Lachlan Brown on Wed, 20 Mar 2002 15:24:02 +0100 (CET) |
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[Nettime-bold] Re: Fw: Air-l digest, Vol 1 #328 - 15 msgs |
t, Yes, I employ a range of participant observation tactics to tease out reaction, as well as to sound-out specific communities over particular questions - beside posting items, links and publications I feel are of relevance to Nettime. I am applying methods learnt in more than 7 years research into the impacts of Internet in culture at large. They work really well at producing questions. I note this reply to my 'Whites Only Pedophile Club?' post in the context of my unsubscription from AoIR. Best, Lachlan - lachlan@london.com (Mon 03/18/02 at 03:43 PM -0500): > Just Doing Cultural Studies, getting some strong reactions, pressing or > cajoling where necessary, drawing on texts netwide to illustrate, + > intimidate where required. Some spectacular shifts in policy, some > testing counter interventions (I will discuss these in Nettime), the > pitfalls are many. except that you tend to send WAY too much mail to nettime, despite perfectly reasonable requests that you chill out. to those you re- sponded with some vaguery like 'i'm talking about important issues,' which (a) is simply false WRT much of the stuff you send, and (b) is a generic evaluation that anyone could make about anything. as a result, the probability that anything you post decreases dramat- ically. moderators are only human, and the notion that it's some- how incumbent upon us to slog through every single thing someone sends--particularly after ignoring the above-mentioned requests--is unrealistic. conversely, if you're more selective about what you send, the probablity that a moderator will give it a serious con- sideration increases dramatically. this system works for, like, 99.7% of the subscribers. cheers, t ---- Original Message ----- From: "Lachlan Brown" <lachlan@london.com> Date: Mon, 18 Mar 2002 17:12:20 -0500 To: <cos01am@gold.ac.uk>,d.morley@gold.ac.uk Subject: Re: Whites Only Pedophile Club? > > > Angela, et al. > > AIR-L unsubscribed me when I sent the following > message: > > > Subject Line: Whites Only Pedophile Club? > > Jeremy, > I believe you unsubscribed me, please explain. > > It is clear that my intervention > brought about by a discussion in January > concerning the revision and erasure of email archives and a comment by Sean Cubitt > "One day the world will mourn the loss of > my juvenelia" has been of interest to > many members. > > It is also clear that one reaction to > this intervention was a displacement thread > concerning unsolicited mail from West Africa. > > My questioning of this displacement > led to a discussion about identity and > search technologies raised by Barry Wellman. > > > When I questioned further the meaning of > the word 'juvenilia' in the context of > widespread abuse in the IT industry, in education as well as in commerce, a great many > questions began to arise, some on other lists, > some on this list. > > > The list is productively considering > a greater range of questions than it had > previously, and there is the emergence > of a set of pictures of Internet that are > very much in the public interest. > > At this point you unsubscibed lachlan@london.com. > > The process of questioning to lead to > the emergence of a culture influencing not only Internet but culture at large is in the > interests of the public. > > I request therefore that you do not > hinder my intervention but help it. > > > Lachlan Brown > > > ----- Original Message ----- > > --On 18 March 2002 13:44 -0500 Lachlan Brown <lachlan@london.com> wrote: > > > > > Lachlan Brown > > > Toronto > > > > > > 16 March 2002 > > > > > > To > > > Professors David Morley, Angela McRobbie, > > > Stuart Hall and Christine Geraghty. > > > > > > Goldsmiths College, > > > University of London > > > > > > Regarding the Association of Internet Researchers http://www.aoir.org > > > [see archives Jan-Mar under resources] and the deep seated problem of an > > > inappropriate culture that runs through the Information technology > > > Industry in education and in > > > commerce. > > > > -- > lachlan@london.com (Mon 03/18/02 at 03:43 PM -0500): > > > Just Doing Cultural Studies, getting some strong reactions, pressing or > > cajoling where necessary, drawing on texts netwide to illustrate, + > > intimidate where required. Some spectacular shifts in policy, some > > testing counter interventions (I will discuss these in Nettime), the > > pitfalls are many. > > except that you tend to send WAY too much mail to nettime, despite > perfectly reasonable requests that you chill out. to those you re- > sponded with some vaguery like 'i'm talking about important issues,' > which (a) is simply false WRT much of the stuff you send, and (b) > is a generic evaluation that anyone could make about anything. as > a result, the probability that anything you post decreases dramat- > ically. moderators are only human, and the notion that it's some- > how incumbent upon us to slog through every single thing someone > sends--particularly after ignoring the above-mentioned requests--is > unrealistic. conversely, if you're more selective about what you > send, the probablity that a moderator will give it a serious con- > sideration increases dramatically. > > this system works for, like, 99.7% of the subscribers. > > cheers, > t > > -- _______________________________________________ Sign-up for your own FREE Personalized E-mail at Mail.com http://www.mail.com/?sr=signup Win the Ultimate Hawaiian Experience from Travelocity. http://ad.doubleclick.net/clk;4018363;6991039;n?http://svc.travelocity.com/promos/winhawaii/ _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://amsterdam.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold