invited as their guest and attended the INCA conference in Bristol
> UK for last two days in which alternative and
community networks in UK
> such as B4RN were very much in evidence.
>
> One of the outcomes on my intray today is I was approached for some
/...\ enabling documentation that alternative network
community providers
> could provide to
communities to better inform them of the issues and
> comparisons between going to telco based broadband v. their own network
> service.
>
> The more upstream issues around using applications such as web Ad based
> services
/...\ Local Internet Society chapters are a good resource for this such as
> mine ISOC UK England but as volunteer bodies they need
community support
> to build this type of information resource.
>
>
> Christian
>
> Anish Mangal wrote:
> > Wanting to have a discussion with
Anish?
I was invited as their guest and attended the INCA conference in Bristol
UK for last two days in which alternative and
community networks in UK
such as B4RN were very much in evidence.
One of the outcomes on my intray today is I was approached for some
enabling
/...\ documentation that alternative network
community providers
could provide to
communities to better inform them of the issues and
comparisons between going to telco based broadband v. their own network
service.
The more upstream issues around using applications such as web Ad based
services and the general levels of insecurity through
/...\ theft (doxing)
Local Internet Society chapters are a good resource for this such as
mine ISOC UK England but as volunteer bodies they need
community support
to build this type of information resource.
Christian
Anish Mangal wrote:
> Wanting to have a discussion with folks who work with
Anish?
I was invited as their guest and attended the INCA conference in Bristol
UK for last two days in which alternative and
community networks in UK
such as B4RN were very much in evidence.
One of the outcomes on my intray today is I was approached for some
enabling
/...\ documentation that alternative network
community providers
could provide to
communities to better inform them of the issues and
comparisons between going to telco based broadband v. their own network
service.
The more upstream issues around using applications such as web Ad based
services and the general levels of insecurity through
/...\ theft (doxing)
Local Internet Society chapters are a good resource for this such as
mine ISOC UK England but as volunteer bodies they need
community support
to build this type of information resource.
Christian
Anish Mangal wrote:
> Wanting to have a discussion with folks who work with
cdel@firsthand.net > wrote: Anish these are great examples. Do you mind if I push them to some
people who work in school online
community building to see if they have
any thoughts or support to offer you to help take this forward?
Am I right in assuming you are offering
/...\ educating",
> or imparting knowledge, and more on observing whether the people who are
> on the ground, who are part of that
community have within themselves
> (mostly motivation) to think this through. I *do* believe this is
> necessary in learning environments like schools where we deploy servers
/...\ vendor but they want to get out that deal gradually with the
> profusion of freely licensed, high quality learning content.
>
> Village
community #2:
> - Small village, about 30-50 families spread over a mountain slope
> looking to setup a village network.
> - The person from
Anish these are great examples. Do you mind if I push them to some
people who work in school online
community building to see if they have
any thoughts or support to offer you to help take this forward?
Am I right in assuming you are offering a connectivity service
/...\ educating",
> or imparting knowledge, and more on observing whether the people who are
> on the ground, who are part of that
community have within themselves
> (mostly motivation) to think this through. I *do* believe this is
> necessary in learning environments like schools where we deploy
/...\ vendor but they want to get out that deal gradually with the
> profusion of freely licensed, high quality learning content.
>
> Village
community #2:
> - Small village, about 30-50 families spread over a mountain slope
> looking to setup a village network.
> - The person from
wrote:
>
> Anish these are great examples. Do you mind if I push them to some
> people who work in school online
community building to see if they have
> any thoughts or support to offer you to help take this forward?
>
> Am I right
/...\ imparting knowledge, and more on observing whether the people
> who are
> > on the ground, who are part of that
community have within themselves
> > (mostly motivation) to think this through. I *do* believe this is
> > necessary in learning environments like schools where we deploy
/...\ want to get out that deal gradually with the
> > profusion of freely licensed, high quality learning content.
> >
> > Village
community #2:
> > - Small village, about 30-50 families spread over a mountain slope
> > looking to setup a village network
Bastien Guerry [LibreList] FLOSS4P2P: Call for Participation 2015-02-18 10:28:26 FLOSS projects that are
building software for peer production and organization, with a focus
on distributed platforms. Scholarships to attend are offered to
grassroots
communities.
** Context **
We know that the Internet was originally decentralized, with protocols
and services built by hackers. However, with the arrival of the
celebrated
/...\ annoying
activist organizations (such as Wikileaks).
