Hey guys,
+1 on renegade bio. Also, I haven't seen FNB's proposal on this list yet,
so I'm attaching it.
On Friday, July 3, 2020 3:55 PM, Helen Finkelstein <hefinkel(a)gmail.com>
wrote:
Food Not Bombs has gotten a small grant to improve our food storage
capacity. We would like to use it to convert our storage room (next to the
trash room) to a walk-in refrigerator.
This would replace the refrigerators we are now using in the basement. It
would require us to install some rat-proof storage, most likely in the
basement.
FNB would not use the entire refrigerator. We would be sharing it with
Phat Beets, and potentially with others.
Helen
Hi community,
I'm having to do a job where I install a linux machine on a vehicle, and I need
to be able to connect to it over the cellular network. I have a Google Fi data
SIM, which should work with most modern cellular devices that are unlocked.
I have a Sierra Wireless MC7455 miniPCIe card and a USB adaptor, but it
restarts every 43 seconds and I can't tell whether it's a hardware or software
problem. I'm going to keep trying it, but it might be a dead end.
I have a Nexus 6P cellphone, which is rooted, and which definitely works with
my SIM. The screen is broken but i have a root login over adb, and I have an
ssh client from an app i installed before the screen broke, but it doesn't give
me a root login and su doesn't work from ssh (although i will keep trying)
but with the android, I have an uphill battle because i have no idea how to
curate the various processes that will take up data bandwidth, and since i'm
paying per data for the SIM, i want to make sure that only my own important
data gets sent through the cellular network. I want to install wireguard,
which I understand might be a challenge, although I can probably just install
wireguard on the downstream beaglebone black which will be running regular
debian.
If anyone wants to help me poke at the android operating system from root ssh
(remotely by phone and screen-sharing of a session like tmux or screen) that
would be greatly appreciated.
I am also open to buying hardware if anyone has a USB cellular modem that you
think is unlocked and will work out of the box with a Fi SIM and especially if
you know how to get it to work from linux (something i've never done)
Thanks everyone!
-jake
Up for consensus at next Omni Delegate's meeting is fiscally-sponsoring
renegade.bio's free public COVID-19 testing. Input welcome!
Jenny Ryan
*Nonprofit Bookkeeping and Technology Consulting*
315.292.4656 | jennyryan.net
---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Jenny Ryan <jenny(a)jennyryan.net>
Date: Thu, Jul 2, 2020 at 11:51 PM
Subject: Proposal - Fiscally Sponsor renegade.bio's 'Test the People'
Project
To: <consensus(a)lists.omnicommons.org>
Discussed initially at tonight's 7/2/2020 Delegate's Meeting:
Full proposal with amendments at:
https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/13cJJh1HiQK5m8PC-diO7-D_jBjNudpRD?us…
2 July 2020
Name of Project: Test the People
Address: 5700 Martin Luther King Jr Way, Suite 1531
Phone Number: 415.338.9306
Email Address: jenny(a)renegade.bio
Website: https://testthepeople.org
Legal organization form of Project: For-Profit Public Benefit Corporation
Describe the proposed project.
renegade.bio is a Queer-owned and -operated Public Benefit Corporation.
Founded in response to the pandemic, renegade.bio provides COVID-19 testing
to underserved communities in the San Francisco Bay Area and New York City.
This past Sunday, renegade.bio launched our first free public COVID-19
testing event at #PrideIsARiot (see TestThePeople.org)
<https://testthepeople.org>. - we collected over 250 samples and delivered
results to patients within 24 hours. Unfortunately, we were unable to
secure funding for these essential public health endeavors from any of the
entities that should be funding them: SF Dept of Public Health, Alameda
County Dept of Public Health, nor California CDPH. There are those who
want to donate to support our efforts, but as a Public Benefit Corporation
(see Appendix A
<https://drive.google.com/file/d/1hp58xQozEFYNA_0D-R35OLTjpXc7LbIi/view?usp=…>)
we're unable to accept donations. Previous donations have been forwarded to
a sister organization, Vaugn's Wings of Hope, which supports patients with
a terminal illness and COVID in the Midwest. In order to continue providing
free COVID-19 testing to underserved communities, we do indeed need funding
for rent, payroll, equipment, reagents, and PPE. As such, we propose a
crowdfunding campaign in collaboration with grassroots organizations
committed to the health and well-being of our most vulnerable. Because:
#WeKeepUsSafe.
