Hi Ana,

Thanks for the link to 'Doctress Neutopia', very interesting...

Yes - I remember on the (once brilliant) Syndicate list years ago, where 
Netochka Nezvanova, N.N., antiorp, integer dominated, causing all kinds 
of upset...

"The net entity nn (Netochka Nezvanova, integer, antiorp, etc.), a
pseudonym used by an international group of artists and programmers in
their extensive and aggressive mailing list-based online-performances and
for other art projects, had been subscribed to the Syndicate list in 1997.
It was, as the first of less than a handful of people ever, unsubscribed
against its will because it was spamming the list so heavily that all
meaningful communication was blocked. In January 2001, nn sent an e-mail
asking to again be subscribed to the Syndicate mailing list. (What nn
never bothered to realise was that subscription to the list had always
been open so that, at any point, it could have subscribed itself - we have
always wondered why Majordomo is such a blind spot in this technophile
entity's arsenal.) After getting assurances from nn that she was not out
to misuse the list, we subscribed it to the Syndicate list.

Naively, as we had to realise. nn went from one or two messages every day
in February to an average of three to five message in April and up to
eight and ten messages per day in May and June - and that on a list which
had a regular daily traffic of three to five messages a day. The
distributed nature of the nn collective makes it possible for them to keep
posting 24 hours a day - great for promoting your online presence,
irritating for people who have a less frantic life rhythm. nn's messages
are always cryptic, sometimes amusing, often tediously repetitive in their
quirky rhetorics and style, and generally irritating for the majority of
people. Its activity on the Syndicate - like on many other lists it has
used and terrorised - soon came to look like a hijack. But the sheer mass
of traffic nn was generating, the sheer amount of nn's presence, was
overwhelming. Perhaps this phenomenon could be compared to SMEGL, short
for super mental grid lock, a term that was developed to describe traffic
jam situations in NYC back in the eighties (or was this term coined in
Berlin-Kreuzberg's famous Fischbuero? Who knows, the boundaries get
blurred...).

In the spring of 2001, nn's and other people's activities who use open,
unmoderated mailing lists for promulgating their self-promotional e-mails,
triggered discussions about 'spam art', on Syndicate as well as on other
lists. Actually, given the extreme openness and vulnerability of a
structure like the Syndicate it remains quite astonishing that this
structure survived for such a long time. What happened in the course of
2000/2001 (not only to Syndicate, but also to several other mailing lists)
was that the openness of these lists, i.e. the fact that they were
unmoderated, was massively abused, and, finally, destroyed, by relentless
'creative' spamming. One of the basic principles of the Internet - its
openness - suddenly seemed to become a mere tool for attacking this very
principle. 'Netiquette' did not seem to be of much value anymore and was
sacrificed for the egotistical self-expression of (distributed) artist
egos. The irony of this process is that, like any good parasite, this
artistic practice depends on the existence of lively online communities:
it not only bites, but kills the hand that feeds it. - These parasite
nomads will find new hosts, no doubt, but they have over the past year
helped to erode the social fabric of the wider net cultural population so
much that communities have to protect themselves from attacks and hijacks
more aggressively than before. Their adolescent carelessness is partly
responsible for the withering of the romantic utopia of a completely open,
sociable online environment. However educational that may be, we despise
the deliberation with which these people act.

nn got unsubscribed from the Syndicate without warning on a day when there
had been nothing but ten messages from her. After some days of silence and
sighs of relief, angry protests by nn came through. On the list,
accusations of censorship and/or dictatorship were made. A small but noisy
faction denounced unsubscribing nn as an act against the freedom of
speech. They called the administrators fascists, murderers, and
'threatened' to report the case to 'Index on Censorship'. While some other
list members welcomed the departure of nn on and off the list and the
admin team again and again explained their move, the ludicrous allegations
and vociferous insults continued.

The real shock for us was that the majority of list subscribers did not
participate in the discussion and thus silently seemed to accept what was
going on. It was personally hurtful not to receive more support against
the insults raised against us, but more frustrating was the indifference
that made the whole process possible. Within few days, the alienation from
the atmosphere on the list was so great that we admitted defeat,
re-subscribed nn and began to withdraw from the Syndicate. The list was
moved to a different server and is now administered by other people at
anart.no/~syndicate. We wanted to avoid further verbiage and conflict and
therefore gave up the name, but we insist that from our perspective the
Syndicate project that was founded in 1996 ended in August 2001. What
remains under its name is a zombie kept alive by misconceptions about what
the Syndicate really was. Maybe we should have stopped the project
altogether in the summer?

Filtering has, in a way, done us in. Before there were effective e-mail
clients that could filter out lists and other mail communication,
everybody on the list got everything more or less instantly, which also
meant a higher level of social awareness and social control of what goes
on on the list. Today, many people filter the lists they subscribe to and
only look at the postings at irregular intervals - some mailboxes don't
get opened for months. Like this, people consume the list passively and do
not even notice a fiasco like the one that we experienced on the Syndicate
list in the summer. I guess that some people who remain subscribed to the
Syndicate list still have not noticed that anything has changed. For a
social community, that kind of behaviour - automated deferance - can be
fatal."

<nettime> Rise and Decline of the Syndicate
http://www.nettime.org/Lists-Archives/nettime-l-0111/msg00077.html

wishing all well.

marc



 > Interesting, it reminds me about doctress Neutopia,
 >  
http://projectwhitehouse.wordpress.com/democrats/libby-hubbard-aka-doctress-neutopia-free-the-slaves
 > a selfnamed prophet and the founder of a new religion at the 
beginning of the Net, around 1995.
 > She terrorized many online communities and was expelled from many forums.
 > Ana
 >
 > On Fri, Sep 9, 2011 at 3:25 PM, marc garrett 
<[email protected]> wrote:
 >
 >     Netochka Nezvanova.
 >
 >     One of the most famous and infamous EccentricCharacters in
 >     turn–of–the–21st Century Western artistic NetworkCulture, Netochka
 >     Nezvanova (aka N.N., antiorp, integer, Irena Sabine Czubera) 
remains an
 >     enigma to many. Widely believed to be an IdentityCollective?, 
Netochka
 >     Nezvanova is a PenName named after the title character in [an early
 >     unfinished Fyodor Dostoevsky novel] whose name means "nameless 
nobody"
 >     in Russian. The identity always presents itself as female, though 
it may
 >     not be in reality. Despite the meaning of her moniker, N.N. has 
coveted
 >     attention and recognition like few others on the Internet.
 >
 >     http://meatballwiki.org/wiki/NetochkaNezvanova
 >     _______________________________________________
 >     NetBehaviour mailing list
 >     [email protected]
 >     http://www.netbehaviour.org/mailman/listinfo/netbehaviour
 >
 >
 >
 >
 > --
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 > http://www.scoop.it/t/food-history-and-trivia
 > http://www.scoop.it/t/gender-issues/
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 > http://www.scoop.it/t/urbanism-3-0
 > http://www.scoop.it/t/postcolonial-mind/
 >
 > mobil/cell +4670-3213370
 >
 >
 > "When once you have tasted flight, you will forever walk the earth 
with your eyes turned skyward, for there you have been and there you 
will always long to return.
 > — Leonardo da Vinci
 >
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