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ideology and community
This page considers the wiki community and ethos.
It covers -
introduction
Much of writing about wiki centres on values of 'community',
'free' and digital technology as a transcendent good.
It also features 'us and them' hyperbole and a vehemence
that has led observers such as Charles Arthur to compare
wiki zealots to a cult.
ideology
One Australian enthusiast - self-described as a "part
time cyborg" - thus dismissed criticism of Wikipedia
with the comment that
this
sort of comment only appears in the deranged hyperbole
of displaced anti-blog/anti-wikipedia/anti-new-media
journalists and ex-journalists. really, the ONLY people
who get so worked up about the unspeakable horror that
is wikipedia and blogging in general are encyclopedia
publishers (in the particular case of wikipedia) and
journalists (for blogs in general).
Darren
Wershler-Henry's Free as in Speech and Beer: open source,
peer-to-peer and the economics of online revolution
(Toronto: Financial Times/Prentice Hall Canada 2002) announces
that
people
are coming to the conclusion that the death of intellectual
property as we know it is a good and laudable turn of
events, that software and other types of intellectual
property should be free -- free as in "speech," free
as in "beer," and sometimes free as in speech and beer.
There
is more detail about free at his "politics, poetics
and practice of digital potlatch" site.
A more nuanced analysis is provided in Lawrence Rosen's
Open Source Licensing: Software Freedom and Intellectual
Property Law (New York: Prentice Hall 2004), in Richard
Barbrook's influential 1998 paper
The High-Tech Gift Economy, Steven Weber's 2000
The Political Economy of Open Source Software (PDF)
and Thomas Streeter's paper
That Deep Romantic Chasm: Libertarianism, Neoliberalism
& the Computer Culture.
McKenzie Wark's zany A Hacker Manifesto (Cambridge:
Harvard Uni Press 2004) equates 'hacker' with 'creative'
("researchers and authors, artists and biologists,
chemists and musicians, philosophers and programmers")
in opposition to the evil "vectoralist class"),
proclaiming that
writers,
artists, biotechnologists and software programmers belong
to the 'hacker class' and share a class interest in
openness and freedom
while
the 'vectoralist class' (presumably a cross between Scrooge
McDuck and Michael Eisner) is driven to "contain,
control, dominate and own". Johan Soderberg's 2002
Copyright vs Copyleft: A Marxist Critique paper
similarly announces that "to oppose copyright is
to oppose capitalism" and that
Marxism
is a natural starting point when challenging copyright.
Marx's concept of a 'general intellect', suggesting
that at some point a collective learning process will
surpass physical labour as a productive force, offers
a promising backdrop to understand the accomplishments
of the free software community. Furthermore, the chief
concerns of hacker philosophy, creativity and technological
empowerment, closely correspond to key Marxist concepts
of alienation, the division of labour, deskilling, and
commodification.
Bala
Pillai of APNIC commented in October 2005 that
I
find Wikipedia, and more precisely the open self-correcting
flowing foundation that Wikipedia sits upon so valuable,
that I am using its newest branch, Wikiversity
to create a new convergent meta-university in Asia.
...The university's aim is to recreate and reconnect
the mental soil for quantum inventiveness in Asia.
... The Wikipedia way is better. It is the ultra-adaptive
entrepreneurial and revolutionary edges of society where
sense-making is born and reinvented.
That
is arguably a manifestation of the concurrent infatuation
with digital technology (as a fashion statement and easy
fix for recalcitrant social problems), business start-ups
and libertarianism analysed in Barbrook's classic The
Californian Ideology.
Andy Updegrove proclaimed that
Wikipedia
is democratic at the user level. The Wikipedia is a
snapshot of the collective consciousness of a society
at any point in time. It's as if you could preserve
the brain of that society. It evolves as that reality
evolves. Not only that, but it maps the consciousness
in societies around the world, because they don't translate
- rather, they write new [entries].
wiki wars
Pekka Himanen's The Hacker Ethic & the Spirit of
the Information Age (New York: Random House 2001)
argued that the digital zeitgeist was cooperative and
positive. Observers of wiki project have questioned that
optimism.
Andrew Orlowski commented in 2005 that
Wikipedia's
"cabal" has become notorious for deterring
knowledgable and literate contributors. One who became
weary of the in-fighting, Orthogonal, calls it Wikipedia's
HUAC - the House of Unamerican Activities prominent
in the McCarthy era for hunting down and imprisoning
the ideologically-incorrect.
... right now, the project appears ill-equipped to respond
to the new challenge. Its philosophical approach deters
subjective judgements about quality, and its political
mindset deters outside experts from helping.
Wkipedia
co-founder Larry Sanger, who'd earlier dismissed Orlowski
as a troll, complained
in 2004 that
I
might have continued to participate, were it not for
a certain poisonous social or political atmosphere in
the project.
There are many ways to explain this problem, and I will
start with just one. Far too much credence and respect
accorded to people who in other Internet contexts would
be labelled "trolls." There is a certain mindset
associated with unmoderated Usenet
groups and mailing lists that infects the collectively-managed
Wikipedia project: if you react strongly to trolling,
that reflects poorly on you, not (necessarily) on the
troll. If you attempt to take trolls to task or demand
that something be done about constant disruption by
trollish behavior, the other listmembers will cry "censorship,"
attack you, and even come to the defense of the troll.
This drama has played out thousands of times over the
years on unmoderated Internet groups, and since about
the fall of 2001 on the unmoderated Wikipedia.
... nearly everyone with much expertise but little patience
will avoid editing Wikipedia, because they will--at
least if they are editing articles on articles that
are subject to any sort of controversy--be forced to
defend their edits on article discussion pages against
attacks by nonexperts. This is not perhaps so bad in
itself. But if the expert should have the gall to complain
to the community about the problem, he or she will be
shouted down (at worst) or politely asked to "work
with" persons who have proven themselves to be
unreasonable (at best).
This lack of respect for expertise explains the first
problem, because if the project participants had greater
respect for expertise, they would have long since invited
a board of academics and researchers to manage a culled
version of Wikipedia (one that, I think, would not directly
affect the way the main project is run). But because
project participants have such a horror of the traditional
deference to expertise, this sort of proposal has never
been taken very seriously by most Wikipedians leading
the project now. And so much the worse for Wikipedia
and its reputation.
Wikipedia
has also provided a fine sandpit for the expression of
egos, with observers - often somewhat gleefully - noting
that particular figures have recurrently buffed their
online profiles and airbrushed their peers. Two of the
more publicised incidents are Rogers Cadenhead's comments
on Jimbo Wales and Adam Curry.
There are broader perspectives in Donald Rosenberg's Copyleft
& the Religious Wars of the 21st Century (here)
and Margaret Elliott's Computing in a Virtual Organisational
Culture: Open Software Communities as Occupational Subcultures
(PDF).
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