User:Cristinac/ThesisQ

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F: Yes, we were talking about flamingos. The point is that the man who wrote Alice was thinking about the same things that we are. And he amused himself with little Alice by imagining a game of croquet that would be all muddle, just absolute muddle. So he said they should use flamingos as mallets because the flamingos would bend their necks so the player wouldn't know even whether his mallet would hit the ball or how it would hit the ball.

D: Anyhow the ball might walk away of its own accord because it was a hedgehog.

F: That's right. So that it's all so muddled that nobody can tell at all what's going to happen.

D: And the hoops walked around, too, because they were soldiers.

F: That ' s right—everything could move and nobody could tell how it would move.

D: Did everything have to be alive so as to make a complete muddle?

F: No—he could have made it a muddle by . . . no, I suppose you're right. That's interesting. Yes, it had to be that way. Wait a minute. It's curious but you're right. Because if he'd muddled things any other way, the players could have learned how to deal with the muddling details. I mean, suppose the croquet lawn was bumpy, or the balls were a funny shape, or the heads of the mallets just wobbly instead of being alive, then the people could still learn and the game would only be more difficult—it wouldn't be impossible. But once you bring live things into it, it becomes impossible. I wouldn't have expected that.

-Why do things have outlines? - Gregory Bateson


Research Questions:

How does delegating the labour of policing to bots change the fabric of a community?

Aims and objectives of the research:

The research aims to provide an understanding into how open communities organise themselves and establish a framework in which to function. At what point do the boundaries of an open system become visible? What are the politics of the boundary?

Research Context:

Starting with Wikipedia as an example of a large scale effort of self organisation, the essay will be looking at the means through which the rules of an open community are maintained and how the role of the guardian is distributed among its members. Wikipedia operates under strict rules, listed within its five pillars: “Wikipedia is an online encyclopedia”, “Wikipedia is written from a neutral point of view”, “Wikipedia is free content that anyone can edit, use, modify, and distribute”, “Editors should interact with each other in a respectful and civil manner” and “Wikipedia does not have firm rules.”


Now a ubiquitous reference point and popular metaphor for democracy, Wikipedia has undergone many changes in its approach to self regulation. Notably, it is currently employing bots in its service to complete small organisational tasks of broad reach.


One of the case studies will be ClueBot NG, an anti-vandalism bot that was created specifically for Wikipedia by users Cobi and Crispy1989. Being extremely effective, the bot has quickly gathered a following on Wikipedia, with users leaving plenty of praise on the bot's user page. I will argue in that the perceived neutrality of the bot gives it a status of superuser gifted with the power of establishing the inside and the outside of Wikipedia.

Proposed structure:

Significance:

Bibliography:

  • States of Exception - Giorgio Agamben
  • The human use of human beings - Norbert Wiener
  • The Network Society - Jan van Dijk
  • Crypto Anarchy, Cyberstates and Pirate Utopias - Peter Ludlow
  • The Culture of Connectivity - Jose van Dijck

Problematics:

    • parasitism - > establishing authority through removal of noise
    • mechanisms of exclusion: ratio system versus patrolling bots. 1:1 ->
    • state of exception: WP and KG are platforms that operate outside of the economic system, KG outside of legal system
    • bureaucratic tendencies
    • anthropomorphism of non-human agents