Apologies for cross posting. 

As a demo for my Network Art course, and in response to this NYT article, I 
manufactured a "fork" of Douglas Davis' World's First Collaborative Sentence in 
the spirit of open source software and artists like Duchamp, Levine, runme.org, 
Mandiberg, et al.
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/06/10/arts/design/whitney-saves-douglas-daviss-first-collaborative-sentence.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0


README for After Douglas Davis
===================================================================================

Statement
--------------

The World’s First Collaborative Sentence was created by Douglas Davis in 1994 
and donated to the Whitney Museum of American Art in 1995. Much like today’s 
blog environments and methods for crowdsourcing knowledge, it allowed users to 
contribute practically any text or markup to a never-ending sentence with no 
limits on speech or length. 

At some point the sentence stopped functioning, and in early 2012 the 
Whitney Museum undertook a "preservation effort"
 to repair and relaunch the project. Measures were taken to during the 
"restoration" to stay true to the original intent of the artist, leaving dead 
links and the original code in place.

During the preservation the curators placed small sections of garbled ASCII 
text from the project on Github with the hope that others would "fork" the data 
and repair the original. However, the Whitney Museum did not succeed in 
realizing that the collaborative culture of the net Davis predicted has 
actually arrived. This is evident not only through sites like Wikipedia, 
Facebook, and Tumblr, but the open source movement, which brings us Linux, 
Apache, and PHP, the very technologies used to view this page, as well as 
others like Firefox, Arduino, Processing, 
and many more
. 

In the spirit of open source software and artists like 
Duchamp, Levine, runme.org and Mandiberg
, on September 5, 2013, I "forked" Douglas Davis' Collaborative Sentence by 
downloading all pages and constructing from scratch the functional code which 
drives the project. I have now placed this work on Github with the following 
changes:

1.  All pages are updated to HTML5 and UTF-8 character encoding
2.  The functional code was rewritten from scratch including a script to remove 
malicious code
3.  The addition of this statement

I was originally disappointed the Whitney Museum didn't place the full source 
code in the public domain. What better way to make it possible for artists and 
programmers to extend the life of Davis' project by learning from, reusing, and 
improving the original code than to open source this work? Though, possibly 
like Davis, my motivation is largely in part an interest in constructing a 
space for dialog, framing distinct questions and new possibilities, and waiting 
to see what happens from this gesture.


Included software
--------------
HTML Purifier 
http://htmlpurifier.org/



Live version
--------------

Enter After Douglas Davis



About the author
--------------
Owen Mundy 
http://owenmundy.com/
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