rebe on Wed, 1 Mar 2017 15:49:14 +0100 (CET) |
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Re: <nettime> Armin Medosch (1962-2017) |
https://voicerepublic.com/talks/the-rise-of-the-network-commons Listening to the talk again is somehow uplifting.The Kim Foale's paper echoes the sentiment that future turned out other then predicted. Today I found it insightful to read Erik Möller's intro of "Die heimliche Medienrevolution" (2004) again and the past optimism he expressed. Where did the progressive techno-libertarianism of the web go? I also have the paper edition of Telepolis 0 in my bookshelf. Today the magazine blinks to the right, at times in a refreshing manner: https://www.heise.de/tp/features/Kostueme-und-kulturelle-Aneignung-3635366.html However, I miss the traditional focus on digital matters and rarely read it anymore.
In the period you describe there was a spirit of vanguard in the literal meaning, a pretty good track record in predictions what would be the next big thing and always a safe bet against the old bulls, ignorant contemporaries and philisters, their lawyers, officials and objections against innovation. A belief that you can take technology in your hands and make great social change when parameters are set right, or at least you keep the unaware from shooting in the cradle, so progress could unfold.
The poisonous machines of noise and self-amplification create a new offspring of alt-right and ctrl-left hate and boredom, avalanches of irrelevance and ridicule, and change you don't want to believe in.
Would we ever get the network commons garden Armin described and what make-do-visions would inspire a new generation?
--- André On 28.02.2017 12:14, Christiane Schulzki Haddouti wrote:
When Armin had to leave Telepolis in 2002 an era ended. In my personal review the decline started with 9/11 and the sudden loss of interest in our traditional topics – and the rise of a speculative sort of journalism at Telepolis.
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