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The police brutality in Miami continues. It's sad that the american people actually accpets the bashing of our amendments with the so called Patriot Act. Well now thanks to this "Patriot Act" the police are having a field day. It's fucked up that a person can be arrested for looking like he/she would be a "terrorist" to the people of the United States. What the fuck is a terrorist any how, if you look at this term in the dictionary is says " One who governs by terrorism or intimidation" well that discribes the people in Washington D.C., so why aren't they arrested? So to conclude this passage the police are abusing because thanks to the patriot act they have the "right" to so fuck this system, because if shit like that can happen in a country with "democracy" then either the people are trully the mindless class or we are being terrorized psychologically and we are afraid to fight back. Think about it! A//F//P//U

The youth of Miami are sick of the police state that we live in. We protested peacefully and in return we recieve rubber bullets, tear gas, plastic mace filled paintballs, CS gernades, etc... After 4pm the protest in Miami wasn't about the FTAA anymore. It was about the state that we live in. We are not puppets, so don't try to manipulate us. I heard a police officer during the protest say " Today we have free licks." What has happen to the fact that we are human beings demostrating democracy by protesting. The truth of the matter is that, in the US there is no democracy ( not any more at least ) What we have is a government run by the selfish upper class with a false sense of democracy. We came to realize that at 4pm of that day. By realizing this we also came to the conclusion that we can not fight this battle with peace, due to the fact that the only thing that would come out of that is that our blood and our lives. So with this in mind, we gathered and together we resisted, and at that moment is where it happened. The becoming of GrassRoot Resistance a.k.a. Root Resistance. Together we looked out for everyone in the protest, not just us, everyone. Till this day Root Resistance contemplating on targeting slave labor corps. like Nike, starbucks, gap, tace bell etc... if you want to know more about Root Resistance just post a comment. A//E//F//P

PPL

We practice and encourage the circulation of all media, irrespective of its proprietary or free (as in software) character. We reject the laws which would stigmatize and criminalize the practice of sharing.

Practically the proposal is for people to bring whatever media they have which they woyu;ld like to circulate and make it available for all to access and copy. External disks are the simplest way ro do this, but bringing CDs, DVDs or portable loaded with delicious data is equally desired.

The Pirate Pride Lounge will take place throughout We Seize! whenever two pirates meet, but we will organise to make external disks with several hundred gigs of films and music available for fixed locations.

x.

"Criminal Mass"

Concerning gift economy, MAUSS, etc. First, there is someone called Mathias Studer who just did a mémoire de licence in economy in that perspective... on Linux. I can ask him if he could participate. There is also Francoise Bloch, who has worked for years in the MAUSS and feminist perspectives who lives in Geneva and who would probably participate (or at least come to the discussion) if you could define a bit more the problematic. She is now actually critical of Godbout and the MAUSS, who she finds a bit "angelic". (Like she says, the poor and the women have always been in gift exchange - even if people try now to persuade them to stop. The problem is the growing privileged classes (and all those who identify with them) who aren't into that at all. (She is now researching to try and find figures on how much these bastards are really "earning".) And, I would add, the fact that the ruling class doesn't seem to want to leave any spaces in which (self)excluded people could organise : be it Linux, LETS or subsistence economies of indigenous populations. (For good reasons) they have never been very tolerant of other social projects. And this would be a bad time for them to change, wouldn't it? For example, the french government just decided to abolish the small garanteed income (RMI) that existed. Now to get the same tiny revenue, people will have to work for the State and even for private persons. The days of cheap domestics and forced labor will return, if we can't organise mainstream society to stop them.

Anyhow, she gave me a few ideas of people that you could try and look up in Paris or see if they are included somewhere in the FSE encyclopedia-supermarket of discussions. Bernard Laville, Bernard Eme or of course Caillé for MAUSS. There is also Serge Latouche who is an anti-developmentalist influenced by MAUSS ideas.

Apart from that (if you have time to read) Francoise is very enthusiastic about Nicanor Perlas, a philipino who has written "La société civile: le 3e pouvoir" (also in english). And a pretty heavy philosopher called Marc Henaff "Le prix de la vérité" on Intellectual property.

Information Insurgency and Its Limits Self-determination of where and how we want to live, and ability to communicate those decisions, constitute the fundamental vectors of individual choice. Limitations on the exercise of the first are the stuff of migration regulation. The second is contingent on the information we have as to the life-choices available. Capacity to communicate beyond a micro-public is constrained by a legal infrastructure that has favored the development of a concentrated ownership of transmission and a system of property rights that denies the possibility of recycling the works of others whether to convey our argument or contest that of another.

Pirate Pride Where are the advocates of freedom in the new digital society who have not been decried as pirates, anarchists, communists? Have we not seen that many of those hurling the epithets were merely thieves in power, whose talk of "intellectual property'' was nothing more than an attempt to retain unjustifiable privileges in a society irrevocably changing?" - Eben Moglen, the DotCommunist Manifesto

Laws expanding the scope and duration of exclusive private rights in information (copyright, patent and trademarks and trade secrets) have been a constant since at least the late 1970s. Growing awareness of the consequences of this has produced a counter-movement in the last years, often rallying around notions of fair use, ‘a balance between public and private claims’ or information as a commons. Factual justification for such a movement is easily available but in the typical fashion of politics the point has been made hysterically, by caricature, so as to better illustrate the point. Thus the propagation of terms which convey events only as a movement of enclosure, commodification, information lockdown and the panoptical surveillance – a language of dystopia, hopelessness and victimhood. Such despondency would be legitimate if the promulgation of laws from on high was enough to control human behaviour and creativity; such a description is however false in several respects and risks being a self-fulfilling prophecy by fostering changes in social norms in flagrant contradiction with the law.

Everyone is an Enemy An estimated 150 million people are now using a diversity of p2p systems to shares music, video, software and text files on a regular basis. Competition within hardware manufacturing and broadband provider sectors is ensuring that access to the necessary commodities – storage space for media, transmission channels for delivery - expands. Copyright industry interests anticipated these developments on the basis of their observation of software piracy and Bulletin Board based media distribution in the late 80s and early 90s. One response was the introduction in the United States of the No Electronic Theft Act in 1997. Prior to NET copyright infringement was merely a civil offence if performed for non-commercial purposes but this law made non-profit distribution of copyright goods a criminal offense, or even a felony, once low thresholds of value and numbers of copies were exceeded. Jeffrey Gerard Levy, a college student in Oregon was the first to be tried under the new law - he pled ‘’guilty’’ of sharing texts and music from a site hosted on his university webserver. Subsequent legislation extended criminal sanctions to the development and distribution of tools devised to defeat ‘’digital rights management’’ technologies - technical measures integrated into media products to restrict their use. These devices, whose integration into hardware is demanded by the info-tainment complex, constitute the other thrust of the industry’s war against the wave of sharing between strangers.

