hi everyone, i'm dropping in again for a moment (i haven't been able to keep up with things because i'm very busy with this: http://www.magdalenamuenchen.de - if any of you will be in or near munich during february, march & april next year, please check out the programme & come along to something! & please pass on to your theatre/performance/live-art friends & networks)
i had a big backlog of netbehaviour emails & have tried to read most of it, but for sure i've missed many nuances in the discussion. for what it's worth, here are some thoughts & comments: from ruth's summary email on 25.11.: > Thor Karlsson presents Authenteq – a blockchain based identity > platform that is eminently sensible and useful in a “trustless” world > of people who want to rent things from others that they don't know, > and move around freely, free of intermediaries. This rings many alarm > bells for a room of artists, historians, sociologists and philosophers > who value the ability to slip between many identities. the idea of a blockchain based identity platform is pretty abhorrent to me. as well as the social implications which are very problematic, fluidity of identity is fundamental to theatre & to cyberformance. it's built in to the design of UpStage - unlike most other platforms, one can be completely anonymous & change identity at will. over 14 years we have never had a problem with this, i think because the whole context is playful, deliberate artiface, the shared suspension of disbelief that is inherent to theatre. authenticity of action rather than individual personal authenticity is what counts. why are we accepting that the world is "trustless"? sure some people are untrustworthy, but this concept of trustlessness seems to have suddenly taken hold as an undeniable fact. if it is so, then how can we respond to that? is it possible to restore some degree of trust in the world? however naive it may be, i want to strive for that. > the logic of war and defence at the heart of cryptocultures yes - this is something that needs to be more discussed from rob's response to ruth: > Or it may just be the case that high finance appropriates folk fintech > as high culture appropriates folk culture, absolutely agree from rob's responses to discussion about why bitcoin uses so much energy: > It is not a waste of electricity, it is the cost of securing the network. but for whom? & at what cost to the planet, to the people, animals & plants who derive absolutely no benefit from bitcoin? > So once there are no more block rewards for mining, fees will still > exist and will become more important. so, it's all about a few people (cryptocurrency miners) making as much money as possible; aren't miners are simply replacing the so-called trustless third parties (banks, governments) that bitcoin is supposed to do away with? re faircoin vs. decred: i didn't see anything about energy efficiency on the decred website (maybe i missed it) & i find the whole governance thing overwhelming. who has the time to read, understand & get involved with this? my guess is, the same people who are developing the technology. so even if its governance mission intends to be more cooperative, it still comes down to a pretty small & unrepresentative group of people. faircoin's reliance on third parties seems more realistic - we exist in communities where we need to interact on a daily basis with all kinds of third parties. sure, they can let us down, but this is how it's always been. even bitcoin, decred & all the rest of them must rely on third party actors (browser applications, for example). is being completely free of third parties a realistic or even useful goal to have? h : ) -- helen varley jamieson [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> http://www.creative-catalyst.com http://www.upstage.org.nz /*Magdalena München Saison 2018 <http://www.magdalenamuenchen.de>*/ 2 Februar - 28 April 2018 *Frauen - Theater - Performance*
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