How will the project promote Omni's charitable purposes?
COVID-19 impacts Black, Brown, and Indigenous people the hardest, due in
part to unequal access to testing and other healthcare. We believe that the
only way we’ll be able to get through this pandemic is via free,
widely-available, accurate, recurring, and accessible testing. Our mission
with Test the People aligns with several of Omni’s core missions, including
“to provide relief to the poor, distressed and underprivileged” as well as
“carrying on scientific research in the public interest.”
Attach a page showing the Project budget and the time period for the
Project.
To support Omni Commons during this difficult time, we are proposing the
high end of administrative fees - 15% of donations received through this
campaign, which we intend to keep rolling as we plan and popup more free
public testing events for as long as testing is needed. Donations received
through this campaign will go solely toward paying for expenses incurred
directly in putting on free public testing events - a sample budget from
our first popup event is attached as Appendix B
<https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1oazUaND09-NoU8ra9qHLRprF_hesJMj8a54…>
.
Your organization’s history, mission, and goals.
renegade.bio is a team of scientists, entrepreneurs, and community
organizers, mobilizing in the public interest to provide rapid,
cost-effective, end-to-end COVID-19 diagnostic testing for city and county
public health. Longtime Omni organizers Jenny Ryan and Marc Juul are both
full-time employees at renegade.bio, which was founded by Counter Culture
Labs and Real Vegan Cheese member Craig Rouskey.
Renegade.bio is accelerating humanity’s capacity to test for novel
pathogens such as COVID-19. Our work empowers an overburdened public health
system to respond swiftly to epidemiologic crises by delivering fast,
reliable, cost-effective solutions for community-based triage.
In collaboration with other labs, researchers, and organizations across the
ecosystem of public health, renegade.bio is working day and night with a
singular goal: to help make COVID-19 testing accessible to everyone in
America, regardless of income—because we know it will take nothing less to
end this pandemic.
Your organization’s current programs, activities, and accomplishments.
Since April, we have been conducting COVID-19 testing in NYC in our shared
lab space at the New York Genome Center. Recently, we obtained our license
to operate our Oakland lab, which is located at the Children’s Hospital ORI
just ten blocks north of Omni Commons.
This past Sunday, renegade.bio launched our first free public COVID-19
testing event at #PrideIsARiot (see TestThePeople.org)
<https://testthepeople.org>. - we collected over 250 samples and had
results delivered to patients within 24 hours. We are conducting follow-up
testing this Sunday, July 5th at the same site in Dolores Park, for which
200 of our registrants have registered so as to participate in generating
data on community spread as these important mass actions continue. We will
have an additional 250 spots available for this Sunday, so pre-register at
the link above and help keep your community safe!
The geographic area and target population served.
Our labs operate in New York City and Oakland, California - however, we can
and do accept samples from across the country. For our public testing
popups, we are planning to provide popup testing at actions and in areas
where testing is unavailable, inaccessible, or overloaded. Our first popup
testing at #PrideIsARiot specifically aimed to serve Queer, Trans, Black,
Brown and Indigenous People of Color. We hope to bring our next popup site
to areas of East Oakland where testing is not currently widely available.
Estimate the number of people to be served.
Our capacity is 1,000 samples a day, so we hope to serve at least that many
per month. However, since a single positive case can infect potentially
hundreds of people, it’s impossible to quantify exactly how many people
would be positively impacted by our testing.
The roles and responsibilities of staff, volunteers, and the board specific
to this grant request.
Staff:
-
Community Outreach - research on communities and geographic areas in
need of testing; outreach to potential community partners;
-
Marketing - manage crowdfunding campaign and social media; creation of
multi-lingual marketing materials;
-
Operations - identifying accessible sites for sample collections;
budgeting; site-based operational logistics;
-
Sample Collection - Samples are safely collected at mobile sites by Bay
Area PLS, one of renegade.bio’s partner organizations;
-
IT - Ensuring the security and privacy of patient data in accordance
with HIPAA - renegade.bio’s IT team manages the patient data portal, in
which requests for patient samples are made by a requisitioning physician,
and the LIMS (laboratory inventory management system), which manages the
flow of individual samples from collection to results. Patient registration
and results reporting are managed by Primary, our partner.
-
Clinical Lab Scientists - process samples and analyze results in our
labs.
Volunteers are welcome and assist in greeting patients, ensuring the safe
and hygienic flow of traffic at the testing site, and registering patients
in our secure portal provided by Primary.
Describe your criteria for success. What do you realistically want to
happen as a result of your activities?
renegade.bio would like to continue testing the community in open and
accessible ways. Success is defined by testing underrepresented
communities, nationwide. From Fruitvale to Immokalee, to the Navajo Nation,
making testing available to at-risk, underserved communities is in our DNA.
Success is defined by actual tests performed, and terminal success is
achieved through a decrease in positivity rates in at-risk populations.
Preventing outbreaks, protecting our communities, and delivering access to
healthcare to folks from all walks of life is our mission.
How will you measure changes?
Changes in public health information, positivity rates, are based on
physical healthcare data. Our website tracks overall statistics for a given
action, and we work to make this data available to communities that need
it. Facilitating knowledge during a pandemic, in which people do not have
access to their ‘status’ means we can help communities build a safer
foundation for a better future. Reports summarizing activities, including
income and expenses for Test the People, can be furnished for Omni Commons
upon request.
Who will be involved in evaluating this work?
Our results are reported to the state of California and patients’ County of
residence as required by law. Our SARS-CoV-2 test is FDA-approved, and
samples are processed in our CLIA-certified lab using positive and negative
controls.
What will you do with the results of your evaluation? How will it be used
to affect the Project?
For community transparency, we will post testing statistics and summary
results on TestThePeople.org, including totals for negative and positive
tests and demographic categories. These totals will not include any
protected or personal health information. We are also required by law to
share these totals with the state of California.
Provide copies of your governing documents, roster of officers, and a
complete and filed IRS Form SS-4, showing the Project's separate existence
as an organization.
-
Form SS-4 - see Appendix A
<https://drive.google.com/file/d/1hp58xQozEFYNA_0D-R35OLTjpXc7LbIi/view?usp=…>
-
Governing Documents and Roster of Officers - See Appendix C
<https://drive.google.com/file/d/1fabnxemby9-LrSOqZhj77IJAhfLcb0kE/view?usp=…>
Provide a list of the Project's choice of funding sources to be approached
and the text of all fundraising materials.
-
IndieGoGo rolling crowdfunding campaign pitch text to be sent when
completed, and prior to campaign launch - see TestThePeople.org
<http://testthepeople.org> to get a sense of our messaging;
-
Potential grants as opportunities arise.
Jenny Ryan
*Nonprofit Bookkeeping and Technology Consulting*
315.292.4656 | jennyryan.net
I was randomly in sudo room today when I noticed smoke rising from the main
tables.
This was caused by one of those adjustable magnifying glass lamps which was
focusing the sun from the overhead windows onto some plastic bags.
Given that the overhead windows are not going away I think we should ban
these types of lamps from sudo room.
I have given the evil lamp away to a good home where hopefully it can be
rehabilitated of its pyromaniac ways.
--
marc/juul
13:22 < telmac> I remember there were some folks at sudoroom a few years back doing homebrew fermentation
13:22 < telmac> I've been trying to do kimchi and have some questions for whoever that was
13:26 < telmac> I seldom can check irc, if someone sees this and is happy to talk about it, shoot me an email herschelrschwartz(a)gmail.com
Does anyone know anything about iOS Shortcut Blurs Faces, an app that
was developed by Noah Conk, a San Francisco-based software developer?