A comparable introduction of criminal sanctions has occurred in the area of payTV. Since its inception in the early 80s there has been a battle between decryption-card hackers and companies such as Sky, DirectTV and Canal+. Tens of millions are using modified cards so as to evade payment of extortionate monthly subscription fees. Initially the industry pursued the commercial distributors of the cards, but as this failed they shifted their attention to users. The result is that it is now a criminal offence even to receive a decrypted programme in your home – also known as a ‘’conditional access service’’ – without the authorised card. Here as in p2p the focus of repression has shifted from commercial counterfeiting entrepreneurs to individual end-users to their machines and their homes. Once-docile consumers are now to be approached as enemies. DirectTV are currently threatening action against nearly 10,000 users in the US.

That is the story from above. Let us look instead, critical eyes open, from below.

Criminal Mass Heedless of their redefinition as criminals by the global media godfathers together with their crooked political friends, there are now an estimated six million people swapping media online at any given moment. The Recording Industry Association of America began their jihad with 261 legal actions against individuals in September, having encountered obstacles in their war against p2p software developers in the spring. Instead of turning off their computers and returning to shopping as usual, however, users’’ reaction was one of rage. Boycotts began. Vilification of media companies for their capitalist rapaciousness became a commonplace in innumerable forums. One of the victims of the RIAA attack, a 12 year old girl living in social housing in Brooklyn, received so many donations that she ended up making a profit despite having agreed a $3,000 settlement with the RIAA to persuade them to drop the case. A legal fund to coordinate and finance collective defence for p2p users was set up at the tellingly titled www.downhillbattle.com. Lastly, and most saliently, the sharing went on in defiance of the threat of individualized punishment, with decreases in the numbers on public networks balanced by an increase in those participating in semi-private spaces for exchange and distribution. Despite the existence of the criminal provisions of the NET, they have yet to be employed

Likewise PayTV hacking continues unabated in both traditional and innovative forms. Sky Italia, launched in July and monopolist of the Italian satellite market, seek to use their control over premiership soccer so as to infiltrate every home with their annual six hundred Euro ransom. In response, pirate television operators in Rome connected a television equipped with an authorized card to a transmitter and rebroadcast the signal in the clear to whole districts of the city on several occasions this autumn. This exemplary action constituted a spectacular intervention into the popular imagination, responded to a real need and sense of identity felt by Romans and attacked the commercialization of popular culture using acts rather than words.

Phantasmagora of Control: No Need to Feed the Machine In addition to severe commercial and social problems, the schemes [hardware based copy-control mechanisms] suffer from several technical deficiencies, which, in the presence of an effective darknet, lead to their complete collapse. We conclude that such schemes are doomed to failure.”” Microsoft Engineers, The Darknet and the Future of Content Distribution

Technical schemes to foreclose redistribution have fared no better. CSS, the content scrambling system conceived to prevent the copying of DVDs was reverse engineered and the resulting program DeCSS provided the key to unlock a large portion of the divx files now available on the web. The Motion Picture Studios vengefully pursued a fifteen year old Norwegian, Jan Johansen, with criminal charges for which he was later cleared. Meanwhile Secure Digital Music Initiative wasted years of research and millions of dollars in an attempt to develop a control mechanism for digital music to no avail. A last prototype was profferred to researchers for testing and summarily cracked. In the aftermath, the SDMI attempted to silence researchers from discussing the techniques employed with threats of legal action under the DMCA, later retracted. Microsoftt’s DRM also yielded its secrets and flaws shortly after release. Finally, and most clamorously, a Russian programmer, Dimitri Sklyaraov, was arrested by the FBI before thousands of people at the hacker-meet DefCon in Las Vegas 2001. He had just delivered a presentation describing flaws in Adobe’s ebook encryption scheme that had allowed the his employers’, Elcomsoft to produce a program capable of circumventing all controls. Charged under the criminal provisions of the DMCA and imprisoned for six weeks in California, charges against Sklyarov were ultimately dropped, but not before a widespread campaign for his release had brought hacker IP activism onto the streets with self-organized demonstrations in 14 cities.

That the pursuit of total hardwired control has so far proved fruitless is not to say that this tendency will disappear. So long however as free software systems have machines on which they can function, users will always be able to control their behaviour and defeat all panoptical devices. This is the fundamental political battle that gives meaning to the free in ‘’free software.’’

In All Tomorrow’s Economies: the Emergence of the “Prod-User’’ Class and Decommodification The phenomenal success and complexity of the free software movement has inspired the study of its means for organizing co-operation and a search for other areas where this mode of production finds form. Examples have not been in short supply. At an infra-structural level they range from the self-organised storage transmission structures of file-sharing networks to the pooling of hardware resources in projects such as SETI. At the level of knowledge and information production there are projects such as Wikipedia (a volunteer build non-proprietary encyclopedia) and a slew of news and discussion sites (Kuro5hin and Indymedia) built on collaborative writing engines have become the de facto standard for the organization of opinion native to the web. Science and research too has benefited from the restless curiosity of the army of amateur collaborators.

Each of these projects demonstrate the advanced state of self-organized production in the networked environment, and its capacity to subtract goods and services from a free market model built on the market and the firm. Hopes that these examples augur a more equitable world rest on the particularity of informational public goods nature of immaterial resources: non-excludability and non-rivalrousness. The first means that the cost of the provision of a good is the same if it's produced for a limited number of people as for all. The second means that your ability to enjoy a given good does not impede my use of it at the same time.

P2P reverses this situation at least in part. As the range of its productive practices grow it substructs, or removes, tasks from the market and the firm. Instead of 'management' or 'planning' these projects rely upon horizontal negotiation, modular production and exploitation of the cheap and easy nature of digital communications to overcome the need for a centrally located decision-maker -- formerly known as the boss. Widespread social cooperation is no longer constrained to the firm - this is the fundamental change of peer to peer. Distinguishing this practice from real-world volunteerism are the low costs of coordination, the role of information (and its public good characteristics) as both raw material and output of the productive process and the access to a near infinite range of expertise and paralellizable workers through the network.

Qualification: Our Invisible Labour for Capital and State The fact that the fruits of this collaboration, like the warez in circulation on file-trading networks, are free does not mean that they sketch future liberation. Such a conclusion could only proceed from a naïve belief that capital accumulation only operates where there is a fee for access. Service and knowledge industries are based precisely on extracting value on the back of free or cheap access to a basic product.

Some degree of pirate circulation of media commodities, for example, is desirable from an accumulation perspective as it ensures that the profile of the film, song, software or game reaches a broader community. In software it means that young designers train themselves in using photoshop and quark express, programs which later in ‘’professional life’’ they will continue to use and will pay for licenses for, due to the inconvenience of learning alternatives. Similarly the Matrix may be downloaded and viewed for free but the public excitement will help to sell t-shirts, posters and a hundred other spin-offs. Counterband circulation in this sense can be the perfect accompaniment for the efforts now commonly made by companies to add allure to their products by integrating ‘’street-hip’’, enlisting scores of marketing and cool-hunting agencies to keep them close to their desired demographic.In a world where retail price has no relationship to the cost of physical production, every positive description of cultural objects participates in the creation of a market for sales of the product directly or some derivative thereof – the mobilization of our subjectivity in the profit-cycle.