On the other hand, in the last few years we have seen the emergence of
Internet-enabled collaborative
communities building shared libre/ open
resources. Commons-based Peer to Peer Production (CBPP) is rapidly
growing: not just for software and encyclopedias, but also for
information
/...\ initiatives are being
undertaken under this premise (e.g. Ethereum, Diaspora, OwnCloud,
MediaGoblin, Sandstorm). These new software tools may also be useful
to boost CBPP
communities further. In this workshop, we will gather
those working around the decentralized FLOSS that could help CBPP/P2P
communities. Hackers, academics, activists and interested stakeholders
those populations. If that idea turns out to be a
good fit for a given population/community/region, then by all
means one should help that
community in doing so (no strings
attached and always ceding all control to the
community in
question), but always with the lesson of (e.g.) recent Ladakhi
/...\ effects of Western and national cultural hegemony and
cultural globalization (which necessarily flows much more
strongly from "West" to "East" and from nation to
community than
vice versa under a [Western] hegemonic system of globalization)
in many of its
communities, including
communities in Leh. I also
think that neglected here
/...\ brainstorming ways right
now to make this sustainable and scalable.
In the context of the open source project (which is XSCE
- School Server
Community Edition) , it is a loose group
of volunteers collaborating remotely, but working
locally with a common technology base. There would be
some NGOs, some companies, some
less on my "educating", or imparting knowledge, and more on observing whether the people who are on the ground, who are part of that
community have within themselves (mostly motivation) to think this through. I *do* believe this is necessary in learning environments like schools where we deploy servers
/...\ proprietary content vendor but they want to get out that deal gradually with the profusion of freely licensed, high quality learning content. Village
community #2: - Small village, about 30-50 families spread over a mountain slope looking to setup a village network. - The person from the
community with whom
/...\ this slowly in a trust building kind of fashion. So, here's the question. How would you best engage in a conversation with these
communities? Note that we only deploy in places where there is strong pull from the field, since that automatically implies people on the ground will have
convince any of the previous interviewees to
> become interviewers to bootstrap this process, I hereby volunteer
> to interview whomever the
community would like me to.
>
> Thoughts? "Pay it forward," shall we? :-)
>
> --Steve Phillips Co-founder of Santa Barbara Hackerspace
/...\ again.
>
> I think in this context it is probably, “Don’t do anything that
> will land another
community member in Jail. Particularly Ross
> because he’s claustrophobic.”
>
> I don’t think people’s adherence
/...\ think things are currently going ok, but as always more help,
> involvement, volunteers would be very welcome and would definitely
> benefit the
community. Everyone’s time is valuable, and often in
> short supply, but getting more videos up more frequently would be
> great. I feel
convince any of the previous interviewees to
>> become interviewers to bootstrap this process, I hereby volunteer
>> to interview whomever the
community would like me to.
>>
>> Thoughts? "Pay it forward," shall we? :-)
>>
>> --Steve Phillips Co-founder
/...\ think in this context it is probably, “Don’t do anything that
>> will land another
community member in Jail. Particularly Ross
>> because he’s claustrophobic.”
>>
>> I don’t think people’s adherence
/...\ currently going ok, but as always more help,
>> involvement, volunteers would be very welcome and would definitely
>> benefit the
community. Everyone’s time is valuable, and often in
>> short supply, but getting more videos up more frequently would be
>> great
convince any of the previous interviewees to
>> become interviewers to bootstrap this process, I hereby volunteer
>> to interview whomever the
community would like me to.
>>
>> Thoughts? "Pay it forward," shall we? :-)
>>
>> --Steve Phillips Co-founder
/...\ think in this context it is probably, âDonât do anything that
>> will land another
community member in Jail. Particularly Ross
>> because heâs claustrophobic
/...\ currently going ok, but as always more help,
>> involvement, volunteers would be very welcome and would definitely
>> benefit the
community. Everyoneâs time is valuable, and often in
>> short supply, but getting more videos up more frequently would
convince any of the previous interviewees to become interviewers to bootstrap this process, I hereby volunteer to interview whomever the
community would like me to. Thoughts? "Pay it forward," shall we? :-) --Steve Phillips Co-founder of Santa Barbara Hackerspace
/...\ demand again.
I think in this context it is probably, âDonât do anything that will land another
community member in Jail. Particularly Ross because heâs claustrophobic.â
I donât think people
/...\ yourselves.
I think things are currently going ok, but as always more help, involvement, volunteers would be very welcome and would definitely benefit the
community. Everyoneâs time is valuable, and often in short supply, but getting more videos up more frequently would be great. I feel
involved in providing internet access to people/places which didn't have it before. Volunteering for the SchoolServer/XSCE[1] project, I largely work with
communities which are rural, often remote, and largely disconnected to the internet. At these places, access to CC-licensed or public domain content is provided to children
/...\ sometimes specifically in schools) and the larger
community through village-spanning wifi networks (for an example, see [2][3]). Many times there is no internet access, but in a few cases there is some limited (in bandwidth) connectivity available. Naturally, the question of "enabling the internet" comes up. Whether
/...\ however, my perceptions have changed. There are many real issues related to privacy, cultural change etc. that need to discussed at length with the
community and this involves effort. The short cut is to assume that people will learn themselves once access is provided, but I don't believe
politics of capital, and the new narrative must convey the
idea that economics should be pushed back to its original application of
serving human
communities, not special interests.
