furtherfield on Wed, 29 Aug 2001 10:17:48 +0000 |
[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
Re: [Syndicate] FW: Results of your commands (WORDS) |
Stuart's such a snob... > Dear K?roly T?th, > >> Dear Whatever List is this, >> The moderation of the list ex-Syndicate has already begun. >> once upon a time (1996), i was subscribed to an open mailing list. called >> Syndicate. >> 'THAT' LIST IS BRAIN DEATH. > > Question is if there is will of the old subscribers or/and if a new > generation wishes to reconquere the public space called Syndicate. Are > East-West art related contacts irrelevant? Do we withness and invasion or an > abandon? > > >> see this!!: >> i wanted to know who is left on the list. >> i sent a mail command to the software to majordomo@anart.no to get a list > of >> subscribers. >> it is forbidden. so far about "openness". >> i could do the same with the list hosted from V2/Berlin. >> see appendix 1&2 below. > > Atle Barcley perfromed the moving of the list to anart.no at 27. August > 2001. We have changed the mailing list manager. Majordomo was a nice > technology five years ago. Now we use sympa (see: > http://listes.cru.fr/sympa/). As administrators we thought that sympa is a > nice non-commercial software which deserves to be supported by its own means > by an art-related list. With the help of the new sofware we will be able to > offer multiple choices to the subscribers: daily digest, weekly digest, > filters. Subsribers hopefully will be able to perceive as many layers of the > syndicate list communication as they wish. See also the discussions about > smart.moderator and and bureau automatism. We downloaded the vaste > documentation of the sympa and we are studying it. As soon as we find the > information how to find the list of subscribers we will announce it. Hardly > anyobody of the old subcribers have left. > >> Dear moderators, maybe it is time that you just change the name of the list >> to something like > >> "Artsy Narcistic ASCII Sociopath's Coup" >> or >> "Ceyboard Cowboys" >> or >> "Bourgoise&Bourgois&Bros." >> D&D (Destructive Distracters) >> "Artsy Narcistic ASCII Sociopath's Coup" >> or >> "Ceyboard Cowboys" >> or >> "Bourgoise&Bourgois&Bros." >> D&D (Destructive Distracters) >> ASCII art > > ASCII art and communication guerilla is from the beginning part of the > tradition of this list. See below the message of (one of the prominent ASCII > artists) Vuk Kosic from 1996, or please browse the archives. > > >> I agree with Raivo Kelomees who wrote: > <CITATE> >> I vote for "syndicate" or ... let's make final meeting of Syndicate >> where >> list/initiative will be "officially" closed with possibility to discuss >> face to >> face what is "happening" not only on list but between "East" and "West". > </CITATE> > > > I also agree with Raivo Kelomees. I propose a small meeting at Ars > Electronica. I don't know how many people will be able to come without > financial support... > > greetings, > Anna Balint > > Vuk Cosic (vuk@kud-fp.si) > Sun, 18 Aug 1996 19:25:13 CET > > > Just stumbled on this while checking mwatz..... > the same Luther Blisset project was involved in an other fake book > by Blisset (double boomerang) earlier this year. More about it at > http://www.dsnet.it/qwerg/blissett/bliss0.htm > under "nasty trick". > This Bologna Blisset thing is very interesting, > they publish a "Luther Blisset - global magazine for psychological > warfare" (3 volumes so far), and have issued two authentic books - > Mind Invaders (Castelvecchi) and Toto, Peppino e la guerra > Psichologica (forgot the editor), both in italian. > Below you can find an email account > that might put you in touch with these nice people. > > vuk cosic > > ///////////// forwarded message follows ////////////////////// > > X-POP3-Rcpt: X-POP3-Rcpt: marius@lima > Date: Fri, 16 Aug 1996 14:27:45 +0200 > From: Luther Blissett <nav0243@iperbole.bologna.it> > Reply-To:nav0243@iperbole.bologna.it > Organization: Transmaniacon > MIME-Version:1.0 > To: marius@hok.no > Subject: Hakim Bey X-URL: > http://www.hok.no/marius/bey/ > > Hello, I noticed you're concerned with Hakim Bey. The attached file > should be of some interest to you. Bye. > > WHY I WROTE A FAKE HAKIM BEY BOOK > AND HOW I CHEATED THE CONFORMISTS OF ITALIAN "COUNTERCULTURE" > > > by Luther Blissett > > > > A. The wonders of creation > > > ...In order to get on and improve the relations between the masses and > the leaders, we must keep the valve of self-criticism open, we must > enable the soviet men to scold their leaders and criticize their > failures, so that