Likewise the benefits of networked voluntary labour do not only accrue to the music-collectors, free software users/producers and humanity in general. State and commercial apparatus get their cut as well. Clear examples are the common practice amongst gaming companies of using enthusiastic players as ‘’guides’’ to help new enthusiasts find their way around the game, overcome cul-de-sacs created by bugs in the code, and generally create a sense of community. Effectively these guides provide, for free, customer service which otherwise the company itself would have to finance. What’s more this fact is baldly stated by games companies themselves. Elsewhere NASA operate volunteer projects that harness free labour for banal techno-scientific tasks formerly requiring the attention of PhDs. What are those people now working on? The next Manhattan project?

Further Excavating the Potential for Liberation: Excarceration “”An important meaning of liberation …. [is suggested]… the growing propensity, skill and success of …. working people in escaping from the newly created institutions that were designed to discipline people by closing them in. This tendency I have dubbed 'excarceration' because I wish to draw attention to the activity of freedom in contrast to its ideological or theoretical expressions.’’ – Peter Linebaugh, The London Hanged

“”The street finds its own use for things”” – William Gibson

There is a more precise connection between this mass 'criminality' and the merging productive power; the desire to obtain media commodities for free is a powerful motivation for self-education the acquisition of new skills and knowledge: how to use cryptographic hashes, compression techniques, wider knowledge of less-charted (and thus safer) network spaces, port-management, network architecture, search algorithms, familiarity with formats and the ability to render digital forms as physical objects such as mastered CDs and DVDs, familiarity with publishing techniques, wikis etc. File-sharing forums function as veritable apprentice-yards for the diffusion of techniques which once acquired are portable to uses outside of the reproduction of the commodity circuit.

Whilst much of current pirate sociality revolves around consumption, the proliferation of the necessary skills for digital production and distribution allow us to anticipate the possibility of a more contestatory appropriation. To paraphrase a feminist phrase of long ago, it’s the possibility of taking the master’s characters, cultural icons embedded in everyday sociality, and repurposing them to tell new stories and offer the possibility of organizing the world in a different way which seduces us. This is what Harry Cleaver elsewhere has referred to as self-valorization, or ‘’those aspects of struggle which went beyond mere resistance or negation…’. These practices of reappropriation that act in disregard to the law and the scoial relations that law fixes, “... the search for the future in the present, the identification of already existing activities which embody new, alternative forms of social cooperation and ways of being."

Today’s pirates can be tomorrow’s agents of transformation, authoring their, and our lives, anew.

Pirate Autonomy Where are the advocates of freedom in the new digital society who have not been decried as pirates, anarchists, communists? Have we not seen that many of those hurling the epithets were merely thieves in power, whose talk of "intellectual property'' was nothing more than an attempt to retain unjustifiable privileges in a society irrevocably changing?" - Eben Moglen, the DotCommunist Manifesto

In addition to severe commercial and social problems, the schemes [hardware based copy-control mechanisms] suffer from from several technical deficiencies, which, in the presence of an effective darknet, lead to their complete collapse. We conclude that such schemes are doomed to failure.”” Microsoft Engineers, The Darknet and the Future of Content Distribution

Laws expanding the scope and duration of exclusive private rights in information (copyright, patent and trademarks and trade secrets) have been a constant since at least the late 1970s. Growing awareness of the consequences of this has produced a counter-movement in the last years, often rallying around notions of fair use, ‘a balance between public and private claims’ or information as a commons. Factual justification for such a movement is easily available but in the typical fashion of politics the point has been made hysterically, by caricature, so as to better illustrate the point. Thus the propagation of terms which convey events only as a movement of enclosure, commodification, information lockdown and the panoptical surveillance – a language of dystopia, hopelessness and victimhood. Such despondency would be legitimate if the promulgation of laws from on high was enough to control human behaviour and creativity; such a description is however false in several respects and risks being a self-fulfilling prophecy by fostering changes in social norms in flagrant contradiction with the law.

Everyone is an Enemy An estimated 150 million people are now using a diversity of p2p systems to shares music, video, software and text files on a regular basis. Competition within hardware manufacturing and broadband provider sectors is ensuring that access to the necessary commodities – storage space for media, transmission channels for delivery - expands. Copyright industry interests anticipated these developments on the basis of their observation of software piracy and Bulletin Board based media distribution in the late 80s and early 90s. One response was the introduction in the United States of the No Electronic Theft Act in 1997. Prior to NET copyright infringement was merely a civil offence if performed for non-commercial purposes but this law made non-profit distribution of copyright goods a criminal offense, or even a felony, once low thresholds of value and numbers of copies were exceeded. Jeffrey Gerard Levy, a college student in Oregon was the first to be tried under the new law - he pled ‘’guilty’’ of sharing texts and music from a site hosted on his university webserver. Subsequent legislation extended criminal sanctions to the development and distribution of tools devised to defeat ‘’digital rights management’’ technologies - technical measures integrated into media products to restrict their use. These devices, whose integration into hardware is demanded by the info-tainment complex, constitute the other thrust of the industry’s war against the wave of sharing between strangers.

A comparable introduction of criminal sanctions has occurred in the area of payTV. Since its inception in the early 80s there has been a battle between decryption-card hackers and companies such as Sky, DirectTV and Canal+. Tens of millions are using modified cards so as to evade payment of extortionate monthly subscription fees. Initially the industry pursued the commercial distributors of the cards, but as this failed they shifted their attention to users. The result is that it is now a criminal offence even to receive a decrypted programme in your home – also known as a ‘’conditional access service’’ – without the authorised card. Here as in p2p the focus of repression has shifted from commercial counterfeiting entrepreneurs to individual end-users to their machines and their homes. Once-docile consumers are now to be approached as enemies.

That is the story from above. Let us look instead, critical eyes open, from below.

Criminal Mass Heedless of their redefinition as criminals by the global media godfathers together with their crooked political friends, there are now an estimated six million people swapping media online at any given moment. The Recording Industry Association of America began their jihad with 261 legal actions against individuals in September, having encountered obstacles in their war against p2p software developers in the spring. Instead of turning off their computers and returning to shopping as usual, however, users’’ reaction was one of rage. Boycotts began. Vilification of media companies for their capitalist rapaciousness became a commonplace in innumerable forums. One of the victims of the RIAA attack, a 12 year old girl living in social housing in Brooklyn, received so many donations that she ended up making a profit despite having agreed a $3,000 settlement with the RIAA to persuade them to drop the case. A legal fund to coordinate and finance collective defence for p2p users was set up at the tellingly titled www.downhillbattle.com. Lastly, and most saliently, the sharing went on in defiance of the threat of individualized punishment, with decreases in the numbers on public networks balanced by an increase in those participating in semi-private spaces for exchange and distribution.

Likewise PayTV hacking continues unabated in both traditional and innovative forms. Sky Italia, launched in July and monopolist of the Italian satellite market, seek to use their control over premiership soccer so as to infiltrate every home with their annual six hundred Euro ransom. In response, pirate television operators in Rome connected a television equipped with an authorized card to a transmitter and rebroadcast the signal in the clear to whole districts of the city on several occasions this autumn. This exemplary action constituted a spectacular intervention into the popular imagination, responded to a real need and sense of identity felt by Romans and attacked the commercialization of popular culture using acts rather than words.