"Redecentralization" is about empowering our
communities, not shifting from
global masters to other global masters. That is the process
/...\ achieve the latter. As to the former, only politics
can do it. Technology alone, especially proprietary technologies, cannot
provide the necessary empowerment for local
communities to adapt it to their
actual needs, and no special committee can ever encompass in their vision
all the complexity of local situations
arkos.io
Haven't made any posts here yet but have been lurking for awhile and
am glad to be a part of the
community.
Cheers!
Jacob Cook <jacob@jcook.cc>
https://jcook.cc
On 29/12/13 04:11 PM, Paul Frazee wrote:
> Hi folks.
>
> I'm Paul - just wanted
/...\ work solo in Austin on a project
> called Grimwire that's in this realm. I'm also involved in the
> distributed systems
community here, though mostly as an enthusiast
> (I'm not implementing paxos or anything).
>
> Nice meeting you all, and I look forward
/...\ seeing where this
>
community goes.
>
> Paul F
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
Version: GnuPG v2.0.20 (GNU/Linux)
iQEcBAEBCAAGBQJSwKEQAAoJECL1sE8aLy0urbEH/0a6g952fF0AbZJVAmrcQ59q
+uWD0PXnPhV7OHVaV1L6hmhwEeOE4IBwu2a3LBREi8mheVLGo3gZD1hSYGqPsKY1
BI0tzaFn+a3LdwCC6v8QMkL4dfSrKfAbqv4fF2xyzIJpDfjpDuwGl+V0xuNU5QzB
CEhBhs0hmgyV5dJbbnhSBTYrusMJkrVOVzamVaRKKnoJ5iuFJvTGm/8YoKNOCy5w
ewCsRBI3dgHUQaJ4NoDfA8KUdJLgsBj6AAtBafBzK2cSwPYN7xpy2CGCdIyIv1Lj
q4uYOQ9aac81inH027AfDVUUetMKKS74wgli8gVj8sLWc1IKG9XKfAdgtblZ1EE=
=hylU
-----END PGP SIGNATURE
redundant to state or demand again.
I think in this context it is probably, “Don’t do anything that will land another
community member in Jail. Particularly Ross because he’s claustrophobic.”
I don’t think people’s adherence to the law is particularly
/...\ yourselves.
I think things are currently going ok, but as always more help, involvement, volunteers would be very welcome and would definitely benefit the
community. Everyone’s time is valuable, and often in short supply, but getting more videos up more frequently would be great. I feel bad because
/...\ sustainable.
For the interviews specifically, and it’s my personal opinion, I’ve *love* to see interviews done by members of the
community with projects that interest them. I mean, I love both Francis and Ira, but equally I’d like to see different approaches
arkos.io
Haven't made any posts here yet but have been lurking for awhile and
am glad to be a part of the
community.
Cheers!
Jacob Cook <jacob@jcook.cc>
https://jcook.cc
On 29/12/13 04:11 PM, Paul Frazee wrote:
> Hi folks.
>
> I'm Paul - just wanted
/...\ work solo in Austin on a project
> called Grimwire that's in this realm. I'm also involved in the
> distributed systems
community here, though mostly as an enthusiast
> (I'm not implementing paxos or anything).
>
> Nice meeting you all, and I look forward
/...\ seeing where this
>
community goes.
>
> Paul F
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
Version: GnuPG v2.0.20 (GNU/Linux)
iQEcBAEBCAAGBQJSwKEQAAoJECL1sE8aLy0urbEH/0a6g952fF0AbZJVAmrcQ59q
+uWD0PXnPhV7OHVaV1L6hmhwEeOE4IBwu2a3LBREi8mheVLGo3gZD1hSYGqPsKY1
BI0tzaFn+a3LdwCC6v8QMkL4dfSrKfAbqv4fF2xyzIJpDfjpDuwGl+V0xuNU5QzB
CEhBhs0hmgyV5dJbbnhSBTYrusMJkrVOVzamVaRKKnoJ5iuFJvTGm/8YoKNOCy5w
ewCsRBI3dgHUQaJ4NoDfA8KUdJLgsBj6AAtBafBzK2cSwPYN7xpy2CGCdIyIv1Lj
q4uYOQ9aac81inH027AfDVUUetMKKS74wgli8gVj8sLWc1IKG9XKfAdgtblZ1EE=
=hylU
-----END PGP SIGNATURE
states and
corporations, and most of the normal human interactions that might
protect against abuse assume relatively small groups. A sports club,
church
community, even a village, are all self managing. Regulation
still happens, but the detection and response are (or can be)
relatively lightweight. This doesn't work even
/...\ suspect, human things. Humans are interacting, and humans
need to address problems. As a direct outcome of the human model, we
might look at
community size. This depends on the facilities being
offered. Distributed search, YaCy, for example, could have a very
large number of users. Social networks
/...\ other hand, might need
very focused small
communities. I can imagine a sort of federated
facility, using something like Diaspora, where smallish groups can
share a server, but servers can talk to each other in some limited way
to allow for groups that overlap. Problems can then be resolved
through
politics of capital, and the new narrative must convey
the idea that economics should be pushed back to its original
application of serving human
communities, not special interests.
