Digifesto

Category: Uncategorized

Personality

Maybe what unites the open-* movement is a kind of personality.

Discomfort with authority, desire for autonomy, but a yearning for community nonetheless.

The movement aspires to a society that supports itself and acts collectively without preventing any of its constituents from being their authentic selves.

Hence all the importance of aggregating patterns from individuals and then using those patterns to inform (but not coerce) other individuals. Hence the active politics of forking and merging. Hence the flattened hierarchies. And so on.

Dewey’s Social Ethics

From Elizabeth Andersons’ excellent Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy article on (John) Dewey’s Moral Philosophy. Emphasis mine:

As a progressive liberal, Dewey advocated numerous social reforms such as promoting the education, employment, and enfranchisement of women, social insurance, the progressive income tax, and laws protecting the rights of workers to organize labor unions. However, he stressed the importance of improving methods of moral inquiry over advocating particular moral conclusions, given that the latter are always subject to revision in light of new evidence.

Thus, the main focus of Dewey’s social ethics concerns the institutional arrangements that influence the capacity of people to conduct moral inquiry intelligently. Two social domains are critical for promoting this capacity: schools, and civil society. Both needed to be reconstructed so as to promote experimental intelligence and wider sympathies. Dewey wrote numerous works on education, and established the famous Laboratory School at the University of Chicago to implement and test his educational theories. He was also a leading advocate of the comprehensive high school, as opposed to separate vocational and college prepatory schools. This was to promote the social integration of different economic classes, a prerequisite to enlarging their mutual understanding and sympathies. Civil society, too, needed to be reconstructed along more democratic lines. This involved not just expanding the franchise, but improving the means of communication among citizens and between citizens and experts, so that public opinion could be better informed by the experiences and problems of citizens from different walks of life, and by scientific discoveries (PP). Dewey regarded democracy as the social embodiment of experimental intelligence informed by sympathy and respect for the other members of society (DE 3, 89–94). Unlike dictatorial and oligarchic societies, democratic ones institutionalize feedback mechanisms (free speech) for informing officeholders of the consequences for all of the policies they adopt, and for sanctioning them (periodic elections) if they do not respond accordingly.

Dewey’s moral epistemology thus leads naturally to his political philosophy. The reconstruction of moral theory is accomplished by replacing fixed moral rules and ends with an experimental method that treats norms for valuing as hypotheses to be tested in practice, in light of their widest consequences for everyone. To implement this method requires institutions that facilitate three things: (1) habits of critical, experimental inquiry; (2) widespread communication of the consequences of instituting norms, and (3) extensive sympathy, so that the consequences of norms for everyone are treated seriously in appraising them and imagining and adopting alternatives. The main institutions needed to facilitate these things are progressive schools and a democratic civil society. Experimentalism in ethics leads to a democratic political philosophy.

My suspicion is that John Dewey’s ethics would provide a substantive philosophical foundation for the latest swathe of open government and “Gov 2.0” initiatives, if anyone bothered looking for one.

Going Global

I am attending the Global Earthquake Model annual outreach meeting this week. The ambition of the project–a global computational engine for earthquake hazard, risk, and economic impact–is awe-inspiring. The people attempting it are extraordinarily daring.

One anecdote from this morning struck me as a potent illustration of why and how GEM will is so important. Ross Stein admitted candidly that currently, seismology is “the best racket in town,” because on a regional level there is no way to test their scientific predictions. A typical result might ascribe a 30% chance of an earthquake striking an area within a fifty year period. By the time the data has been collected, the scientist has retired.

Not so, argues Stein, with a global earthquake model. A model associating strain on fault lines (for example) with seismic hazards that has global scope will be tested whenever and wherever an earthquake strikes. So a global model opens up the scientific inquiry on top of allowing for the dissemination of results.

This is just one effect of one facet of GEM’s anticipated work. I’m already impressed.

Digifesto.com

I finally got the domain name on this sucker mapped properly.

But I’ve never been able to figure out the appropriate top level domain for this blog.

COM — It’s not really commercial.
ORG — I’m not an organization
NET — My favorite, but actually wildly inappropriate

INFO, ME, NAME are all bogus. What’s the solution?