On the technical side every

boh

imc-london@lists.indymedia.org Jamie london event

http://lists.indymedia.org/pipermail/imc-uk-process/2003-November/001456...

http://www.cyberaxe.org/

rimorchiare

Request of Grants for Innovation in Youth Service Policy

1 In Italy is acting a transition from the Civilian Service for Conscientious Objection to a National Civic Service, voluntary based. One of the most innovative aspects of this transition is the placement of the Service on the citizenship building and the youth civic education, even it continue the peace research activity. This National Civic Service is now related to women between 18 to 26 years old, because the men are involved on the Civilian Service for Conscientious Objectors. From January 1, 2005 this service will be open to the women and the men between 18 to 28 years old. Started December 2001 with 100 placements, today, October, 2003 are in service almost 20.000 people. In foreign countries programs are involved a minority of people (around 50).

2 Arci Servizio Civile is a national non profit organization partner of the National Office of National Civic Service from 1981. Now it is the bigger organization on the field of National Civic Service with 2.045 women engaged on 279 local projects. At the same time Arci Servizio Civile has a national staff of trainers to support this local system. The members of Arci Servizio Civile are 5 national non profit organizations named Legambiente, ARCI Nuova Associazione, Uisp, Arciragazzi e Auser. These organizations are leaders on the Italian Third Sector on the fields of environment, culture, sport, children education, old people. In addition of it there are hundreds of local members.

3 The overall focus of the current National Civic Service in Italy in terms of youths are the youth civic education and the national and European citizenship building. In terms of society the goal to reach is to support the youth service as a community development strategy tool. The funding requested could help a development of some international projects based on the share of experiences, best practices, between Italian and Europeans organizations. Europeans means not only UE members, but also 10 Countries new members of UE. At the same time the building of an European citizenship is not only a juridical and institutional process, but above all a based process of to do activities together.

4 The funding are available to support the monitoring process of 8 projects that will start this December 2003 and will finish December 2004 on the following Countries: Belgium, France, Spain, Germany, Czech Republic, Poland, Slovenia, Greece. At the same time are available to present a final report of this pilot experience. The goal of this pilot experience is to create a model of international programs to submit of the European level and the National level.

5 Arci Servizio Civile has a partnership with a survey institute of Trieste to do twice a year the polls to the people engaged on the programs. At the same time Arci Servizio Civile has a partnership with a private Agency of Rome to somministrare questionnaires to the people engaged on the programs to monitor the level of satisfaction, the problems, the proposals. At least Arci Servizio Civile has an agreement with a Social Research Institute of Milan to write a Annual Report of the impact of the programs in terms of local and national community, use of resources, impact on the Third Sector-Public Administration relations.

6 We think the funding amount requested ($ 15.000) will be, in addiction of the Arci Servizio Civile budget, to permit at the beginning of 2005 to offer a report and a vision of the development of the international and possibly transnational dimension of the Civic Service, above all look the worldwide process of need to add to the economical globalisation a human and social trust between different cultures, social approaches, religions. The funds will be utilized to pay a tutor of this pilot experience for one year ($ 4.000), to organize two international meetings with the program leaders, included ICP members ( $ 6.000), to translate in English the documents ($ 3.000), to print in English a brochure about the Italian experience, including a section of the worldwide situation in terms of Civic Service ($ 2.000). This is a preliminary budget and we are ready and happy to receive ICP suggestions.

Organization: Arci Servizio Civile, Via Monti di Pietralata, 16 00157 Roma Tel. 0039-6-4173.4392 Fax. 0039-6-4179.6224

Contact Licio Palazzini, National President Claudia Marcolin, international programs Email presidente@arciserviziocivile.it

Web site www.arciserviziocivile.it

Con grande piacere porto il saluto della Consulta Nazionale del Servizio Civile in Italia a questa First European Conference on Civic Service and Youth.

Avendo sviluppato da tempo esperienze di collaborazione con altri Paesi sono ben consapevole del dibattito sulle terminologie da usare per descrivere azioni solo in apparenza comuni, soprattutto se svincolate dall’elemento unificante della modalità alternativa di adempiere al servizio militare obbligatorio. Obbligatorio per gli uomini.

Mi attengo quindi con piacere alla terminologia Civic Service, una terminologia che si sta affermando anche a livello internazionale (penso al Symposium organizzato a fine Settembre dal Global Service Institute a St. Louis negli USA, dove hanno partecipato studiosi di tutti i continenti).

In Italia, come negli altri Paesi (penso alla Francia, alla Germania) e a livello Europeo (penso al BEOC, ad AVSO) esistono organismi di coordinamento fra NGO’s nel campo del Civic Service, espressione di una tendenza al Coordinamento comune a tutto il Terzo Settore. Più raro è avere un organismo previsto dalla legge nazionale che sia punto di riferimento per gli organismi statali chiamati a gestire il Civic Service. La legislazione italiana prevede che per le scelte più rilevanti in materia di destinazione delle risorse, di definizione delle dimensioni quantitative dei giovani da coinvolgere (il contingente annuale di obiettori o di volontari), di strategie per la formazione e così via, l’Ufficio Nazionale si avvalga del contributo della Consulta nazionale per il servizio civile.

Un organismo composto dai diversi attori del sistema nazionale del Civic Service (rappresentanze dei giovani, dei principali enti nonprofit, delle principali amministrazioni pubbliche, sia nazionali che regionali che locali) che dovrebbe elaborare contenuti che siano espressione globale delle specifiche esigenze di soggetti fra loro diversi e delle potenzialità che scelte condivise possono aprire.

Il fatto che non sempre questi obiettivi siano raggiunti non toglie niente alla validità di questa forma di governo del sistema nazionale del Civic Service. E’ inoltre importante che la stessa filosofia italiana di partecipazione sia presente anche nell’unica legge regionale oggi attiva per il Civic Service, quella recentissima della regione Emilia Romagna.

Mi pare che questo possa essere un contributo italiano al dibattito internazionale sulle modalità di organizzazione delle amministrazioni statali e regionali nella promozione, sostegno e controllo del Civic Service e sulle modalità di formazione delle decisioni più rilevanti. Una modalità inclusiva, che operi nella linea della sussidiarietà fra pubblico, privato e nonprofit.

Il riferimento ai componenti della Consulta mi permette di richiamare una specificità italiana che credo rilevante. Mentre in materia di SVE la legislazione italiana attua disposizioni decise a livello comunitario e quindi sono nonprofit i soggetti abilitati a coinvolgere i giovani, in Italia, in materia di Civic Service e prima ancora di Civilian Service, la legislazione mette sullo stesso piano nonprofit e Pubblica Amministrazione nella attivazione di progetti di SCN.

La rilevanza del peso della Pubblica Amministrazione nell’offerta di Civic Service è frutto della storia del servizio civile degli obiettori di coscienza e di specifiche scelte del legislatore italiano.

Se questo favorisce la presa di coscienza anche da parte dei pubblici amministratori del valore e dell’efficacia del Civic Service, può anche introdurre possibili modifiche nella percezione delle finalità dell’impegno sia da parte dei giovani che di alcuni amministratori rispetto alla finalità principale del Civic Service: la educazione alla partecipazione civica e alla solidarietà sociale, per avere cittadini, anche europei, consapevoli dei propri diritti e dei propri doveri.