"Redecentralization" is about empowering our
communities, not shifting
from global masters to other global masters. That is the process
/...\ achieve the latter. As to the
former, only politics can do it. Technology alone, especially
proprietary technologies, cannot provide the necessary empowerment for
local
communities to adapt it to their actual needs, and no special
committee can ever encompass in their vision all the complexity of local
situations.
I understand
beakerbrowser.com/ ) to this list. Â There is good energy starting to emerge around these two projects. Overall, I feel that the tech
community is starting to approach a point of coherence around the need and importance of decentralization, and as the Early Adopter crowd floods into this space which
/...\ need high-quality curated resources to show them how to get started, what is where, etc. etc. Â There are many different tech
communities emerging, many of which unfortunately over-rotate on blockchain and whatnot, and it is critical that sites like redecentralize.org (or something like it) provide
Austin on a project called Grimwire that's in this realm. I'm
>>> also involved in the distributed systems
community here, though
>>> mostly as an enthusiast (I'm not implementing paxos or
>>> anything).
>>>
>>> Nice meeting
/...\ look forward to seeing where this
>>>
community goes.
>>>
>>> Paul F
>>>
>>
>>
>>
>> -- konklone.com | @konklone
>>
>
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
Version: GnuPG v2.0.20 (GNU/Linux)
iQEcBAEBCAAGBQJSxf2yAAoJECL1sE8aLy0ufMUIAJfnX1r+h5CcP95fEGgbSfB2
9t0E0Wi/aUGdersAw5k6NLIZX3+gsgaspJWud0oUXThUAVq+iia5/UDuhGHP3hmK
dhjMifscsYuBALsc+46oFx02ZPFJJjPB3FuS4DF/HRR2LbQxUJpsOwQTFsoMAsLN
Ira [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] Hello! 2015-09-07 08:47:29 here's a short introduction :)
I am a free-software and open-education volunteer mainly working on
the XSCE (short for School Server
Community Edition) project. I've
volunteered for the OLPC project from 2010-2014 and worked in the
field in Paraguay and Uruguay, and helped develop the Australian
/...\ version of OLPC's OS.
At XSCE, we are a active global volunteer
community working to foster
grassroots learning and education in the remotest corners of the
world. Right now our model of implementation is to have offline
content-loaded servers hosted in schools and villages providing access
Austin on a project called Grimwire that's in this realm. I'm
>>> also involved in the distributed systems
community here, though
>>> mostly as an enthusiast (I'm not implementing paxos or
>>> anything).
>>>
>>> Nice meeting
/...\ look forward to seeing where this
>>>
community goes.
>>>
>>> Paul F
>>>
>>
>>
>>
>> -- konklone.com | @konklone
>>
>
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
Version: GnuPG v2.0.20 (GNU/Linux)
iQEcBAEBCAAGBQJSxf2yAAoJECL1sE8aLy0ufMUIAJfnX1r+h5CcP95fEGgbSfB2
9t0E0Wi/aUGdersAw5k6NLIZX3+gsgaspJWud0oUXThUAVq+iia5/UDuhGHP3hmK
dhjMifscsYuBALsc+46oFx02ZPFJJjPB3FuS4DF/HRR2LbQxUJpsOwQTFsoMAsLN
Austin on a project called Grimwire that's in this realm. I'm
>>> also involved in the distributed systems
community here, though
>>> mostly as an enthusiast (I'm not implementing paxos or
>>> anything).
>>>
>>> Nice meeting
/...\ look forward to seeing where this
>>>
community goes.
>>>
>>> Paul F
>>>
>>
>>
>>
>> -- konklone.com | @konklone
>>
>
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
Version: GnuPG v2.0.20 (GNU/Linux)
iQEcBAEBCAAGBQJSxf2yAAoJECL1sE8aLy0ufMUIAJfnX1r+h5CcP95fEGgbSfB2
9t0E0Wi/aUGdersAw5k6NLIZX3+gsgaspJWud0oUXThUAVq+iia5/UDuhGHP3hmK
dhjMifscsYuBALsc+46oFx02ZPFJJjPB3FuS4DF/HRR2LbQxUJpsOwQTFsoMAsLN
Austin on a project called Grimwire that's in this realm. I'm
>>> also involved in the distributed systems
community here, though
>>> mostly as an enthusiast (I'm not implementing paxos or
>>> anything).
>>>
>>> Nice meeting
/...\ look forward to seeing where this
>>>
community goes.
>>>
>>> Paul F
>>>
>>
>>
>>
>> -- konklone.com | @konklone
>>
>
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
Version: GnuPG v2.0.20 (GNU/Linux)
iQEcBAEBCAAGBQJSxf2yAAoJECL1sE8aLy0ufMUIAJfnX1r+h5CcP95fEGgbSfB2
9t0E0Wi/aUGdersAw5k6NLIZX3+gsgaspJWud0oUXThUAVq+iia5/UDuhGHP3hmK
dhjMifscsYuBALsc+46oFx02ZPFJJjPB3FuS4DF/HRR2LbQxUJpsOwQTFsoMAsLN
Paul Frazee [LibreList] Intros and current projects 2013-12-29 15:11:48 restrict. I work solo in Austin on a project called Grimwire that's in this realm. I'm also involved in the distributed systems
community here, though mostly as an enthusiast (I'm not implementing paxos or anything).
Nice meeting you all, and I look forward to seeing where this
/...\ community goes. Paul
Anish Mangal [LibreList] Hello! 2015-09-02 22:02:28 here's a short introduction :)
I am a free-software and open-education volunteer mainly working on
the XSCE (short for School Server
Community Edition) project. I've
volunteered for the OLPC project from 2010-2014 and worked in the
field in Paraguay and Uruguay, and helped develop the Australian
/...\ version of OLPC's OS.
At XSCE, we are a active global volunteer
community working to foster
grassroots learning and education in the remotest corners of the
world. Right now our model of implementation is to have offline
content-loaded servers hosted in schools and villages providing access
to media
example is this belief that connecting everyone to the Internet
will bring more benefits than harm. But so far, there's no
demonstration that communities thrive better with Internet access.
Certainly isolated communities can defend themselves better if they can
reach out to the Internauts and have them pressure their
Thomas Levine [GG] Distributed Dance Party update 2018-06-18 23:34:00 experts, students and designers as we chart the course
 of the economic and thought re-evolution!
 We will cross-pollinates communities in tech, philosophy, art, education
 and wellness to discuss what these changes mean for communities across
 Portugal, Europe and the World
Tic Nticsebastian [LibreList] (no subject) 2014-05-28 00:08:52 summer I want to make an open call for developers and programmers world wide to help out. Â The reason behind my open
community  is that "having to be friend with a person" on facebook is just another firewall to spread ideas, initiatives, social and cultural movements
/...\ will understand better.Â
Looking forward for your answer. Â I'd like to make my idea known in the redecentralize
community in order to get the help I need. If you wish I could make a video-chat and explain better what I want to do with
components:
https://suite.tiki.org/Tiki+Suite+Features
Each component of the suite has a proven track record to manage its
own internal complexities, and, as a
community, we are handling the
interoperability between the components. So your organization can
maintain full control of all your data, with Free / Libre / Open
Source software (FLOSS
/...\ self-host on premise or on rented
servers. It can be customized to your needs and we urge you to
contribute to this
community-driven and innovative project.
This project was born out of Tiki Wiki CMS Groupware. Tiki is 11 years old and:
* http://tiki.org/FLOSS+Web+Application+with+the+most+built-in+features
* http://tiki.org/FLOSS+Web+Application+with+the+fastest+release+cycle
Kiktron RAKO [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] 2014-06-06 16:04:20 summer I want to make an open call for developers and programmers world wide to help out. Â The reason behind my open
community  is that "having to be friend with a person&
quot
; on facebook is just another firewall to spread ideas, initiatives, social
/...\ Looking forward for your answer. Â I'd like to make my idea known in the redecentralize
community in order to get the help I need. If you wish I could make a video-chat and explain better what I want to do with anyone who is taking interviews
your interest in creating equitable
systems that shift power to people and
communities
has led you to develop a tech innovation that does
just that - please considering applying to Social
Tech Trust's new grant fund - Tech to Unite
Us!
We've been thinking about the
affordances of tech
/...\ using tech to increase
access, opportunity or quality of outcomes in
terms of wealth, health, education, political
participation,
community engagement, social
justice or any other area - and you meet
the criteria - you should
apply!
Eligible ventures could receive a
grant of up to £45K, plus a bespoke package
restrict. I work solo in Austin on a project called Grimwire that's in this realm. I'm also involved in the distributed systems
community here, though mostly as an enthusiast (I'm not implementing paxos or anything).
Nice meeting you all, and I look forward to seeing where this
/...\ community goes. Paul F
-- konklone.com | @konklone
Kiktron RAKO [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] 2014-05-27 23:24:13 summer I want to make an open call for developers and programmers world wide to help out. Â The reason behind my open
community  is that "having to be friend with a person"
; on facebook is just another firewall to spread ideas, initiatives, social
/...\ will understand better.Â
Looking forward for your answer. Â I'd like to make my idea known in the redecentralize
community in order to get the help I need. If you wish I could make a video-chat and explain better what I want to do with
Benjamin ANDRE [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] 2014-05-28 00:20:46 summer I want to make an open call for developers and programmers world wide to help out. Â The reason behind my open
community  is that "having to be friend with a person&
quot
; on facebook is just another firewall to spread ideas, initiatives, social
/...\ better. <
/u>
Looking forward for your answer. Â I'd like to make my idea known in the redecentralize
community in order to get the help I need. If you wish I could make a video-chat and explain better what I want
maze@strahlungsfrei.de [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] Intros and current projects 2014-01-02 23:56:09 Austin on a project
>> called Grimwire that's in this realm. I'm also involved in the
>> distributed systems
community here, though mostly as an enthusiast
>> (I'm not implementing paxos or anything).
>>
>> Nice meeting you all, and I look
/...\ forward to seeing where this
>>
community goes.
>>
>> Paul F
>>
>
>
>
> --
> konklone.com | @konklone
software defined virtual networks in data centers.)
I've been following CJDNS for a while. I know it's being used by several community meshnet projects. Anyone tried it? I admit I haven't yet, but I've heard it basically does work but not perfectly. I'm curious about
software defined virtual networks in data centers.)
I've been following CJDNS for a while. I know it's being used by several community meshnet projects. Anyone tried it? I admit I haven't yet, but I've heard it basically does work but not perfectly. I'm curious about
personal
computing.
The way Apple uses cloud is close to what
we ought to be trying to build in the more free/open
software community. Apple uses cloud exactly this way—
as dumb storage and support for rich endpoint devices.
They just don’t do the open or encrypted
Adam reads my
blog post about the dangers he faces ahead. He will have an uphill
battle in keeping it decentralized and in the communities control.<br>
<br>
And your question about market forces? My answer would be, what
market forces? I don't believe
personal computing. The way Apple uses cloud is close to what we ought to be trying to build in the more free/open software community. Apple uses cloud exactly this way— as dumb storage and support for rich endpoint devices. They just don’t do the open or encrypted
important topic, thanks for posting this! There already is a W3C community group for this, and ownCloud is a participant in it: https://www.w3.org/community/decsharing/participants It's currently made up mainly of people from ownCloud, Cozy, Known, and IndieHosters, and we had some discussion at and after the FLOSS4P2P unconference
Paul Frazee [GG] Re: So centralized! 2016-04-06 17:03:00 yeah, please feel free to join us. It's one of the better communities in this space
Anish Mangal [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] Webcasts / Periscope 2015-10-16 21:42:50 then I'll gladly send
Bitcoin tips to any volunteers who take up the task, and will encourage
others from the Bitcoin community to do so.
Best Regards
Filipe Farinha
Joakim Stai [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] Webcasts / Periscope 2015-10-16 18:21:41 then I'll gladly send
Bitcoin tips to any volunteers who take up the task, and will encourage
others from the Bitcoin community to do so.
Best Regards
Filipe Farinha
will.sch [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] Webcasts / Periscope 2015-10-16 15:17:45 then I'll gladly send Bitcoin tips to any volunteers who take up the task, and will encourage others from the Bitcoin community to do so. Best Regards Filipe Farinha
Joakim Stai [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] Webcasts / Periscope 2015-10-17 11:19:48 then I'll gladly send
Bitcoin tips to any volunteers who take up the task, and will encourage
others from the Bitcoin community to do so.
Best Regards
Filipe Farinha
Paul Frazee [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] Webcasts / Periscope 2015-10-17 11:55:30 then I'll gladly send
Bitcoin tips to any volunteers who take up the task, and will encourage
others from the Bitcoin community to do so.
Best Regards
Filipe Farinha
Filipe Farinha [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] Webcasts / Periscope 2015-10-18 10:22:06 gladly
> send
> Bitcoin tips to any volunteers who take up the task, and will
> encourage
> others from the Bitcoin community to do so.
>
> Best Regards
>
> Filipe Farinha
pretty easy to setup an offline static tile
server (i.e. not editing the database) to serve tiles.
For the Internet in a Box/School Server Community Edition project I
setup tilesets which may be custom generated (zoom levels, styles) and
used offline.
I am also using SECN (Openwrt) Batman based mesh
need to install like Dropbox. I've used Patchwork ( https://ssbc.github.io/patchwork/ ) a bit, and it has a surprisingly large community of regular users! Feross
tried to go there.
Next time !
=> do not hesitate to share info about events around
decentralization, I think this is important for the community to
have opportunities to meet.
