Radio Worm: Protocols for an Active Archive (Week 1)

From XPUB & Lens-Based wiki

XPUB + Radio WORM?

XPUB

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XPUB is the Master of Arts in Fine Art and Design: Experimental Publishing of the Piet Zwart Institute. XPUB focuses on the acts of making things public and creating publics in the age of post-digital networks.

XPUB’s interests in publishing are therefore twofold: first, publishing as the inquiry and participation into the technological frameworks, political context and cultural processes through which things are made public; and second, how these are, or can be, used to create publics.


WORM

Worm duck delfshaven.jpg Worm Logo 2009.jpg WORM Mission Statement (2006)

WORM is the ultimate test environment for alternative art production, experimental ways of living and non-academic knowledge development. We are a network organisation at the intersection of (popular) culture and (performing) arts, fueled by an abiding interest in all the inspiring, beautiful, urgent, vital, raw, unruly and / or crazy shit that our fellow human beings come up with. We do not see the chaos that comes with it as a problem; rather we use it as energy for action.

source: current about description from website

Radio WORM

Radio WORM is an online radio platform at the heart of WORM Rotterdam. Our studio hosts audio production of all descriptions, with over 80 resident shows as well as a shifting schedule of one-off events, mini-series and special guests.

Sound art, experimental music, interviews, mixes, informal reporting and in-depth talk-based series all find their place here: we’re always looking for what doesn’t fit anywhere else.

After nearly a decade’s absence, Radio WORM (Mark 2) came into existence during 2019, when Lieuwe Zelle and Lukas Simonis began broadcasting from the WORM office. After COVID struck, a small crew of broadcasters moved to the Pirate Bay booth, where the radio service has since expanded with an ever-growing list of shows.

source: https://radio.worm.org/

Protocols: How Control Exists after Decentralization

At the core of networked computing is the concept of protocol. A computer protocol is a set of recommendations and rules that outline specific technical standards. The protocols that govern much of the Internet are contained in what are called RFC (Request For Comments) documents. Called “the primary documentation of the Internet,” these technical memoranda detail the vast majority of standards and protocols in use on the Internet today.

... Other protocols are developed and maintained by other organizations. For example, many of the protocols used on the World Wide Web (a network within the Internet) are governed by the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C). This international consortium was created in October 1994 to develop common protocols such as Hypertext Markup Language (HTML) and Cascading Style Sheets.

...Protocol is not a new word. Prior to its usage in computing, protocol referred to any type of correct or proper behavior within a specific system of conventions. It is an important concept in the area of social etiquette as well as in the fields of diplomacy and international relations. Etymologically it refers to a fly-leaf glued to the beginning of a document, but in familiar usage the word came to mean any introductory paper summarizing the key points of a diplomatic agreement or treaty.

...Yet instead of governing social or political practices as did their diplomatic predecessors, computer protocols govern how specific technologies are agreed to, adopted, implemented, and ultimately used by people around the world. What was once a question of consideration and sense is now a question of logic and physics.

Source: Introduction, pp 6-7, Protocol: How Control Exists after Decentralization, Alexander Galloway (2004)

Burnstation (2003)

With Burn Station, Platoniq bridges the physical space of the city with the world of media through the exchanging of files and the building of personal contacts. The project aims to promote the right to free culture and to copyright alternatives being developed on the Internet thanks to the influence of open-source/free software on digital information. This open source, copyleft model project is an experiment in practical gift economics and face-to-face network builder.

Platoniq took to the streets to disseminate content with Burn Station, is a mobile copying station and online installation using a four-computer local network:

Come by with some blank CDs and record songs you like from the database. You can also bring your own compositions for others to copy. In this way, people can hear work that would never find a commercial sales channel.

Source: Description at V2, Rotterdam

Active Archives (2006)

Activating the archive?

Manifesto for an Active Archive

Radiomaker.jpg

  • Contrast of monolithic platforms to protocols, (open) formats and standards, and diverse and interchangeable tools.

Circulation

Free Software?