Sono tutte sfide che rendono ancora più appassionanti i possibili sviluppi di questa First European Conference on Civic Service and Youth.

Vorrei indicare nel breve tempo a disposizione alcune azioni concrete che ritengo utili a consolidare un percorso internazionale, del quale avverto l’estrema necessità proprio per l’esperienza italiana. Avere realizzato una transizione così impegnativa in termini di giovani coinvolti (in due anni già 20.000 persone), di soggetti sociali interessati, di risorse investite, sia pubbliche che nonprofit è un merito per il nostro Paese e una scelta importante del Governo in carica. Il consolidamento di questa scelta sarà più agevole se avviene in un quadro europeo.

Dicevo alcune indicazioni concrete.

La dimensione istituzionale europea: credo sia estremamente rilevante un ruolo di stimolo e di coordinamento da parte della Commissione Europea, un ruolo più politico che organizzativo, ma di diffusione delle migliori pratiche e soprattutto di indicazione di finalità unitarie a esperienze pratiche che saranno certamente differenti. In altri termini, precisare che, quali che siano le attività dei progetti, la mission generale e prioritaria deve essere la stessa: la educazione alla partecipazione civica e alla solidarietà sociale, per avere cittadini, anche europei, consapevoli dei propri diritti e dei propri doveri.

La dimensione istituzionale a livello di Stati: mentre sono già attive sedi di dialogo sovranazionale per il nonprofit, serve un costante dialogo fra i diversi organismi nazionali chiamati ad attuare le leggi in questa ampia materia, per programmare soluzioni omogenee per problemi comuni: la mobilità, il tempo di permanenza nei Paesi ospitanti, le coperture assicurative, le tematiche sanitarie, il monitoraggio e le verifiche sull’attuazione dei progetti etc..

Sul piano del contributo italiano a questo percorso credo che molta rilevanza vada data al bando straordinario attivato dall’UNSC per progetti nei 15 Paesi della UE e nei 10 Paesi di ingresso. Sarà importantissimo monitorare costantemente la attuazione dei progetti, rilevare le indicazioni che ne scaturiscono, così come sarà importante condividere queste indicazioni in modo sistematico con i Paesi interessati e la Commissione, per valorizzare le indicazioni concrete e correggere eventuali imperfezioni.

Sarà anche utile che il sito internet dell’UNSC abbia una sezione in lingua inglese per favorire la comprensione della nostra esperienza.

Infine la connessione del Civic Service con il programma Gioventù dell’Unione Europea.

Il superamento del legame giuridico fra Civilian Service e obiezione di coscienza al servizio militare permette di collocare meglio il Civic Service dentro questo progetto dell’Unione. Ritegno importante che l’opportunità di questo ingresso sia inserito da subito nel percorso di definizione di proposte che la Commissione sta istruendo in vista del rinnovo con il 1 Gennaio 2007 del programma Gioventù.

Ringrazio in conclusione il Sig. Ministro Giovanardi per aver scelto di tenere questa conferenza, il Direttore dell’UNSC, Palombi per l’attivazione del gruppo di lavoro che ha permesso questa conferenza, Giovanni Bastianini per essere stato l’animatore di questo evento.

Pirate Autonomy Where are the advocates of freedom in the new digital society who have not been decried as pirates, anarchists, communists? Have we not seen that many of those hurling the epithets were merely thieves in power, whose talk of "intellectual property'' was nothing more than an attempt to retain unjustifiable privileges in a society irrevocably changing? But it is acknowledged by all the Powers of Globalism that the movement for freedom is itself a Power, and it is high time that we should publish our views in the face of the whole world, to meet this nursery tale of the Spectre of Free Information with a Manifesto of our own." - Eben Moglen, the DotCommunist Manifesto

Eben Quote from DotCommunist Manifesto

"......intellectual property and its conceptual neighbors may bear the same relationship to the information society as the wage-labour nexus did to the industrial manufacturing society of the 1900s." James Boyle

1. Attack on Dystiopianism 2. Dark net quote 3. Quote from Report on P2P 4. Availability of criminal sanctions against non-commercial users since the NET. 5. Agenda for the FTAA.

"Having redefined IP as a trade issue and exhausted the immediate opportunities presented by the GATT, knowledge industries and the US government then moved policy back to WIP where the level of protection was once again ratcheted up in two treaties in 1996 (The World Copyright Treaty and the World Performers and Phonographs Treaty). Even this event however witnessed a steeling of developing countries position and the end of the multilateral trojan horse was nigh. Fused with frustration at the refusal by many states to go beyond formal compliance with TRIPS (leading arch-lobbyist and former head of the US Patents and trademarks Office, Bruce Lehman, to baldly state "TRIPS has been a terrible failure") the US has returned once again to coercive bilateral deals, whose ideal protectionist template is provided by the recent Free Trade Agreement with Singapore. For many accustomed to the association of the WTO with satanic acts, it is urgent to understand that the place of the game has changed.

P2P As many readers will be aware, the RIAA finally filed civil charges against 261 users of p2p systems last monday, after having sub-poenaed personal information on about 2000 users in recent months. Whilst the identities of many of the defendants remain unknown to the public, it is confirmed that they include a 67 year old man from Texas, and a 12 year old girld from New York city named Barbara ? - understandably she has decided to settle her case, paying $3.000 to the RIAA.

This wave of prosecutions arises in the same week when the RIAA offered an amnesty to those willing to publically confess and atone for their sins. Such a rapid escalation can only be understood as evidence of mounting desperation amongst major music owners in the face of a file-sharing population now numbering up to two hundred million by some estimates. This legal vilification and desire for an exhibition of public-shaming however is but a simulation of control; the heterogeneity of p2p networks, the complexity of jurisdictional issues, and the constant refinement of the technology itself spells doom for the RIAA in their battle against sharing. Indeed, the most immediate consequence of the current onslaught is a renewed interest and development effort to safeguard user privacy against the hostile data-trawling conducted by copyright owners. Ironically the current debacle offers probably the most fertile ground for the emergence of new clients to challenge market incumbents like Kazaa and iMesh, as users shop around and compare the relative levels of protection on offer.

All of the actions currently underway are civil suits for compensation and it is noteworthy that the criminal provisions of the No Electronic Theft Act have not yet been brought into the fray. Jeffrey Gerard Levy - then a 22 year old student at the University of Oregon - was the first person charged under this act in 1999, for making available music and copyright images from his website. Copyright infringement under the NET becomes a felony once the value of the copyrighted works infringed exceeds $2,500. Levy pled guilty and received a non-custodial sentence. The RIAA understood long ago that public reaction to this most recent move would be hostile and this likely explains why the criminal provisions have not been invoked. Furthermore criminal prosecutions are the province of state action, and would require strong support from the FBI's 'cybercrime' division and a district attorney willing to commit political suicide and initiate charges. Nonetheless, criminal actions can be expected in the near future: the inability to close the networks down will lead to the utter jettisoning of reason and desperate attempts to impose order through the prospect of jail.

