Skip to content
New issue

Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.

By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.

Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account

ParisKiwi #34

Closed
mattbk opened this issue Aug 11, 2015 · 10 comments
Closed

ParisKiwi #34

mattbk opened this issue Aug 11, 2015 · 10 comments

Comments

@mattbk
Copy link
Contributor

mattbk commented Aug 11, 2015

https://gratipay.com/pariskiwi/

@chadwhitacre
Copy link
Contributor

Not sure this one's a winner. Too much "anti-", especially anti-capitalist. Gratipay is not anti-capitalist. We're actually actively trying to work within the existing global financial system (aka, capitalism).

@mattbk
Copy link
Contributor Author

mattbk commented Aug 13, 2015

In terms of these criteria, these guys don't have a clear work-first plan--at least not linked on the application.

@mattbk
Copy link
Contributor Author

mattbk commented Aug 14, 2015

The link to culture-jamming at http://inside.gratipay.com/big-picture/brand/ might invite anti-capitalists:

We value honesty. We try to be honest with ourselves, and we welcome critique and culture-jamming of Gratipay by others.

(also, as noted elsewhere, my use of "work-first" is probably not the best.)

chadwhitacre added a commit to gratipay/inside.gratipay.com that referenced this issue Aug 26, 2015
This particular form of critique is too tied to anti-capitalism, as
@mattbk points out at:

gratipay/project-review#34 (comment)

We are not anti-capitalist.
@chadwhitacre
Copy link
Contributor

@mattbk Could you email the owner of this account to bring them into this conversation?

@mattbk
Copy link
Contributor Author

mattbk commented Aug 28, 2015

Done.

@chadwhitacre
Copy link
Contributor

Thanks. :-)

@smonff
Copy link

smonff commented Aug 28, 2015

Thanks guys for reviewing our team membership.

Maybe my team membership application was a bit clumsy or not so serious.

I could maybe explain a bit about the anti-* list we provide on our wiki: 2 years ago, some people starts to use our wiki to promote activities that didn't match with our philosophy. We provide this website to anybody willing to share informations about the Paris DIY musical scene, for free, without tracking anybody or selling data, and outside of the classical social networks. Our thinking about people (punks) who would define themselves as anti-capitalist but would extensively use Facebook or MySpace for their promotion was that it didn't make sense. Even Bandcamp is non-acceptable sometimes, even if it is largely used by punk/alternative bands. Maybe it can be considered as as childish thinking, but we are a bit smarter that we look. For more, you can read what we have to say about this (FR).

So we built this website using a vanilla Wikimedia. It is totally open to anybody. We almost moderate anything. Sometimes, when people promote very commercial stuff, or sexist stuff, we explain them that it is maybe not the better place for this and if really not acceptable, we delete the content. At some point, we experimented quite a lot of these kind of problems and decided to provide this anti-* list, just to clearly say what we don't want here. These people were acting like if they posted cats on a website dedicated on dogs.

We don't block or erase people who link to Facebook or youtube or Bandcamp... People are free to do what they want. We are not so dumb. And we use a commercial hosting service and we drink commercial beer.

I don't think listing these anti items was very smart: it is always more easy to say what you are against than what you are for. I agree with that.

Anyway here is a translation of what we stand up for :

  • creating a space for alternative / DIY practices around music and artistic stuff in Paris
  • doing this in a participative way with a decentralized editing politic
  • being autonomous and build our own communication tool (did you see as we are good at communicating :-D)
  • creating sense
  • being non-profit

So in the same time, this is logical :

  • we are not a website that will make money with it's activity
  • we don't allow people to have a dominative, violent, sexist, homophobic, racist, ******* (this list could be longer) behavior while posting
  • don't allow projects that don't create a form of alternative (I agree it doesn't mean much but reading our website during two minutes makes it crystal clear if you can understand french)

I started to use Gratipay to support Riseup and some people of the Perl programing language community. At some point I think it was suitable for our project, maybe because of the values that you described as yours: gratitude, generosity, love, honesty, critique, kindness, collaboration and openness to one another. If I made a mistake we will find another way to retrieve money. You should understand that I used Gratipay because I identify it as an interesting alternative to other (maybe it was a mistake).

About the work-first plan and open work, here is how it is: you can find on http://pariskiwi.org a huge list of collectives, bands, labels. All these people work a lot, by crafting records, organize concerts, playing music, etc., together or not. For free, just because they like what they do. At some point, we built this to help all these people to coordinate themselves and help making visible and archiving a moving and sometimes ephemeral culture. It looks that after three years, it helps a bit and some people thanks us for maintaining this concert calendar.

Thank you for reading and sorry for having being so long. At least it helps me to clarify our will :-D

@chadwhitacre
Copy link
Contributor

@smonff Thanks for the thoughtful post! :-)

I'm reading through materials below the link you've shared, as well as the English Wikipedia article on punk subculture:

The punk subculture, which centres on punk rock music, includes a diverse array of ideologies, fashions and forms of expression, including visual art, dance, literature and film. The subculture is largely characterized by anti-establishment views and the promotion of individual freedom.

It's an interesting question, whether punk clashes too strongly with the Gratipay brand! I'm not sure yet, I have to observe and think about this more. In general, it seems fair to place Paris Kiwi within the punk subculture, yes?

[W]e drink commercial beer.

Hah! Cheers! :D 🍻

@smonff
Copy link

smonff commented Sep 4, 2015

ParisKiwi can be placed within the Punk subculture, but it is a bit restrictive. As I was explaining it in my previous message, these people much more describe themselves as belonging to the DIY subculture - a 70's punk movement branch - that includes building fanzines, records, clothes, beer, vegetables or websites like ours and more... As you may know it, today, this movement is extremely diluted everywhere. All the movement around hackerspaces, 3D printing and the instructables.com website are good examples, most of these people are not punks though. I am not an historian, but maybe even the free software movement could have some shared roots with DIY.

@chadwhitacre
Copy link
Contributor

Well, DIY definitely belongs on Gratipay. We love hackerspaces and makers and DIYers! :-)

Thanks for working through this with us, @smonff. Welcome aboard Gratipay 2.0! 💃 🍻

Sign up for free to join this conversation on GitHub. Already have an account? Sign in to comment
Labels
None yet
Projects
None yet
Development

No branches or pull requests

3 participants