the leaders do not become presumptuous and the > masses do not leave the leaders. Josif Stalin, 1923 > > > Since last April all good Italian bookshops are selling A Ruota Libera > - Miseria del lettore di TAZ [more or less: "Loose from all restraint > - On the poverty of the TAZ readership"], a collection of pieces by > Hakim Bey published by Castelvecchi (Rome). Multitudes of fans of that > notorious guru of 1990's counterculture bought the book (which has > quickly sold out). The left-wing press reviewed it enthusiastically. > Concurrent publishers have gone off their nuts and charged the > publisher and the editor/translator (the mysterious Fabrizio P. > Belletati - born in Caserta 1969, now living in Nottingham, UK) with > "uncorrectness" for having copyrighted "texts freely circulating on > the Net". None realized that A Ruota Libera is apocryphal, nay, no > more euphemisms!, it is FAKE. "Fabrizio P. Belletati" doesn't exist. > I, Luther Blissett, wrote A Ruota Libera. It is not a mere parody of > Beyan writings, rather, it's been a way of testing how gullible and > tardy is the average buyer and/or reviewer of cyber-crap, and how > believable is the output of an overestimated "santon" whose anal > orifice, just as anybody's butthole, spouts ordinary shit instead of > gold. > > A Ruota Libera includes: > --- A preface by "Belletati". ('This book is a selection of articles > and essays by Hakim Bey, written during the period 1993-95, previously > untranslated into Italian [...] Why have I "invented" for the Italian > market a book that does not yet exist in the USA? Maybe I had to wait > for the author himself to improve and collect his writings, didn't I? > As always, the reason is one of the several "Italian" anomalies, i.e. > the surprising untimeliness of Bey's critical success in Italy [...] > Shortly before, during and immediately after the publication of > TAZ...Hakim Bey was actually without interlocutors: the reviews of his > major theoretical work were marked by an uproarious "greed for > novelties" and a passive admiration of Bey's syncretic acrobatics. The > main result was a depressing banalization of his positions, which in > many ways were mistaken for those "cyber-gnostic" ideas which Bey > explicitly detests. Bey appears to be the first person to complain > about these foolishly new-agey or pseudo-cyberpunk interpretations > [...] Luckily enough, this trend has recently been inverted. An > useful, indeed indispensable critique of Bey's theories is revealing > itself and retro-acting on his latest texts [... quick overview of the > things written by John Zerzan, the Neoist Alliance, the London > Psychogeographical Association and the Berlin-based magazine Super! > Bierfront...] Apparently, this is only the beginning: Hakim Bey is no > longer so awfully trendy, he isn't deemed as an untouchable santon any > longer. This doesn't mean that his bias on the countercultural debate > is going to end; rather, the understanding of his next pieces will be > easier than before, also thanks to the rudiments of "immediatist > self-criticism" which he is inserting. And as to Italy? Here is > necessary to bring the debate up-to-date, because we're still facing > the long rambling speech on the TAZs: "Geez, this party really seems > to be a TAZ!", "Hey, won't you come down at the TAZ in the squatted > centre?"...That's why I decided to publish these texts...which provide > us with a complete picture of Bey's theories, here and now, without > enervating and useless waits.') --- A few lark-mirrors, i.e. true and > "serious" (as well as questionable) Bey's texts: "PAZ", "Media Creed > For The Fin De Siecle", "Primitives & Extropians"; --- Some true, > ludicrous Bey's texts - shameful bullshit, newagey nonsense: "Evil > Eye", "Moorish Weather Report". --- Some interesting (as well as > questionable) apocrypha, things that Bey would write if his ideas were > clear enough: a) "Fart Strike", in which "Bey" suddenly changes his > (banally pro-situationist) position on art and the Art Strike 1990-93; > b) "Albigensis Postscript", actually "A Conspectus On The Evolution Of > Cyberspace", a text by the London Psychogeographical Association, with > such ludicrous inserts as a reference to one Lee Mortais (which sounds > like "Li Morte'!!!" [...your deads!], i.e. a Roman insult meaning > "[Fuck] the souls of your dead parents!") as well as a mega-stupid > final roller-coaster ride; c) "On The Poverty Of The TAZ Readership", > which does not break the promise of its title. Since I imitated the > style of Italian translations of Bey's writings, any translation > "back" into English would betray the text. It's a pity. Anyway, the > piece is a radical critique of Bey's fans. --- apocryphal crap, > indifferently swallowed by the readers, which proves that the "new > underground" conformist posers would believe anything: a) "An > Immediatist Self-criticism" (actually a 1926 Stalin's speech, which I > had slightly altered without softening its arrogant, authoritative > tone); b) An appendix to "Evil Eye" entitled "Toccarsi le palle" > [Touching One's Own Balls], which I couldn't comment without getting > sick of my own laughters! c) "Outdated Media", i.e. a hasty critique > to the Internet which culminates in a ludicrous yearning for the good > old smoke signals and carrier-pigeons; --- A real piece by John > Zerzan, 'Hakim Bey, Postmodern "Anarchist"'. In one word, a crapbook. > > I parodized Bey's style (which is one part Hippy bullshit and cheap > oriental trinkets, one part post-Structuralism and pithily > intricacies, one part cyber-crap), forced its ambiguity, made use of > any banal rethoric expedient. I also stuffed the texts with fake > translator's notes (pointing out various untranslatable puns) and > persian and arabian words. At last, I created "Fabrizio P. Belletati", > who sent all the stuff to Castelvecchi. Castelvecchi deemed the texts > as "extremely disputable, but worth publishing" (not too bad if Luther > cheated even one of his/her publishers and spokesmen: not even Gerry > Adams knew that the IRA was going to explode the Canary Wharf bomb!). > As an ultimate hoax, I copyrighted the texts - Italian "translations" > of unexisting anti-copyright English texts. Eventually the book has > been published and positively reviewed, the prank was successful. As a > side effect, the entire operation raised panic in the "underground" > scene. > > > > B. It's the press, baby! > > > A "white radical" is three parts bullshit and one part hesitation. Up > Against The Wall Motherfucker, 1968 > > > The left-wing press welcomed A Ruota Libera with fanfares and > flourishing trumpets. On Friday, April 26th B.V. (Benedetto Vecchi) > reviewed the book on "Il Manifesto" (whose heading contains the phrase > "communist newspaper") and published several excerpts from "Media > Creed For The Fin de Siecle". Here is the end of B.V.'s masterpiece, > which was entitled: 'Hakim Bey: Self-consciousness of the > "underground" scene' : "...This Bey's book published by Castelvecchi > replies to fans and detractors. Bey's provocations are the right way > to take a different look at this 'too-late-Capitalism', which is how > he describes the post-modern age. A book worth devouring, thanks also > to Belletati's introduction, which describes in details what happens > to that jovial Sufi master". A few weeks later, Angelo Quattrocchi > fell in the pseudo-Bey ambush. Quattrocchi [his surname means "4 > eyes"] is a boring old guy who can't help yearning for May '68, and > boasts of having taken supper with Guy Debord (as if this was a > honour). This dotard wrote some useless anti-media pamphlets such as > Come e perche' difendersi dalla televisione [How And Why We Defend > Ourselves From TV] (1988) and Dai...Stacca la spina! [Come On, Take > The Plug Off!] (1996); he's proud of not having a TV set, a fax or an > Internet access, and yet this disinformed moron writes articles on > "counterculture" on "Liberazione", the organ of the PRC [Re-founded > Communist Party, that is a powerful trotsko-stalinist monster]. On May > 29th, Quattrocchi wrote this meaningless and ungrammatical review: > > SONS OF SITUATIONISM DEMOLISH EACH OTHER Hakim Bey, "A Ruota Libera", > Castelvecchi, lire 14.000 Hakim Bey, Sufi master or bastard nephew of > Vaneigem, the father of Situationism, is still a lovely > theoretician-antitheoretician of libertarian radicalism thought and > lived in this age. TAZ was published in Italian by Shake in 1993, then > they published "Via Radio: Saggi sull'Immediatismo" [Radio > Sermonettes/Immediatism]. Now another collection of Bey's writings, A > Ruota Libera, is out thanks to quick and multi-coloured Castelvecchi. > O, it's a funny, brilliant, delicious book, though there are some > style drops! As to radical thought, it takes us on the same time wave > of the US, which is where Bey writes, and Germany, where Bey is as > famous as in Italy. The book has an incredible appendix, a 3-page > mycrocosm in which John Zorzan [sic], another brilliant writer of the > same school, demolishes our Bey by describing him as perfect > mega-trendy blah-blah poseur, a sort of post-modern anarchist. Zorzan > [sic] has published for Nautilus another lovely text, "Apprezzare il > tempo" [Time And Its Discontents]. Who's right? Zorzan [sic] or Hakim > Bey? Both. They both foam with a critical intelligence that leaves all > the other "libertarians" amidst the ruins of an ideological wall which > they haven't yet removed. Zorzan [sic] and Bey are both bastard sons > of gran pere Vaneigem, the Situationist philosopher whose > "Treatise..." throws light on this fin de siecle since 1968. This end > of the century sees anarchy and utopia rising again from the ashes of > ideologies. They [Bey and Zorzan] talk about temporary autonomous > zones, that is a conquest of space (squats) and time (raves? Altered > states of consciousness?), which subjectivities want to take over. > This is the only weapon left against the omnipotence and omnipresence > of capital, it is worth reading and living. Again, ce n'est qu'un > debut. > > A storm of turd. It's piteous to see how a life without TV can reduce > an educated man. Vaneigem is NOT "the father of Situationism": the > Situationist International was founded in 1957, Vaneigem joined it in > 1961 and left it in 1970, two years before its official dissolution. > Likewise, the Traita du savoir vivre _ l'usage des jeunes generations > was NOT published in 1968, but in 1966. Actually "Zorzan"'s surname is > Zerzan, and the Italian title of Time And Its Discontents is Ammazzare > il tempo [Killing Time], not "Apprezzare il tempo" [Appreciating > Time]. Again, Zerzan is not "of the same school" of Bey: the former is > one of the "primitivists" which Bey charges with absolutism. Zerzan > DOESN'T talk about temporary autonomous zones, and anyone who says > that they both are right is an obnubilated person. At best, Vecchi and > Quattrocchi superficially read the book. At worst, they can't tell a > libertarian discourse from a mere reactionary delirium. In the > meanwhile, A Ruota Libera was cited on several zines and influenced > the whole debeyte...Even professor Georges Lapassade, the prestigious > anthropologist, was sighted waving a copy of the book during a > conference! > > Before I cover how the media reacted to the scam and some idiots in > the radical scene freaked out, I want to state that this prank doesn't > need a "political" concluding postscript. This operation was an > attempt to forge the passage between theory and practice. There are > too many charlatans all around, guys who try to sell miraculous > remedies for the "crisis of the end of the millennium". Humanity will > not be happy 'til the last "layc intellectual" will be hanged with the > guts of the last hezbollah. What? I'm running the risk of making > enemies? But what "me" are you talking about? The name of Luther > Blissett may be adopted even to bash my face in, and anyone can use > it. Humans understand themselves in the process of psychic warfare. > Forwards to a world without poseurs! > > > > C. Terror in the underground > > > Let the throbbing flyers become impatient, we'll calmly bring them > back to the ground, back at the humble level at which we ourselves may > ascend. We are unsuitable to any heroism and prefer irony to lyricism. > We feel forced to warn the most impetuous ones: don't play Phaeton! > > Amadeo Bordiga, 1952 > > > > By chance, the A Ruota Libera prank clashed with other events pivoting > on the circulation of Bey's books in Italy. Milan-based ShaKe > Edizioni, often described as the "official" pushers of Bey's dope in > the "bel paese", began indulging in the most trivial conspiracy > paranoia. Therefore a light-hearted and playful prank has been > perceived as a base assault. But my prank was not a character > assassination of Gomma and Raf Valvola nor had it a "fratricidal" > purpose. I don't believe in the stalinist pedagogics of "false > friends", and what's more I don't imagine I can aim at such an easy > target (just a few months ago I kicked the shit out of Mondadori, the > most corporate of Italian publishers. Two weeks after the prank Iem > describing, Ieve attacked the Bologna District Attorney, the local > ecclesiastic authorities and a rightwing paper by a scam on Satanic > cults and black masses). I don't intend to bear the blame of Gomma's > behaviour: ShaKe did all they could to fall into ridicule. Is it my > fault if I found out that the ShaKe edition of Radio Sermonettes (Via > Radio, 1995) had been censored? They cut out a sentence against Che > Guevara ("...that Rodolfo Valentino of red fascism") which is both in > the original text and in the competing (i.e. better) edition