💾 Archived View for rawtext.club › social_contract.gmi captured on 2020-10-31 at 01:27:19. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content

View Raw

More Information

⬅️ Previous capture (2020-09-24)

➡️ Next capture (2021-11-30)

-=-=-=-=-=-=-

_ _ _ _

_ _ __ ___ __ _| |_ _____ _| |_ __| |_ _| |__

| '_/ _` \ V V / _/ -_) \ / _|_/ _| | || | '_ \

|_| \__,_|\_/\_/ \__\___/_\_\\__(_)__|_|\_,_|_.__/

--

rawtext.club social contract

The rawtext.club is a place to socialize with others, learn from them, and

tinker with Linux and command line technology.

But underlying this is a commitment to a free, open, decentralized internet and

its role in pursuing a socially and environmentally sustainable future.

In the early days of the public internet, networked digital communication was

often described as a great equalizing tool that would support public education

and awareness, and that would empower popular engagement for the betterment of

society. But since then, the internet has veered dangerously in the opposite

direction. Now, the internet divides people, misinforms them, monitors them,

and leaves them pliant to the groups that control large, centralizing portions

of the network. This centralization gives a privileged few the power to pursue

their interests by manipulating and exploiting everyone else.

This is the same struggle that has existed throughout the history of society,

the abuse of power by a few at the expense of the many.

People in democratic countries might be saying, "but don't we have a government

and legal system to protect us?". In theory yes - but as history shows, these

legal systems are often distorted to encourage those abuses. The corporations

and wealthy individuals responsible are either good friends with governments,

or hard at work "convincing" them. They are funding intense lobbying efforts to

influence politicians, and entire media campaigns to erase public awareness of

their work (or, similarly, to manufacture consent). The end result is that

public service and regulations are being systematically dismantled and

neutralized as an obstacle to reckless, short-sighted profiteering. The

institutions that are nominally for the people, by the people, and designed to

protect the people, turn out to be none of those, and we are being broken apart

into a bickering sea of lonely individuals.

Why do the politically and economically powerful want to atomize society

and prevent people from organizing around public interests? Because no matter

how much money or power they have, they know that there is nothing more

powerful than people working together. And if people worked together, with

clarity of awareness and unhindered access to information, they would put the

interests of the people above the obscenely disproportionate profits of the

few [1].

As long as the internet is centralized around a few filtered sources like

Facebook or CNN or FoxNews, this will never happen. In fact, networks like

those act to trivialize and undermine any attempts to organize and genuinely

inform.

Luckily the internet in many countries is still not technically centralized--

it is peoples' use of the internet that is centralized. So one of the easiest

things you can do to support the decentralized internet is simply to use it,

and talk about it, and help build and refine tools for it. And raise awareness

about the negative effects of large, corporate-owned social and news media

services.

Is the road ahead easy? Nope. But the power is there for the taking. We need to

take back the internet, and use it to support each other in establishing (or

rebuilding) the institutions and organizations that support life for everyone

now, and that allow us to build toward a better, more sustainable life in the

future. That is, people can take back the hijacked institutions of democracy

and use them against the broken system, thereby creating true and interest-free

self-organization.

If this sounds alarmist, that's because we are facing a dire situation. The

decisions our societies make now, for example about climate change, will

influence whether or not future generations face catastrophic consequences. And

take this interview with Noam Chomsky[2] for further description about how the

economic and political elite use mass media to downplay the threat.

With this context in mind, rawtext.club supports building and learning about

the tools, resources, and people that make a non-commercial, decentralized

internet possible, particularly focusing on Linux technology and federation

among Linux based systems. rawtext.club is just one small node in a sea of

decentralized internet projects, but some of its big goals are to raise

awareness about the message above, to empower people through education about

internet technology, and to make connections between people supporting these

goals.

A little more tangibly, this has implications for members with accounts on

rawtext.club:

will with it whenever you want.

this is if strong evidence suggests a user is violating policies toward an

outcome that is system-destructive.

others. the only exception to this would be a legal order.

is that you interact with others in a positive, supportive manner. we all lose

when we don't work together.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------

https://mkorostoff.github.io/1-pixel-wealth/

https://www.nationalobserver.com/2019/02/12/features/noam-chomsky-couple-generations-organized-human-society-may-not-survive-has-be

(web links. sorry.)