.30 PLENARY SESSION / STUDIO K / SK1
18.30 – 20.30 DINNER / RESTAURANT STAYOKAY
20.30 – 22.30 EVENING PROGRAM
Friday 6th of March
08.30 – 09.30 DOORS OPEN, COFFEE AND TEA / STAYOKAY
09.30 – 13.00 WORKSHOP, 5TH ROUND / WORKSHOP SPACE
13.00 – 14.00 LUNCH / RESTAURANT STAYOKAY
14.00 – 17.00 WORKSHOP, 6TH ROUND / WORKSHOP SPACE
17.00 – 18.30 PLENARY SESSION / STUDIO K / SK1
18.30 – 20.30 DINNER / RESTAURANT STAYOKAY
20.30 – 22.30 EVENING PROGRAM
Saturday 7th of March
12.00 – 13.00 LUNCH / RESTAURANT STAYOKAY
13.00 – 13.20 UPGRADE! / STUDIO K / SK1
13.20 – 13.40 GOTO10 / STUDIO K / SK1
13.40 – 14.00 MYCREATIVITY / STUDIO K / SK1
14.00 – 14.20 GENDERCHANGERS / STUDIO K / SK1
14.20 – 14.40 MICROVOLUNTEERISM / STUDIO K / SK1
14.40 – 15.00 FLOSS MANUALS / STUDIO K / SK1
15.00 – 15.30 BREAK
15.30 – 15.50 FREEDIMENSIONAL NETWORK / STUDIO K / SK1
15.50 – 16.10 EDUFACTORY / STUDIO K / SK1
16.10 – 16.30 DYNE.ORG / STUDIO K / SK1
16.30 – 16.50 CREATIVE LABOUR / STUDIO K / SK1
16.50 – 17.10 BRICOLABS / STUDIO K / SK1
17.10 – 17.30 BLENDER / STUDIO K / SK1
17.30 – 18.00 PLENARY CLOSING DEBATE / STUDIO K / SK1
19.00 – 21.00 DINNER / RESTAURANT STAYOKAY
22.00 – 01.30 PARTY / STUDIO K BAR
Sunday 7th of March
WHOLE DAY DEPARTURE GUESTS
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