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Using and inspired by existing F/LOSS (free/libre open source software) but also things like Wikis & git where sources and versions are archived and distributed.

In discussions of Free software, you may hear of four freedoms:

  1. The freedom to run the program, for any purpose
  2. The freedom to study how the program works, and adapt it to your needs. Access to the source code is a precondition for this.
  3. The freedom to redistribute copies so you can help your neighbor.
  4. The freedom to improve the program, and release your improvements to the public, so that the whole community benefits. Access to the source code is a precondition for this.

sources: aa presentation (2018), gnu philosophy

Negotiating Ontologies

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source (presentation AA 2014)

Active Archives: 2023?

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La Langues Schaerbeekoise / Spreekt-u Sint-Gillis

An example "spin-off" project from Active Archives that very much worked as a generator for engaging with different publics, practices, and formats.

Forms of engagment / inputs and outputs:

An adapted format for long term archival access

Both websites were based on dynamic database-driven backends (python + django) when actively developed; The sites were later adapted into static HTML (+JS+CSS) for longevity and easier maintenance in a "frozen" state.

Kurenniemi: Spectrum sort

On the data set's ruins

Nicolas Malevé's work is increasingly interested in considering how so-called AI (Artificial Intelligence) tools are in fact complex assemblages of curated materials (audio/visual/textual, aka data sets), labor (caring for and producing this data) and algorithms (based on statistical methods to produce predictive "models" based on the given examples).

Computer vision aims to produce an understanding of digital image’s content and the generation or transformation of images through software. Today, a significant amount of computer vision algorithms rely on techniques of machine learning which require large amounts of data assembled in collections, or named data sets. To build these data sets a large population of precarious workers label and classify photographs around the clock at high speed. For computers to learn how to see, a scale articulates macro and micro dimensions: the millions of images culled from the internet with the few milliseconds given to the workers to perform a task for which they are paid a few cents. This paper engages in details with the production of this scale and the labour it relies on: its elaboration. This elaboration does not only require hands and retinas, it also crucially zes mobilises the photographic apparatus. To understand the specific character of the scale created by computer vision scientists, the paper compares it with a previous enterprise of scaling, Malraux’s Le Musée Imaginaire, where photography was used as a device to undo the boundaries of the museum’s collection and open it to an unlimited access to the world’s visual production. Drawing on Douglas Crimp’s argument that the “musée imaginaire”, a hyperbole of the museum, relied simultaneously on the active role of the photographic apparatus for its existence and on its negation, the paper identifies a similar problem in computer vision’s understanding of photography. The double dismissal of the role played by the workers and the agency of the photographic apparatus in the elaboration ...

source

Protocols?

  • Questioning authorship
  • Interogating ontologies
  • Collectivity on (our) own terms

TOS: Terms of Service

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Logo of TOSDR website

TOS: Tyranny of Structurelessness?

Contrary to what we would like to believe, there is no such thing as a structureless group. Any group of people of whatever nature that comes together for any length of time for any purpose will inevitably structure itself in some fashion. The structure may be flexible; it may vary over time; it may evenly or unevenly distribute tasks, power and resources over the members of the group. But it will be formed regardless of the abilities, personalities, or intentions of the people involved. The very fact that we are individuals, with different talents, predispositions, and backgrounds makes this inevitable. Only if we refused to relate or interact on any basis whatsoever could we approximate structurelessness -- and that is not the nature of a human group.

sources/versions: jofreeman.com, text-to-speech version (youtube)

CC: Creative Commons, or Collective Conditions

REMINDER TO CURRENT AND FUTURE AUTHORS:

The authored work released under the CC4r was never yours to begin with. The CC4r considers authorship to be part of a collective cultural effort and rejects authorship as ownership derived from individual genius. This means to recognize that it is situated in social and historical conditions and that there may be reasons to refrain from release and re-use.

CC4r (constant gitlab)

Ursula Franklin: Real World of Technology

https://archive.org/details/the-real-world-of-technology

Trimester plan

Schedule

See also... (from the XPUB/Media Design archives)

Hörspiel?