Paul Ramsey’s FOSS4G Keynote on Open Source Business

Paul Ramsey did an excellent keynote at FOSS4G on the subject of the profitability of open source software. In it, he points out that the relevant produced unit of the software market is the “Whole Product”–a package that includes both software and services. He goes on to explain the shift in thought from “Buy Software, Get Services Extra,” to “Buy Services, Get Software Extra,” and the inevitable rise of open source as a result. Hilariously.

Yes Pecan! and Common Cause

Just got an email from one of my favorite advocacy organizations, Common Cause. Here’s the news:

For the month of January, Ben & Jerry’s is renaming its butter pecan ice cream flavor to “Yes Pecan!” and donating a portion of the proceeds from scoop shop sales of the new flavor to the Common Cause Education Fund!

We’re honored to be working with Ben & Jerry’s to celebrate the spirit of activism and the newfound optimism that government can work for the common good.

Common Cause, in case you aren’t familiar with it, is a great organization which stands for participatory politics, fair elections, and open and ethical government, and responsive media.

Ben & Jerry’s, in case you aren’t familiar with it, is a great organization that stands for delicious ice cream.

Nothing but good can come out of this alliance.

Self referential metablogging about a horse

I recently had an IRC chat with friend and colleague David Winslow. It is of zero consequence, but provides a convenient way of breaking my own ice.

[15:25] <sbenthall> you made a post in november which egregiously demonstrates [your] bash fu.
[15:25] <sbenthall> I should totally grab stuff from the #opengeo channel and use it for material
[15:26] <dwins> i like posting snippets from irc conversations
[15:26] <dwins> they don’t lose much in the translation if you choose carefully
[15:26] <sbenthall> yeah.
[15:26] <sbenthall> i keep thinking I should start blogging again
[15:27] <sbenthall> but for some reason fell off that horse
[15:27] <sbenthall> the blogging horse

Perhaps I can remount this thing.

OBEY

Apple Obey BlackApple Obey White

Apple Obey WhiteApple Obey Black

idea by kyle moore

Public vs. grassroots campaign financing (part 2)

If grassroots funding does not really solve the problem of campaign finance, then what other option is there?

Public campaign financing–where the state provides money for candidates to run–is the more traditional solution. If the state provides funding to qualified candidates irrespective of their political positions, then that means that only voter preferences will determine who will win office.

That’s how it works in theory, at least. In practice, there are several problems with the current public campaign financing systems, and especially our current presidential system.

One of those problems is qualification. Obviously, you can’t just give public campaign funding to everybody. But if the conditions of qualification reiterate the conditions for financing a private campaign, then public funding doesn’t help anybody. Unfortunately, that’s exactly what happens with the current presidential funding laws:

At the federal level, public funding is limited to subsidies for presidential candidates. To receive subsidies in the primary, candidates must qualify by privately raising $5000 each in at least 20 states. For qualified candidates, the government provides a dollar for dollar “match” from the government for each contribution to the campaign, up to a limit of $250 per contribution. In return, the candidate agrees to limit his or her spending according to a statutory formula.

This is lame. Contrast it with the Clean Elections financing system used in Maine, Arizona, and elsewhere. In this system, candidates qualify by getting some number of seed donations (commonly limited to $5) that demonstrate popular support. In systems like these, qualification correlates to voters, not dollars.

The meetup

It’s name still needs a lot of work, but tonight’s meeting of The New York Web 2.0 for Grassroots Causes (Web4Roots) meetup was a huge success.

To be honest, I’ve had some doubts about the effectiveness of the group in the past. But no longer. Tonight’s event focused on the web site and web presence of the NYCLU, represented at the meetup by Jen Carnig, its Communications Director. That concrete task kept a room full of miscellaneous programmers, activists, and pundits grounded in actionable ideas for the entire evening.

As a bonus, I met Lou Klepner, of GatewaytoGov.org.. A fledgling non-profit, they have an ambitious mission:

Gateway to Gov’s mission is to create an electronic public square that promotes civic engagement by enhancing communication between constituents and their elected officials.

Lou seems dedicated, and the cause is certainly worthy. But I worry that he may be biting off too much to chew. If I have learned anything in my (brief!) experience in this world, it is that it pays to start small. A realized service that pulled off the verified users aspect of their mission alone, and even in one state or city alone, would go farther than any amount of Vision. And the best part is…it’s in reach!