Within the RIAA there appear to be different and clashing views. In November 2001, Cary Sherman contrasted the 'reasonable' approach of the music industry to that of the MPAA (Motion Picture Association of America) who have had no compunction about going after individuals: ""Nobody likes playing the heavy and having to resort to litigation," said Cary Sherman, the RIAA's president. "But when your product is being regularly stolen, there comes a time when you have to take appropriate action. "

Now that claim lies dead as a dodo. Some players undoubtedly find the idea of attacking their customers distasteful, but the exhaustion of other avenues has obviously put to bed these doubts. The failure of legal action against Morpheus earlier this year may have been the turning point. The District Court determined that distributed file and search systems were not liable for their users activity in the same way that Napster had been determined to be. Napster used a centralized server so as to establish the initial contact between its users, giving the site's owners considerable control over their behaviour. Subsequent generations of p2p clients have not repeated this mistake (by and large). With this decision (currently on appeal) the offensive against p2p developers as a point of potential vulnerability has faded. Thus a new figure was required between the industry's cross-hairs - the individual.

The coming moths will be crucial. Targeting the 'content-owners' with protest, propaganda and boycotts is fundamental - passivity could lead to the slow erosion of the sharing community if people are individualized for victimization and go to their fate alone. Groups such as the EFF and boycottRIAA.com already offer a campaign infrastructure into which some people may wish to invest their energies, but there are lots of other opportunities and methods of creative action.

push in the standards bodies threaten legislation so as to accelerate the adoption process (CBDTA - FCC, felony circumvention)

- Negative experience during the 1980s with dongles - Defeat of SDMI/CSS - Broadcast Flag for digital tv transmissions - Complex role of hardware manufacturers: ensure exceptions for themselves, relegate consumer interests, interoperability - Videogame lock-out; Sega Enterprises Ltd. v. Accolade, Inc. and Atari Games Corp. v. Nintendo of America - Innovation/value addition v barriers to entry - Sklyarov, elcomsoft, adobe ebooks - Microsoft DRM hack

Decommodification

1. The new field of production 2. China/Korea, Munich, Brazil. 3. BBC archive project 4. Strangulation of proposed conference on open-collaboration to be hosted by WIPO. 2. Controversy over WIPO meeting on FLOSS 2a. Aggressive posture adopted by the uS State Department on orders of copyright industry 2b. Meanwhile announcements about Munich and Brazil 2c Software Patents Directive 2d Litigation commence against P2p users Microsoft had threatened to boycot WSIS if "Open Source" was so much as mentioned in the WSIS Declaration of Principles and Plan of Action.

The non-rivalrous nature of information -- use by one doesn't diminish availability to another – network-driven decline in communications cost, and cheap commodity hardware enable new realms of cooperation where human labour is central. GNU/Linux, Kuro5hin, Indymedia, SETI, and filesharing networks such as eDonkey and Kazaa are just a few of the outcomes of this protean productive force composed through the voluntary cooperation of network prod-users. A key benefit of the peer-based production model limned above is that volunteer labour goes where it is most competent -- bypassing the inefficiencies of task allocation through firms or price signals -- and goes only where it's willing. Such spaces of free association constitute a significant terrain of individual freedom. Although this voluntary labour and its fruits are partially appropriated by capitalism, these practices are nonetheless concrete experiences of self-valorization, where participants appropriate the tools and knowledge of production and employ them to their own ends in a sort of triumph of use over exchange. Intellectual property laws limit or attempt to crush the potential of this mode of production by narrowing the range of inputs available to be refined or repurposed by all. "

- externalities positive and negative, capturing imagination, exploiting sociality, subjectivity, cooperation, creativity. Life-long learning, perpetual serviude tot he demands of the capitalist labour market. - affective labour “What is prescribed is subjectivity, that is to say, precisely that which only the operator can produce by ‘’giving themselves”” to the task. The impossible to command qualities that are expected from her are discernment, the capacity to confront the unexpected, to identify and resolve problems (Gorz, 16). Physical production becomes subaltern to the affective moment, the ‘’service’’, the research and development behind the product - shift in nature of the workspace from one of forced and often violent discipline (factory model) to the bringing of culture inside the production process.

1. Antechamber to a real appropriation. 2. Workshop for the transmission of knowledges. 3. Willingness to tolerate certain level of piracy as means of market construction and increasingly to hinder the expansion of free software.

1. Why do we bang on about infrastructures? It’s the substance that counts. Limitations of autonomous media systems, centrality of the new proletariat. 2. Confronting the media systems in their entirety. Those building a transformative media apparatus are not media-activists but rather a paradigmatic figure of the new workforce, precarious, mobile, multi-skilled. The Sky broadcast team is a mirror of the media activist. 3. Inability to establish a sustainable funding model lies has historically spelt out the destiny of transformative communications initiatives. Clearest in newspapers (Liberation, Tageszeitung, Village Voice) but also manifested in physical spaces close to political agitation; the familiar story of the squat or social center that signs a contract and five years later has no meaningful substance at all, existing merely so as to produce a wage for those determined enough to persevere, ekeing out an exploitation of past feats with the occasional artiistic retrospective of its radical origins.

1. What happens to the public in noddy-noddy land? Their focus would move away from commercial considerations to providing "public value", he said. "I believe that we are about to move into a second phase of the digital revolution, a phase which will be more about public than private value; about free, not pay services; about inclusivity, not exclusion. "In particular, it will be about how public money can be combined with new digital technologies to transform everyone's lives." 2. How do the discourses that seek to reinforce the public state and authoritarian scaremongering of the security pandemic coincide?

Why go to Geneva 1. Constuitutive moment share skills 2. relaunch a discussion outside of the pattern of summit-hopping 3. experiment with decentralized mode of organizing 4. capitalize on public attention to raise consciousness aropund issues such as IP/precarity 5. Access to communications workers outside of the west 3-400 delegates related to cris, 8-10,000 delegates for summit

The sadness of the WSIS 1. Refusal to establish separate fund to finance digital divide program. 2. Today, 16th July, a governmental sub-group constituted of the governments of China, Egypt, Canada, Mexico, San Salvador and the USA was formed to look at issues of Human Rights, the “Right to Communicate” and Cultural Rights. Egypt blocked a European proposition to introduce a freedom to communicate. China, presumably, is responsible for the exclusion of HRIC. Opposition to Libya's role in the Human Rights trade led to the exclusion of RSF. 3. Concentration: US, Italy 4. Bureaucratic obstacles to registration etc. 5. CS to draft their own declaration out of exasperation with official process 6. Militant position of CCBI 7. Instrumentalization of digital divide discourse: No conflict then with programs such as the recently launched 'Digital Freedom Initiative' administered by USAID with their 'partners' Cisco and Hewlett Packard, guided by the approach outlined by Secretary of Commerce Donald Evans: ""Our solution is free enterprise and free markets. We know that the miracle of capitalism is that in an environment of free enterprise the spirit of competition takes hold, leading to more innovation, which leads to economic growth, which leads to higher standards of living, which leads to quality of life, which leads to a world that lives peace and prosperity."