by > Salerno-based Edizioni Ripostes (Immediatismo, 1995). It appears that > ShaKe didn't want to piss off the average leftist reader. When the > matter came to light, ShaKe said that Bey had given them leave to cut > out the passage. If this was true, the author would cut an extremely > sorry figure, having complied with leftist moralism and created a > gaudy discrepancy between the different versions - for abstract > reasons of political time-serving. Is it my fault if those champions > and "experts" of anti-copyright, as well as Bey himself, threatened to > apply to the bourgeois legal system in order to prevent an > "unauthorized" publication of Bey's Pirate Utopias by Ripostes? While > they were attacking Castelvecchi and "Belletati" for having > copyrighted free texts, they threatened Ugo Scoppetta Adelfio, > Ripostes' translator of Pirate Utopias, and Alessandro Tesauro, the > owner of that small publishing house. ShaKe used to say: "WE are in > the 'Movement', THOSE PEOPLE aren't", which was fucking absurd: first > of all, there's no such thing as a "movement" pedigree, nay, there's > no such thing as a "movement"! Secondly, if it's a matter of "street > credibility" (...and it isn't), Adelfio is a notorious anarchic > prankster, friend of Canadian neoists like Gordon W., involved in the > Luther Blissett project. Likewise, if one is really against copyright > and the private property of ideas, he won't claim any "patent". O boy, > I can't help fully exposing this storm in a teacup! > > Summer 1995: Ripostes announced they were going to publish Adelfio's > translation of Radio Sermonettes. According to some informers, ShaKe > got pissed-off and hastily translate the same book. November 1995: > bookstores got the two editions on the same day! Peter Lamborn Wilson > a.k.a. Hakim Bey sent an undated fax to the Salernitan guys: "Dear Ugo > & Romano (et alii), ...thanks for a marvellous job on Immediatism - > It's very weird to me to be taken seriously! - I wish I could read the > apparatus criticus..." I got a copy of this by Ugo. At the beginning > of 1996, Gomma & Co. were told that Adelfio was translating Pirate > Utopias as well. They contacted Wilson and urged him to intervene. > Wilson sent another undated fax: "Dear Ugo...please communicate with > ShaKe in Milan because they are also working on Pirate Utopias!!! Talk > to Goma [sic] or Sid. I'm sorry this confusion arose. Maybe you can > work together! Sid just started work on translating..." I got a copy > of this by ShaKe. (They made a lot of stuff public in order to claim > their exclusive "right"!) Anyway, at that moment, Ugo was aware that > ShaKe had cut out a passage of the book, so he didn't want to > cooperate with any of them. On April 24th, Wilson sent a fax to ShaKe: > "Dear Sid & Goma [sic]...you can tell [Adelfio] - or anyone - that you > are the only authorized translator and publisher of Pirate Utopias in > Italy. Any other translation or edition is unauthorized & I will take > legal steps to prevent its appearance or sale..." Consider that the > text we're talking about is anti-copyright! After ShaKe received this, > they forwarded it to Ripostes attaching a similar threat. At last, > Adelfio sent a fax to Wilson: "Dear Peter... Our intents are not > connected to copyright and we want to stigmatize the disquieting > behaviour of neo-copyrightist paranoid Italian publishers. We don't > want to start a merchandising war. Our intentions are clear, the cure > for our version of Immediatism! demonstrates it. [The omission of your > definition about Che Guevara] shows what they really are: red > fascists, ther usual passe' expression of Italian leftist hegemonical > cultural control disguised as alternative cyberpunk!...For this reason > we did not want to cooperate with them...Are you a sponsor of the > neo-copyright movement?". Wilson never replied. In plain words, Bey > was ready to bring to court people whose only fault was having "taken > him seriously" and put into practice all the 1990's idle talk on > anti-copyright. Accidentally, they had found out Wilson's opportunism > (stalinoid self-censorship - I hadn't gone so far! :)) > > Again, is it my fault if ShaKe didn't realize that A Ruota Libera was > a fake? Those guys used to brag of their direct link with Hakim Bey or > pontificate as if they knew the Internet like the back of their > hands...And yet they didn't notice that "the original English versions > of these texts, which circulated only via E-mail" (as "Belletati" > wrote) simply DON'T EXIST! Why didn't they ask to the supposed author? > Why