Matthew Fuller on Fri, 6 Mar 1998 22:09:48 +0100 (MET) |
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<nettime> Nettime Moderation |
Note on Moderation of Nettime By Matthew Fuller and Geert Lovink The sequence of recent posts regarding Kosovo went like this: 1. one post which was off-topic 2. other posts respond to the original post contextualising it, linking to web resources for further analysis, arguments about the veracity of information available on the web, etc. 3. posts made calling for regulation of content to be stricter. 4. the discussion moved on. 5. more information on actual situation became apparent There are four layers of moderation on the list. The first is the delete key on everyone's keyboard. The second is the decision of list-members to make a post or not in relationship to the flow of posts. The third is posts to the list and privately to individuals calling for a thread to change or stop. The fourth is deletion at source by the moderator. This list exists only as it is used. The negotiation of what is and what is not suitable for inclusion on the list has been acheived by the list itself in this case. Hopefully it works more effectively because it doesn't give all power to the decision making of the moderator which can never be informed as to the suitability of all messages. This is perhaps a case in point. Matthew forwarded the initial message to the list. He hadn't got much of an idea what it was about - certainly not enough to make a decision to delete it. Not wanting to base a decision on ignorance, he based it on a generalised -rather than specific - trust that people would not overly abuse the list. We believe that adopting this approach pays off because list-members who are more informed - or at least more engaged - with the situation were able to provide a cluster of texts which provided a context to the initial post, and pointers outwards. Now as the tolerance limit of other list-members is - also quiet rightly - expressed, things begin to move on. We do not want to continue to post these kind of nationalist messages. One could call this censorship. But there are plenty of free and open places on the Net where this type of provocations can be posted... Is the Kosovo just a 'regional case'? We do not think so. Since the beginning of the war in Former Yugoslavia (and the Gulfwar) in 1991 more and more people are becoming aware of the role that both state-owned and global players like CNN are playing in the spread of propaganda. A lot of small, so-called 'independant media' are trying to come up other images and voices and the role of media activists and the Internet is on the rise. Famous examples are the computer network Zamir and B'92s opennet.org, based in Belgrade. In the case of Kosovo many of us have been supporting the weekly, now daily magazine 'Koha'. For us there is a direct link between the propaganda of Milosovic (since 1987!), the installment of marshall law in Kosovo (in 1989), the long years of peacefull resistance of the Albanian population, the economic crisis in Serbia and the fight for independant media and the Internet in special. Not that the conflict in Kosovo is rapidly expanding, it is important to emphasize the media and propaganda aspect. In order to do this, some basic knowledge (and discussion) on the background of this struggle is sometimes neccerary. That's why it is usefull to broaden the defintion of 'media activism' and 'net criticism' a little bit beyond the technological, cultural and artistic levels. --- # distributed via nettime-l : no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a closed moderated mailinglist for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: [email protected] and "info nettime" in the msg body # URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: [email protected]