Sounds like a great tool, my question tho is whether the app itself
saves the photo and whether they could release it when subpoenad.
also, once you think about it, it would be a great tool for FBI to have
database of pictures that need to be blurred.
anyway, anyone knows anything about the dude?
--
Anka
https://epikurewicz.wixsite.com/anka
Dear Sudo Room,
Here's your invoice! We appreciate your prompt payment.
Thank you for stewarding the commons.
Love and solidarity,
Omni Commons
------------------------ Pledge Summary --------------------------
Invoice # : 2086
Invoice Date: 07/01/2020
Due Date: 07/25/2020
Terms: Net 25
Amount Due: $6,000.00
The complete version has been provided as an attachment to this email.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Hey All,
I'm one of the organizers of a large, awesome conference that happens every two years: the HOPE conference (Hackers On Planet Earth).
It's normally in New York City, but this year thousands of people will be attending totally online.
25-July through 2-August
https://www.hope.net/
Would you or anyone you know like to give a talk or workshop or performance (or something else you think is cool?) for HOPE. It can be live, or pre-recorded, or a combination.
It can be about one of your projects, ideas, musical pieces, art pieces, or about anything else you are excited about and would like to share.
No presentation experience is necessary. And the project or topic doesn't need to be revolutionary. The only requirements are that you think it is awesome, and you'd like to share it.
The deadline for submissions is Friday 28-June.
I'm happy to answer any questions.
Cheers,
Mitch
p.s. please pardon my cross-posting
Please reply below and i'll collate our answers and send them back to Benjamin,
we are borg resistance is futile
---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Mon, 1 Jun 2020 16:46:01 -0700
From: Benjamin Jameson-Ellsmore
To: Jake <jake(a)spaz.org>
Subject: Re: Sudo Room during COVID
Hi Jake,
Thanks for your response!
That's actually just as interesting to me.
I've got a whole bunch of questions on that note. If you'd like and if it's
easier we could schedule a phone conversation. Otherwise, some of my
questions are below:
How was a decision reached to decide who gets to access the space?
Do people manufacturing PPE or other crisis relief efforts have access, and why do or don't such people use the space?
Did Sudo Room decide to close its doors along with the rest of Omni Commons, or was it a separate decision?
How are the membership and Sudo Room frequenters doing during this crisis?
Are Sudo Room folks engaged in PPE/ventilator/respirator etc. production from home?
Is Sudo Mesh still operational?
Is there any plan in the works to reopen?
Is there any documentation of Sudo Room's decision making during COVID?
Such as meeting notes? I noticed there's nothing on the wiki for 2020.
Thanks so much for indulging me.
Ben
On Mon, Jun 1, 2020 at 4:14 PM Jake <jake(a)spaz.org> wrote:
> Hi Ben,
>
> I can try to answer your questions but i haven't been going to sudoroom, i don't think almost anyone has been going.
>
>
> On Mon, 1 Jun 2020, Benjamin Jameson-Ellsmore wrote:
>
>> Hi Jake,
>>
>> My name is Ben and I'm doing dissertation research on hackerspaces during the coronavirus outbreak. Naomi Most referred me to you saying you might be a good person to talk to about that as it pertains to Sudo Rooms and Omni Commons. Would you be willing to chat? Let me know!
>>
>> Thanks,
>>
>> --
>> Benjamin Jameson-Ellsmore
>> Doctoral Candidate
>> History of Art and Architecture
>> University of California, Santa Barbara
Dear Sudo Room,
Here's your invoice! We appreciate your prompt payment.
Thank you for stewarding the commons.
Love and solidarity,
Omni Commons
------------------------ Pledge Summary --------------------------
Invoice # : 2071
Invoice Date: 06/01/2020
Due Date: 06/25/2020
Terms: Net 25
Amount Due: $6,000.00
The complete version has been provided as an attachment to this email.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Hello all,
I hope everyone is well. I wanted to remind all collectives that if yall
have an event, even if it is virtual, we want to encourage sharing it via
the Omni's calendar. You can send the event info to
commons(a)lists.omnicommons.org.
En Solidaridad,
Roberto
Hello fellow omninoms, how is everyone doing? We hope all of you are well
and taking care of yourselves and your community during this covid-19
pandemic.
What an intense couple of weeks we have lived, right? Full of
uncertainties, but also full of hope. A lot has happened in the past
several weeks, it feels like we are the center of a fast moving current,
acting and reacting to the rapidly evolving threat we and our communities
face. After all, covid-19 has done an excellent job at amplifying the ills
of the capitalist system making its deadly presence ever more cruel within
our most vulnerable communities. But at the Omni, we are lucky to be part
of a community of caring, committed and skillful folks who are doing the
groundwork to support and build efforts to aid those in need. There is a
lot that has happened, direct actions, mutual aid efforts, mask making,
food distribution, and more!
In the spirit of community building and mutual-care, the communications
working group is dusting off the printing press and bringing back Omni’s
newsletter to share with each other all of the work we are doing, the
feelings we are feeling, and maybe a collective vision for a better future.
We are hoping to have the newsletter out by the end of the month, which is
in about two weeks. Like newsletters of the past we want to feature the
work of each collective. So we are asking each collective to submit 1-4
paragraphs providing an update of the work ya’ll are doing collectively or
maybe feature the work of an individual member. Below are some suggestions
of questions or topics you can touch on:
-
Updates from your collective
-
How is your collective responding to the covid-19 pandemic.
-
Reflections about the covid-19 pandemic.
-
What kind of world do yall imagine post covid-19?
-
Share anything that your collective needs help with, or needs.
-
Anything you want to share….poetry, paintings, photographs, recipes,
anything.
Additionally, we will be featuring upcoming events, meetings, or ongoing
efforts from collectives, so please send those our way as well.
*Please send your content to the communications working group email at
comms(a)lists.omnicommons.org <comms(a)lists.omnicommons.org>, by Tuesday April
28th. *
Like all the other working groups at the Omni, the communications working
group needs more participation. If you are interested in joining please
sign up to the communication working group email list at
https://omnicommons.org/lists/listinfo/comms.
Thank you.
With love and solidarity,
The Communications Working Group
Hi, I'm no longer able to login to the list. Let me know if anything else
is needed on my end. If my account was deleted, could you please add me
with sunjam(a)james.network
Thanks!
Dear Sudo Room,
Here's your invoice! We appreciate your prompt payment.
Thank you for stewarding the commons.
Love and solidarity,
Omni Commons
------------------------ Pledge Summary --------------------------
Invoice # : 2062
Invoice Date: 05/01/2020
Due Date: 05/25/2020
Terms: Net 25
Amount Due: $4,000.00
The complete version has been provided as an attachment to this email.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Apologies that my own statement is lackluster at best >_<
but, i think y'all know me by now.
should we use our loomio account to poll the membership? anyone wanna
create a way for members to weigh in on this proposal?
Jenny Ryan
315.292.4656 | jennyryan.net
---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: MaryAnn Tenuto-Sanchez <enapoyo(a)gmail.com>
Date: Tue, Apr 14, 2020 at 11:09 AM
Subject: [omni-consensus] Candidates Statements
To: <consensus(a)lists.omnicommons.org>
Dear Omni Comrades,
Roberto Martinez has withdrawn as a candidate for President of the Omni
Commons. The remaining candidates and their statements are below. Delegates
should forward these statements to your collective’s internal mailing list
and seek your collective’s counsel on how to vote. The vote will take place
at the Thursday, April 23, 2020 Omni Commons Delegates Assembly/Executive
Board meeting.
Thanks to everyone for your cooperation,
Mary Ann Tenuto-Sánchez
CANDIDATES
*PRESIDENT *
*John Torok - *Candidate Statement of John Hayakawa Torok for Presidency of
the Board of Directors, Omni Commons
Hi! My name is John and I am a Wage Slave and a Debt Peon. (Hi John!)
I participate in the Omni member collective, the Global Women’s Strike. I
am also a recovering Catholic, a recovering lawyer, and a recovering
academic. While I am an expensively educated and highly indebted activist,
I identify as a worker and a member of the working class.
I have been active in the community including helping start up the Asian
American Bar Association of New York over thirty years ago. While a
graduate student at Columbia Law School I became severely emotionally
depressed and following expulsion transferred into Berkeley’s Ethnic
Studies Ph.D. program where I completed a dissertation on immigration
policy enforcement during the Cold War. During the last financial
depression I was hired by the California Employment Development Department
and right away became a union shop steward with a strong focus on
grievances by fellow workers living with disabilities who sought reasonable
accommodations. California Unemployment Insurance is thus my state day job.
I now serve on the EDD Director’s Statewide Disability Advisory Committee.
I agree that state worker and anarchist is a contradiction in terms.
However I participated in Occupy Oakland and identify increasingly with
anarchist philosophy. There I became familiar with and known to many
Oakland activists and organizations. Previously, I was involved in
communes, collectives and cooperatives on and off over thirty five years. I
lived in housing collectives in Santa Cruz and Brooklyn, NY over a dozen
years. I participated in both a Santa Cruz and the Park Slope food coops.
My short organizing jobs have been in small self-governing collectives.
Lastly, while still in New York I served 10 years on the board of directors
of the Asian and Pacific Islander Coalition on HIV/AIDS, Inc. as it
transformed from a grass-roots ACT-UP-like formation to something akin to
an Asian American Gay Men’s Health Crisis.
In Occupy Oakland from 2011 I was active in the Queer People of
Color/People of Color and Labor Solidarity Committees. Informed and
inspired by the Occupy moment, I have helped start up and run three social
justice grass roots Bay Area organizations since 2012, the Oakland Privacy
(Working Group), the Oakland Livable Wage Assembly, and most recently the
Bay Area Poor People’s Campaign Steering Committee. I am and have always
been very excited about the utopian experiment that is the Omni Commons.
I am thrilled for the opportunity to learn from and collaborate with all
the Omni Commons collectives and their members to build a sound basis for a
long-term sustainable future for this critical Oakland cultural and
revolutionary community. I am eager, willing and able to use my organizing
and union leadership and legal trainings, and with your help, to make our
Omni Commons a domestic and international model for what we utopians can
both imagine and make happen in the real world.
Thank you for your support.
John Torok, Union Shop Steward, EDD San Francisco Building
SEIU Local 1000 District Labor Council 743 (San Francisco)
SEIU 1000 Delegate to Alameda and San Francisco County Labor Councils,
AFL-CIO
Member and Labor Representative, Alameda County Workforce Development Board
510-480-6153
*TREASURER *
*Jenny Ryan - *Hi, I'm Jenny, and I've been both the Omni Secretary and
Omni Treasurer since.. actually, I don't remember. Since ~2015. Last year,
I petitioned to be paid for this gig (which often encompasses dozens of
hours per fiscal quarter - keep in mind we are also the fiscal sponsor of 6
other groups), and for transparency can report I received $1,945 from Omni
in 2019.
I very much want other officers to take on these roles - but to be honest,
we've never taken these 'official' positions very seriously. At most, they
are needed for signatures. All decision are still made by the delegates.
Very little responsibility is required, other than reflecting the decisions
of the board - aka, the delegates.
Officer roles and responsibilities were expounded upon in Laura's proposal,
passed in 2019, to facilitate more responsibilities in these roles. But no
greater power in comparison to the spokescouncil.
I am totally fine with continuing to be Omni's treasurer and upholding
those responsibilities - but I seriously urge others to consider working
with me and other board members to step up right now and support the board
if you're able! I am happy to train _anyone_ interested in joining the
finance team, for instance.
You can find my work here: https://omnicommons.org/wiki/Finances
and my credentials at https://jennyryan.net
Much love, and I look forward to building the new world with you all,
Jenny Ryan
*Nonprofit Bookkeeping and Technology Consulting*
315.292.4656 | jennyryan.net
*SECRETARY*
*Robb Benson - *If elected Secretary of Omni Commons, I intend to begin
creating summarized minutes of the delegates meeting notes for approval at
the following delegates meeting and transparently report, to the best of my
ability, the substantive decisions and actions of the working groups.