Benjamin ANDRE - Cozy Cloud
more than 1,000,000 NGO organizations on the ground. Many of these NGOs are not aligned with the long term interests of the communities, and in many cases this is not obvious initially. Money coming to NGOs is increasingly attached. Few years ago a friend from UNDP
centralization story, but when you think about it, the objective of many map providers is centralization. We in the Maps for HTML Community Group have been working on fixing by pushing maps as a standard for integration with HTML, Â and we have developed what we think
Paul Frazee [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] FireChat in Economist 2014-06-03 10:17:33 contract byzantine agreement route and Ethereum using the global
blockchain approach.)
Best
/Jörg
But all the intentions, architecture, security, community
engagement, good faith participation, etc. of the project are
all obscured by closing the source. They exist apart
Benjamin ANDRE [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] Hello ! 2013-12-09 00:40:42 your site :-)
It will be a good opportunity to explain our business models and present our clients and perspectives. I am sure the community will be able to provide good feedbacks, so I definitely think it is very valuable for us !
And we need to find
Jos Poortvliet [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] Redecentralize Conference! 2015-08-09 11:33:06
Danny Knestaut [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] Hello! 2013-12-09 14:15:09 Plus
with diaspora*. I looked into hosting my own diaspora* pod, but that
required more expertise than I have, so I just use a community pod.
For my Chromebook, I used Luigi to replace Chrome OS with Linux Mint
Xfce, and I've been very happy with that.
For Android
Francis Irving [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] Hello! 2013-12-10 01:52:00 with diaspora*. I looked into hosting my own diaspora* pod, but that
> required more expertise than I have, so I just use a community pod.
>
> For my Chromebook, I used Luigi to replace Chrome OS with Linux Mint
> Xfce, and I've been very happy with
Benjamin ANDRE [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] Hello! 2013-12-10 11:40:51 Plus
with diaspora*. I looked into hosting my own diaspora* pod, but that
required more expertise than I have, so I just use a community pod.
For my Chromebook, I used Luigi to replace Chrome OS with Linux Mint
Xfce, and I've been very happy with that.
For Android
Jan Kunkel [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] Hello! 2013-12-10 15:34:56 hosting my own
>> diaspora*
>> pod, but that required more expertise than I have, so I just use a
>> community pod.
>>
>> For my Chromebook, I used Luigi to replace Chrome OS with Linux Mint
>> Xfce
Jan Kunkel [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] Hello! 2013-12-11 22:18:27
personal computing. The way Apple uses cloud is close to what we ought to be trying to build in the more free/open software community. Apple uses cloud exactly this way— as dumb storage and support for rich endpoint devices. They just don’t do the open or encrypted
Danny Knestaut [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] Hello! 2013-12-10 10:16:04 Plus with
diaspora*. I looked into hosting my own diaspora* pod,
but that required more expertise than I have, so I just
use a community pod.
For my Chromebook, I used Luigi to replace Chrome OS
with Linux Mint Xfce, and I've been very happy with
that.
For Android
Benjamin ANDRE [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] Hello! 2013-12-10 17:36:48 Plus with
diaspora*. I looked into hosting my own diaspora* pod,
but that required more expertise than I have, so I just
use a community pod.
For my Chromebook, I used Luigi to replace Chrome OS
with Linux Mint Xfce, and I've been very happy with
that.
For Android
Benjamin ANDRE [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] A blog post 2013-12-18 18:41:47 hello, If you open the blog to the contribution of the community, I then would be happy to contribute ! The first idea that comes to my mind is a post about "Decentralization : which incentives for private companies to play the game ?"
Another idea would be : "Strengths & dangers of personal
www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/redecentralize-january-london-meetup-registration-9841361778 (or just turn up ;) ). Failing that we’re canvassing for interesting posts for the new community-contributed blog in January, if you are that way inclined/have time. Ross. On 19 Dec 2013, at 10:27, Richard Marr < richard.marr@gmail.com > wrote: So has there been
Richard Marr [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] Ideas from London meetup 2013-12-19 14:26:27 www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/redecentralize-january-london-meetup-registration-9841361778 (or just turn up ;) ).
Failing that weâre canvassing for interesting posts for the new community-contributed blog in January, if you are that way inclined/have time.
Ross. On 19 Dec 2013, at 10:27, Richard Marr < richard.marr@gmail.com > wrote:
So has there been
Jeremie Miller [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] Yesterday's London meet-up 2014-01-08 06:03:22 Holger's cc wasn't included so maybe you can forward, but I'd be very interested in getting the telehash community involved in what you're talking about, I believe that's exactly what we've built towards as a p2p framework and now have working
software you mention even addresses net neutrality. You use "censorship" very vaguely, and your post mostly reads as an attempt to echo back the community's ideas.
Anybody else? On Tue, Jan 14, 2014 at 2:14 PM, Odinn Cyberguerrilla < odinn.cyberguerrilla@riseup.net > wrote:
[note: the following message has been
Eric Mill [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] FireChat in Economist 2014-06-02 11:34:27 generally verify that the server is running the same code that's in public source control.
But all the intentions, architecture, security, community engagement, good faith participation, etc. of the project are all obscured by closing the source. They exist apart
Nicholas H.Tollervey [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] Yesterday's London meet-up 2014-01-15 14:37:29 wrote:
> Holger's cc wasn't included so maybe you can forward, but I'd be
> very interested in getting the telehash community involved in what
> you're talking about, I believe that's exactly what we've built
> towards as a p2p framework
computer security, though.
I do not want to present this as a "you must listen to a security professional" advice. The security community is realising more and more how elitist the traditional "don't do your own crypto" advice sounds. Rather, we would encourage people to learn security
collaborate with people passionate to create social
impact, in an environment which mixes academics,
hackers, designers and activists. We do research on
commons-oriented communities, and build
blockchain-driven frameworks and tools to support
their sustainability.
More info:
Funded by the largest EU individual research
grant
funds for a few extra pair of hands in the team.
This is not illegal astroturfing, they only fund initiatives with proven
deep community roots. Please re-tweet..
( https://twitter.com/TriblerTeam/status/445971016972787712 )
For the past 16 years I have been working with my research team on building
privacy-enhancing technology, today
extra pair of hands in the team.
>> This is not illegal astroturfing, they only fund initiatives with proven
>> deep community roots. Please re-tweet..
>> (https://twitter.com/TriblerTeam/status/445971016972787712)
>>
>> For the past 16 years I have been working with my research
extra pair of hands in the team.
>> This is not illegal astroturfing, they only fund initiatives with proven
>> deep community roots. Please re-tweet..
>> ( https://twitter.com/TriblerTeam/status/445971016972787712 )
>>
>> For the past 16 years I have been working with my research team
funds for a few extra pair of hands in the team.
This is not illegal astroturfing, they only fund initiatives with proven
deep community roots. Please re-tweet..
(https://twitter.com/TriblerTeam/status/445971016972787712)
For the past 16 years I have been working with my research team on building
privacy-enhancing technology
Filipe Farinha [LibreList] Webcasts / Periscope 2015-10-16 21:45:43 then I'll gladly send
Bitcoin tips to any volunteers who take up the task, and will encourage
others from the Bitcoin community to do so.
Best Regards
Filipe Farinha
Jeremie Miller [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] London panelist? 2014-04-25 08:01:11 right in the middle if supporting transparent mesh connectivity over BLE and 802.15.4 as well... I'll see if there's anyone in our community that might be able to join, wish I was in the area, sounds super interesting! Jer On Apr 25, 2014, at 7:50 AM, Stephan
Giovanni P [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] GNUnet 2014-06-02 11:37:56 friendly version.
However, the RTC version seems to be the best thing that could happen to the project, and maybe it could take some community help.
On Mon, Jun 2, 2014 at 11:11 AM, Ross Jones < ross@servercode.co.uk > wrote:
Nice that itâs going
Jörg F. Wittenberger [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] FireChat in Economist 2014-06-03 08:29:42 taking the
per-contract byzantine agreement route and Ethereum using the global
blockchain approach.)
Best
/Jörg
But all the intentions, architecture, security, community
engagement, good faith participation, etc. of the project are
all obscured by closing the source. They exist apart
Eric Mill [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] FireChat in Economist 2014-06-03 10:35:02 contract byzantine agreement route and Ethereum using the global
blockchain approach.)
Best
/Jörg
But all the intentions, architecture, security, community
engagement, good faith participation, etc. of the project are
all obscured by closing the source. They exist apart
there is a community of us using patchwork on a daily basis.
https://github.com/ssbc/patchwork
Jörg F. Wittenberger [LibreList] Re: [redecentralize] FireChat in Economist 2014-06-04 10:32:38 taking the per-contract byzantine
agreement route and Ethereum using the global
blockchain approach.)
Best
/Jörg
But all the intentions, architecture,
security, community engagement, good
faith participation, etc. of the project
are all obscured by closing the source.
They exist apart
well. We have a a lot of python enthusiasts and really good programmers that need to learn to appreciate the value of a "community" work. Working towards a common goal ( p2p ) without craving for the finances... And who knows if it's good and can be made into a platform
well. We have a a lot of python enthusiasts and really good programmers that need to learn to appreciate the value of a "community" work. Working towards a common goal ( p2p ) without craving for the finances... And who knows if it's good and can be made into a platform
shed on
my 17th wedding anniversary hacking on the drogulus (I have a young
family, a "real" job and organise UK Python community stuff - so I get
very little time to work on it; this needs to change). I'd be interested
to know
software defined virtual networks in data centers.) I've been following CJDNS for a while. I know it's being used by several community meshnet projects. Anyone tried it? I admit I haven't yet, but I've heard it basically does work but not perfectly. I'm curious about