Patrice Riemens on 12 Jan 2001 16:23:48 -0000 |
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[Nettime-bold] The Corpse that Kicked: The Digital City Seven Years Later |
The Corpse that Kicked. The Digital City Seven Years Later. In three days time, Amsterdam' s famous Digital City will have been exactly seven years in existence. Usually, this anniversary is the occasion of a festive gathering (a regrettable infestations of 'suits' in recent years notwithstanding) in the august and 'grand canal' located Felix Meritis (of 1789) Academy premises, but up to now, invitations have not yet been forthcoming. But then the Digital City has been gravely under the weather of late, and rumours over its impending demise have gathered momentum. Its afflictions, indeed, were not benign. What had been a living monument of a networked community in construction, a laboratory of social experiments in the digital age, had slowly, and in recent times, frighteningly fast, fallen on hard times. The commercialisation of the Net, the explosion of the number of people and organisations on-line, but also the relentless advances in technology, bandwidth, and application ranges had not been kind to what had once begun as a temporary experiment to familiarise with the opportunities of communication offered by the then still fledgling (public) Internet. Plagued by various problems and predicaments (which have been frequently discussed in Nettime), and lured by the opportunities and challenges the 'new economy' seemed to offer, the DDS management decided to go for an all-out commercialisation (and a management buy-out) in the beginning of 2000. This entailed the transformation of the Digital City from a foundation into a registered company, with the goal to attract some serious investment from the market place. Alas, as the year went by the conjuncture turned ever more sour for e-business, and attempts to market the DDS as a whole failed. The new owners then resorted, and where more successful at selling the DDS - which had been partitioned in four separate companies - in bits and pieces. The first to go was DDS-Ventures, which consisted of a sole, education related project, and it went to a specialised publisher. Then, the hosting part (DDS-Services) was sold to Energis (http://www.energis.co.uk/) with the staff going there. This left DDS holding with not much more than a run-of the mill web-design bureau (DDS-Projects), plus the 'community' of old, now renamed DDS-City Ltd, and its 80.000 (or 145.000, depending on the figures) inhabitants with their free mailboxes, homepages, and various activities. This 'spending department' could only become an increasingly hopeless burden on the cash-strapped remainder of the DDS holding, and its management had already curtailed the editorial activities by December, thus folding up as a content provider. In a subsequent interview with a Dutch computer magazine, DDS (self-appointed) director and co-owner Joost Flint bluntly stated that 'tough decisions' would have to be taken by the end of the month, and that this might mean 'pulling the plug' on the DDS as we knew it. My premise was then that the traditional DDS red letter day would be coloured black, and that the anniversary would turn into a burial. But now it seems that news about the death our beloved Digital City have been greatly exaggerated! In December already, one of its more active inhabitants, Reinder Rustema had started an initiative to self-rescue the DDS by its own users in the Dutch e-zine Smallzine. (http://www.smallzine.nl/ & goto DDS forum). Over the past few days, the momentum has gathered tremendously, with many inhabitants, but also former (and we may presume, disgruntled) employees of DDS joining the fray. A mailing list has been established (contact [email protected]) and plans are a foot to set up a foundation (again! ;-), attract support, fish for subsidies, and get the community back on the rails. Will a 'refounded' DDS make digital history again, this time in the form of a 'netizen take-over'? The prospects have never looked so good. I am, to quote cypherpunk Lucky Green, putting my money where my mouth is, and I thereby pledge CHF 1000.- (One Thousand Swiss Francs) towards the realisation of this initiative. I enjoin the members of the nettime community to engage also and to express their support in the manner they think appropriate. Please correspond with Reinder Rustema, [email protected] or myself, [email protected] _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list [email protected] http://www.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold