fran ilich on Sun, 21 Apr 2002 14:15:02 +0200 (CEST) |
[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
[nettime-lat] Solaris Electronic Mailinglist |
Announcement of the Solaris Electronic Mailinglist An Initiative for Critical Issues of Internet and Development Dear All, We would like to inform you about Solaris, a new electronic mailinglist on IT and "Development" related issues in the once and future/post "non-Western world". The list started in early 2002 and now has 150 subscribers. The discontent amongst many of us with the conventional discourse around "IT & Development" has gradually grown over the last few years. So far there has not been an on-line institutionally independent forum to discuss critical topics concerning the full range and use of new media and their cultural/creative, political, social and economic contexts in the (for lack of a better term) "Developing (aka Third, Less Developed, Underdeveloped) World" and in lagging regions and among digitally excluded populations in "Developed" Countries. The existing lists in the "IT & Development" or "Digital Divide" fields are too closely tied to funding bodies, Not for Profits, international institutions or governmental agencies with their own world encompassing assumptions to promote. Despite their efficiency they seem to have too narrow a policy and theoretical focus. We would like to see more independence, a neutral forum where critical and lively multi-disciplinary and intercultural exchanges can take place. Current mailing list culture seems to have little interest in debating more fundamental issues of exclusion in a digital context, the new power relations of digitally enabled economies, digitally enabled security from below rather than above, community e-commerce development, Napsterism and other post "E" development strategies, the new terms of trade and sophisticated accumulation in the Real World of IP, OS (Operating System) wars and regional insurgencies, and determining if WTO director Mike Powell was right and the Digital Divide really is about fancy German cars in low income neighborhoods. This call for a critical discourse comes from 'within' and is not meant to spread a new form of techno-cultural pessimism. The last thing we need is a moralistic analysis of the Internet as a 'US-American imperialist tool'. An engaged form of research is necessary which overcomes dry economism and its spiritual counterpart, techno-determinism (the all too often heard notion that technology will automatically bring salvation and result in prosperity for all, worldwide). "Solaris" is born out of a felt need for a lively and diverse independent ICT and development discourse and particularly one which recognizes and reinforces the perspectives of those who see ICT as a base for liberation and creativity--with eyes wide open for the chilly reality. There is a need to analyze the agendas of all the agents, from globe spanning UN or G8 Task/Dot Forces, US-American foundations (Markle, Soros, Rockefeller, Ford, etc.), charity/marketing input from IT companies, government ICT/DD development programs, NGOs and media activists. nformation technology hasn't solved world poverty. It arguably has contributed even further to the growing income inequality on both a global and national scale while the all too easy rhetoric of UN initiatives, and DotForce and other Digital Divide programs appear to be recycling outdated neo-liberal dotcom models. The 'organized positivism' around successful projects is often used against those who rightly ask questions while mysteriously never seeming to manage the morphing into on-going "sustainable" programs. There is an "end of history" culture in the making driven by the almost religious belief that technology plus business results in democracy and prosperity. The bandwidth gap is widening on any level at an accelerating pace. With Linux stagnating as an alternative to Microsoft, limiting its role as an operating system and server software, Solaris would like to raise the question in which areas strategic software could be developed. Information technology does not come with 'out of the box' solutions. At the time there is an amazing amount of talent around to prevent and reverse the expensive import of hardware and software. The overall picture is a complex, often paradoxical one. There is no longer a need for 'technology transfer' from North to South. "Everyone is an expert." IT-specialists are everywhere. However, there are numerous economic blockages explaining why software production from below hasn't taken off. It is now time to stress the structural obstacles-and NGOism could be one of them (not just the more obvious WTO). The use of information technology worldwide is causing paradoxical, sometimes contradictory and confusing effects, with occasional miracles and widely spread new forms of exclusion. Still, the overall sense is one of empowerment - and surprise. The primal drive to discover, adapt, mutate and further develop technologies is a truly global phenomenon, one that cannot be overrun by a culture of complaint or the desire of corporate interests to create and capture markets. These are just some of many topics which could be discussed. The Solaris initiators would like to emphasize the complexity of the picture and involve all those who feel attracted to a rich multidisciplinary form of digital story telling beyond dull politics, sterile academicism, paper tiger task forces and self-reflexive policy conglomerates. It is time to get rid of the almost dead phrase "IT is about people, stupid" and move it beyond the massing ranks of the Digital Divide industry. Solaris is co-founded by Michael Gurstein (mgurst@vcn.bc.ca), community Internet maven based in New York and Geert Lovink (geert@xs4all.nl), media theorist and Internet critic, based in Sydney. The list is hosted by Sarai, the New Media Initiative in Delhi, India which has been a source of inspiration while starting up Solaris. Please forward this invitation to your friends-and enemies-who you think would/should be interested in joining Solaris. To start, the Solaris mailinglist will be open and unmoderated. There will be a (growing and rotating) team of facilitators from different continents and backgrounds who will initiate debate and bring in material. In order to prevent spam only members will be able to post and from the e-mail address where they receive the list. When there are around 50 subscribers the list will go live. Please be careful not to publicly circulate this announcement, especially in the beginning. To (un)subscribe write to solaris-request@sarai.net with 'help' in the subjectline for further instructions or go directly to: http://mail.sarai.net/mailman/listinfo/solaris Post to: solaris@mail.sarai.net (list members only) List archive: http://mail.sarai.net/pipermail/solaris/ solaris--independant forum for IT & development issues un/sub info: solaris-request@mail.sarai.net with the word "help" in the subject line or in the body of the message. URL: http://mail.sarai.net/mailman/listinfo/solaris/ archive: http://mail.sarai.net/pipermail/solaris/ _________________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Get your free @yahoo.com address at http://mail.yahoo.com _______________________________________________ Nettime-lat mailing list Nettime-lat@nettime.org http://amsterdam.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-lat