David Carney, Bush Administration Announces Digital Freedom Initiative http://www.techlawjournal.com/topstories/2003/20030304.asp

Enabled by the dramatic decline in price of powerful computational devices, information processing has transformed every area of work: from the PDA-equipped waitress taking her orders, to real-time tracking of dockers track as they move pallets on quaysides or in warehouses. Nothing escapes the suction towards capillary monitoring, modeling, integration into workflow and inventory management. Incumbent businesses strive to appropriate these gains wherever possible, as a new mode of production emerges, child of the precipitous reduction in the cost of computation power, the transaction costs of communications. This protean productive force is composed of the voluntary cooperation of network prod-users.

The Mad Stuff "School children should recognize their own creativity by including the copyright symbol on their course work."

According to the Patent Office's director of copyright, Anthony Murphy, a major proponent of the new program, understanding intellectual property carries important social value: "By bringing awareness of the importance of copyright into our schools, tomorrow's consumers can take their place in a community which understands, values and respects intellectual property." http://archive.salon.com/tech/feature/2001/07/16/abc_ip/print.html

Ten Theses on Freedom of Communication and Freedom of Movement

1. Two great transformative productive forces.

2. In both instances evasion or resistance to the laws takes place upon a mass level that feels no need to articulate itself politically. Mass illegality is the practice of emancipation.

3. Both require the erection of legal borders and their imposition.

4. Both increasingly tend towards a police response.

5. In both management is introduced as a euphemism for control and surveillance - governmentality

6. In each the prohibition is ambivalent: the need for labour creates a demand for migrants. The IOM actively recruits specific type of workers as well as deporting others. Security firms need hackers. Software companies need pirate copies in circulation. Porosity.

7. At the level of migrant subsistence there is a direct correlation in many cases; wherever the labour market is tight the migrant community depends on infringing or grey goods in order to eke out a living.

8. As the key determinant in productive capacity IP restrictions are central to the hindering of national industrial development and consequently an individual's capability to subsist where they are born. IP laws now help to fashion the flow of immigration from the labour intensive areas of the world to the profit centers.

9. In both areas there is a tendency towards a kind of feudalism; under feudalism labour was tied to land, migration controls execute such a function negatively by excluding migrants from the desired land. Trade secret laws achieve the same thing in terms of restricting the portability of knowledge, tying it to a particular workplace to the worker's detriment.

10. Illegal migrants, 'border-hackers', breach social laws by going where they ought not be. Their assault on the reining lies in this symbolic disordering as well as their material reality. Hackers themselves first penetrate at this symbolic level, although there can be material costs coincident to this.

11. Long before the emergence of mass media, migrants, pirates, soldiers, slaves were the conduit of information through which knowledge of struggles circulated. The movement of people and the movement of radical ideas have always been inseparable, driven by disaster, repression, agitation. Migrant communities, forced to operate in clandestinity make continued use of these exact informational structures. On the other hand to interpret the progress of free software as a sign of a general obsolescence of the need to fight around IP strikes me as simplistic. The threat of jail for p2p users and the reality of death for millions in need of patented medicines are very real.Whilst the former may function as something similar to a migrant's risk of ending up in a detention center - a risk, but not the controlling factor of migrant action or subjectivity - by performing legal vilification on an individual as a simulacrum of control and management. The complexities of modern life and the basic conditions for modern production do not however enable the realization of such power fantasies. Instead we get the totalitarian state show five days a week after the news at lunchtime, repeated again at 6.30. The potential danger in this display lies in tis capacity to straightjacket the social appropriation of technology, in such a way as to keep the model of exploitation central to media-marketing-news companies alive. This is why the struggles around IP should not be foremost about consumption, but production, social relationships and the collapsing of the distinction between user and producer. In this light there is nothing 'moralistic' about 'sharing' – it is t pragmatic mode of exchange commensurate to the form of social relation proper to that nebulous movement now touted as the 'commons'.

Key Terms: Role of research in agitation. For a European Inquiry into Information and Communications Production.

Time Bandits against the Gangsters of Accumulation: access to the means to life remains contingent on mostly unnecessary production whose only purpose is to reproduce the cycle of accumulation and continue the class war waged from above.

Criminal Mass: strategies against the of Criminalization of sharing of, and access, to knowledge.

Pirate Pride Parade: to coincide with the Genevan festival, a parade through the streets, culminating in a concert and rave.

Copyriot.Fightsharing.Dealers for life.Outlaw Broadcasters.Highwaymen of the net.Global Syndicate. What's the point of robbery when there's nothing left worth stealing? Evil genius for a better tomorrow.Illegal bodies

Crackpipe Neoliberalism

What are the moments represented by these themes?

Communication and movement from below are two of the strongest forces fashioning our everyday lives in ways which are not controlled and commanded by the state. No accident that the same paradigm, management, involving in one case demographic survey and in the other personal profiling based on informational inputs, is applied to both. Both are defined as problems; both have generated mass practices of illegality which the institutions given sovereignty over these jurisdictions can only simulate control over; both are central to the reproduction of the economy and profit on the terms now defined.

Movement from above mostly expresses itself in the movement of capital over borders and industries, the effortless economic blossoming and withering of regions. But it is also the summit-hoping by those who would be kings, and the fairytale lifestyle of the media celebrity or business magnate who flies to Venice for dinner and London for his tailor. Communication from above is the engineering of opinion, the manufacturing of the subject as consumer, the predatory generation of the fear of the other, the evacuation of sense and the bending of the knee before neo-feudalisms (old) new aristocracy.

Where we can be and what we know determine the parameters of what we can do. But in this world at the end of each trail lies the mad demands of production and the morality of the job. Work was always ugly but becomes even more undignified under informational capitalism, accelerated, intrusive, destabilising and omnipresent. Whether its selling the self in 'services' or the demand to turn-over a hundred 'customer inquiries' an hour in a call center, the means of accessing an income are locked to the use of the wage as a means of social control and the demand to extract surplus value from one and all. There is labour from below, but alas it doesn't tend to produce income, unless we're talking about that activity dubbed criminal, whose repression comprises one of the few outstanding justifications for its own existence that kingpins of the state apparatus appear to invest their faith in.

When the majority of profit extracted from commerce derives from the design, idea and research behind the good rather than the physical artifact itself, and when the manufacture of these physical containers can be subjected to a devestating dose of comparative advantage as demonstrated in the market for labour, then intellectual property rules become the fundamental vectors for control and the reproduction of profit-centers. In a world without borders these rules ensure that each keep their proper place, injecting a certain social order. Meanwhile, the networked millions, discovering the scale of their capacity in collaborative production from below using informational inputs, find their practice of building outside of profit impeded by rules erected so as to limit access, prevent the emergence of alternatives capable of challenging the rentier's racket and deny access to knowledge. These laws bind the arms of workers in the labour market as well, block the portability of skills, know-how, and of course, alienating us from the products of our work

References: Solo, Trashing Free Software Jacques Godbout Killbarda’s article Sasha Constanza Chock Yochai, Coase’’s Penguin. Kuda Rossiter 1. BBC Announcement about archives http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/tv_and_radio/3177479.stm HRIC http://iso.hrichina.org/iso/news_item.adp?news_id=1527 Telestreet, Gurriglia Marketing, Link to my article RSF http://www.rsf.fr/article.php3?id_article=797215.09.2003 http://www.itu.int/wsis/docs/im/content_themes/contributions/ccbi.doc ]. Cptech artcile on compulsory licensing and FTAA. Conrad’’s article on FTAA.

i. The User Insurgency

(a) As Critique of property

There is a more precise connection between this mass 'criminality' and the merging productive power; the desire to obtain media commodities for free is a powerful motivation for self-education the acquisition of new skills and knowledge: how to use cryptographic hashes, compression techniques, wider knowledge of less-charted (and thus safer) network spaces, familiarity with formats and the ability to render digital forms as physical objects such as mastered CDs and DVDs, familiarity with publishing techniques, wikis etc. File-sharing forums function as veritable apprentice-yards for the diffusion of techniques which once acquired are portable to uses outside of the reproduction of the commodity circuit.

(b) As Productive Force

"But the worker, as owner and seller of his labour-power, enters into relation with capital only as an individual; cooperation, the mutual relationship between workers,only begins with the labour process, but by then they have ceased to belong to themselves. On entering the labour process they are incorporated into capital. As co-operators, as members of a working organism, they merely form a particular mode of existence of capital. Hence the productive power developed by the worker socially is the productive power of capital." Panzieri

Critical interpretations of automation earmark the introduction of technology as either a reaction to the militancy of or, or an attack on, workers activity. This is sometimes described as the increasing role played by constant capital (investments, machinery) with respect to variable capital (labour). The worker is deskilled as the intelligence formerly drawn from living labour is invested in the machinery itself, the producer ceases to be the subject of production and becomes supervisor of a machine that has taken her place. In some cases the introduction of technology will result in unemployment whose disastrous consequences can be seen in a thousand former industrial towns turned wastelands.

P2P reverses this situation at least in part. As the range of its productive practices grow it substructs tasks from the market and the firm. Instead of 'management' or 'planning' these projects rely upon horizontal negotiation, modular production and exploits the ease and cheap nature of digital communications to overcome the need for a centrally located decision-maker, formerly known as the boss. Widespread social cooperation need longer be constrained to the firm - this is the fundamental change of peer to peer. Distinguishing this practice from real-world volunteerism are the low costs of coordination, the role of information (and its especial public good characteristics) as both raw material and output of the productive process and the access to a near infinite range of expertise and paralellizable workers through the network.

No objections to the creation of value per se.

Produces a decline in the level of political dependence.

(c) The Dark Side of the Collaborative Mode

ii. Response of the State

iii. Response of existing market incumbents

ii. Deregulation of the media

iii. We want the machines to work for us. To improve the standard of living whilst abolishing monotonous, labour.

Assessing the effects of technological innovation between potential productivity and real-world effect allows us to shine light on the social consequences at the level of distribution of wealth and crucially power, rather than fetichizing innovation in and of itself.

"The working-class struggle thus presents itself as the necessity of global opposition to the capitalist plan, where the fundamental factor is awareness -- let us call it dialectical awareness -- of the unity of the 'technical' and 'despotic' moments in the present organization of production. The relationship of revolutionary action to technological 'rationality' is to 'comprehend' it, but not in order to acknowledge and exalt it, rather in order to subject it to a new use: to the socialist use of machines .30" Panzieri

Caffentzis essay commentary

In the master's mind, "the machinery and his monopoly of it are inseparably united"12 Panzieri

iv. Freedom to be where we want and do what we like

"In fact, for Marx, free time for the free mental and social activity of individuals by no means simply coincides with the reduction of the 'working day'. It presupposes a radical transformation of the conditions of human labour, the abolition of wage labour and the "social regulation of the labour process" In other words, it presupposes the total overthrow of the capitalist relationship between despotism and rationality, for the formation of a society administered by free producers, in, which-with the abolition of production for the sake of production-planned development, the plan itself, rationality and technology would be subjected to the; permanent control of social forces, and work would thus (and only thus) be capable of becoming man's 'vital need'."

Difference between opposition within the accumulation mechanism and that at the level of the social relation of power that lies at the heart of the system as a whole.

‘ An important meaning of liberation with continuities to the Revolution of 1640 is suggested in the first chapter: namely the growing propensity, skill and success of London working people in escaping from the newly created institutions that were designed to discipline people by closing them in. This tendency I have dubbed 'excarceration' because I wish to draw attention to the activity of freedom in contrast to its ideological or theoretical expressions. I see that activity as a counter-tendency to a recent historiographical trend exemplified by Michel Foucault, who stresses incarceration in the 'the great confinement' and who makes rulers of government and society seem all-powerful.' Linebaugh, The London Hanged, p.3

v. Strategy "The tendential line that can be identified objectively as a valid hypothesis/guide lies in the strengthening and expansion of self--management demands. Since self-management demands are not posed merely as demands for 'cognitive' participation, but affect the concrete relationship rationalization/hierarchy/power, they do not remain closed within the ambit of the firm. Instead, they are precisely directed against the 'despotism' which capital projects and exercises over society as a whole, at all levels, and they are expressed as the need for a total overthrow of the system, by means of a global prise de conscience and a general struggle of the working class as such."

fn41: The representation of communist society as a society of 'abundance' of goods (even if not purely material ones) and of 'free time' is widespread in Soviet ideology, and is obviously the result of denying any effective social regulation of the labour process. 'Technological' illusions intervene today to sustain such ideology; for example, in R. Strumilin (On the Road to Communism, Moscow 1959), 'directing functions in the processes of production' are identified with 'technical' control, with the 'higher intellectual content' of work made possible by the "development of technology with its miraculous automatic mechanisms and electronic machines that 'think' ". Thus, automation will make it possible to achieve a really 'affluent' society of consumers of 'free time'; see above, note 30! As an example of typical deformation of Marx's texts on this point, see G. Friedmann, Industrial Society, New York 1955, where the worker's reappropriation of the product and of the content of work itself is identified with 'psychic-physiological control of work'!

6. Obscuring of labour, technical, comparison with housework etc.

7. “The reason we’re so downbeat is we think the peer-to-peer problem is going to only get worse. In 2008, broadband will be prevalent around the world,” said Simon Dyson, the report’s author.

It's funny how in the beggining all you wanted was to get that X item (song/game/app etc) and ended up joining and participating in very nice comunities. You laugh you learn and you meet ppl all over the world which otherwise you would never have met.

lol .... for me one of the great staisfactions of this internet age is seeing those two words together... "Download Complete" eh eh eh (how sad am I?) No really ppl begin with filesharing then they learn about routers then network connection... the possibilities are endless (you even begin to unravel the mistery of the smurfs.... which I only begin to compreend...) June 20, 2003 p2pforums.com

Chris Gregory "Gifts and Commodities", Ongka's Big Moka Ongka: A Self Account by a PNG Highlands Big Man by Andrew Strathern Kim Stanley Robinson's Mars trilogy, starting with the second book. There are also elaborations on an eco-economy, too, and hydrogen economies. Vonnegut mauled the gadget genre with Player Piano.

- difference between ‘’gift exchange and direct reciprocity’’ - http://struggle.net/Ben - MIYACHI TATSUO - Germna Ideology, Feuerbach - indignity of work breeds the desire and readiness to produce elsewhere for free, in conditions of dignity

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