didn't they search for the texts on Alta Vista, Yahoo and the > likes? No, Sir, they only wanted to slander, calumniate, backbite > Castelvecchi and Adelfio, insult "Belletati"... They FORCED me to con > them, so I contacted Luther Blissett of the Nottingham > Psychogeographical Unit (COM3FASSID@ntu.ac.uk) and proposed him to > play "Belletati". He began to write and/or ring up Gomma, obnoxiously > trying to tranquillize him, then insulting him. Gomma would wail over > that behaviour, that's why everybody kept believing "Belletati" to be > a real person ("Who the fuck is this Belletati? His letters are total > crap! He's gotta be mad!"). Every complaint by Gomma became a further > pound of shit thrown in the fan. > > > > D. The scam exposed > > > ...A little more like Italy where only drivers who sharpen their > skills survive. Jello Biafra, 1987 > > > The previous three sections of the text you are reading are an English > translation of the communique by which I revealed my scam in the > second week of July 1996. I sent it via fax and snail-mail to as many > zines as I could, then put it in digital form on many BBSs and mailing > lists. I sent it to the press as well. Many > "post-cyber-anarcho-situ-hippie-punk-bullshit" clap-trap leftist > poseurs in the "alternative scene" freaked out, many more started > laughing and haven't yet stopped! When the first article appeared on a > national newspaper ("Una beffa a ruota libera", by Loredana Lipperini, > on La Repubblica, 7/20/1996), some said that "the dirty linen of the > movement shouldn't be washed in public" (which sounds like a sort of > Mafia ideal). The most stupid victim of the prank, that is Angelo > Quattrocchi, got totally out of control. Soaked in his lofty anti-tech > dream, he was the only journalist who didn't bump into my communique. > Someone passed on him a copy of Lipperini's article, which he got as > the only gateway to my prank. Instead of taking the piece as a > secondary source, he assumed that was an anti-communist scam by his > colleague, indeed, a vile provocation by "the bourgeois press", maybe > favoured by Luther's verbal incontinence. On Wednesday, July 24th > "Liberazione" published an ultramoronic article by Quattrocchi > [entitled "C'e' Stalin in un testo underground e allora 'La > Repubblica' gode" = "La Repubblica is excited in finding Stalin in an > underground text"]. Geez! Quattrocchi wrote that A Ruota Libera was > not fake and attacked both Lipperini (whom he also mispelt as > "Lipparini") and Blissett for "having craped in his nest" (uh?!)! On > the following day, Lipperini replied and demolished Quattrocchi: > "[...] Everyone approved at the prank on Mondadori. Should everyone > take offence now that Luther has given a blow to counterculture? This > is an unpleasant signal [...]". Two days later, "Il Manifesto" > published a whole-page article on the prank by Alberto Piccinini > [entitled: "La beffa e le miserie di Lee Mortais" = The prank and the > poverty of Lee Mortais], which exposed the whole matter of censorship, > anti-copyright, conformism etc. The article contained this passage: > "[this prank] is a further proof of Luther Blissett's fascinating and > admirable capability of keeping his "fifth columns" [i.e. spies] in > the media". Many "representatives" of the Italian "radical scene" said > that my prank was "beneficial", at least "useful" in order to destroy > "some putrescent mechanicisms of myth-making and literary criticism" > (S. Dazieri). On August 9th, during an interview on the public radio, > Bifo criticized some aspects of the prank but added that "Blissett's > operation is extraordinary". As to ShaKe, they reacted bearing a deep > grudge against "me". Gomma was sighted in a Milan social centre > yelling: "I think I know who had a hand in this! I'll smash their > faces in!". Well, "we" can physically humiliate him at any moment. > Choose your seconds and come tomorrow at 5 o'clock behind the > graveyard. I've chosen (and already used) the weapon: your touchiness. > > > Luther Blissett, August 1996 > > > > > > > -----Syndicate mailinglist----------------------- > Syndicate network for media culture and media art > information and archive: http://anart.no/~syndicate > to post to the Syndicate list: <syndicate@anart.no> > no commercial use of the texts without permission > -----Syndicate mailinglist----------------------- Syndicate network for media culture and media art information and archive: http://anart.no/~syndicate to post to the Syndicate list: <syndicate@anart.no> no commercial use of the texts without permission