Additionally, I’ll commit myself to furthering my understanding of our
reporting duties to external entities, in particular, with regards to
activities and events of the commons working group
*Mai Sutton - **My motto when it comes to collective decision-making is
"Easy things should be easy, hard things should be doable." I'm involved in
several non-hierarchical organizations, have facilitated hundreds of
meetings, and have been a community organizer for nearly a decade. I
previously worked at the **Electronic Frontier Foundation*
<https://www.eff.org/>* (EFF) and **Shareable* <https://www.shareable.net/>*
as a policy analyst and writer, and have since been a self-employed doing
this work. I'm also the Digital Commons Fellow with the **Commons Network*
<https://www.commonsnetwork.org/>*, an EU-based advocacy organization for
the commons. *
*I've been involved with Sudo Mesh since October 2017 as a contributor and
steward of the project. Sudo Mesh has also long been a pillar organization
of Omni. Several of its members contribute their time and expertise to
maintain the building and its wireless network. We are currently applying
to become an official Omni member collective. *
*I'm running for Secretary because I want to ensure that Omni complies with
its legal obligations as a 501c(3) corporation and its internal governance
process. I only started to attend the Omni delegates meetings in early
March and the collective I'm a part of isn't even an Omni member yet.
Despite that, I decided to run for Secretary. I deeply care about Omni as a
community resource and space for art and radical organizing. I recognized
that there were several core Omni delegates that have been involved for a
long time and seemed to be burning out. I thought it would be helpful for
others like myself to step up. *
*I plan on attending the Omni delegates meeting regularly anyway. If I can
help Omni out by putting my name on the official filings, and be there to
organize board meeting agendas and elections then I would be happy to do
so. *
Thanks for facilitating this process!
Mai
_______________________________________________
consensus mailing list
consensus(a)lists.omnicommons.org
https://omnicommons.org/lists/listinfo/consensus
Hi Sudo folks!
Does anyone know if there is a Bird charger lying around that I could use
for today? I have a liberated Bird but no charger; I see there is a Bird at
Sudo, but I don’t see the charger for it (42V 2Amp).
I hope this is the appropriate messaging platform for you all.
Thanks,
Leela
(Hello, please excuse me if the email below has gone already into this
email list. I think I sent it to a wrong address, so that is why I
re-sending it. Thank you! )
----
Hello Folks,
I know this is off topic, but COVID-19 is not discriminating, and or
waiting for us.
I am volunteering with a small group trying to get ventilators (in the
thousands) to our folks in NewYork, but it is being difficult task.
Right now *we need *find out the *European CE Certification Number for each
*of the following two items:
- *Aeomed VG 60*
- *Aeomed VG 70*
I have contacted the EU Trade commission and I was informed that their
database doesn't have that kind of information. But, it should be found on
the devices themselves, as part of their requirements. Please forward this
email to anyone that you may think can help us to gather this information.
Also, while on it, we are looking for a warehouse in NYC were the supplies
can be stored.
Many thanks for your help, and stay safe.
Daniel
Signal/WhatsApp: 413.336.9143
*For more direct emails, please use: danarauz(a)protonmail.com
<danarauz(a)protonmail.com>.*
---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: MaryAnn Tenuto-Sanchez <enapoyo(a)gmail.com>
Date: Tue, Apr 7, 2020 at 10:46 AM
Subject: [omni-consensus] Corrected List of Candidates
To: <consensus(a)lists.omnicommons.org>
Dear Omni Comrades,
One candidate has withdrawn, so a corrected list of candidates is
below. Delegates should inform your collectives.
Thanks,
Mary Ann Tenuto-Sánchez
CANDIDATES
President:
Roberto Martinez
John Torok
Treasurer:
Jenny Ryan
Secretary:
Mai Sutton
Robb Benson
He's working on doing this in the future on platforms that are not Facebook.
https://facebook.com/events/s/virtually-sam-and-ashley/648132942640172/?ti=…
For anyone who doesn't know, Sam is/was an early Sudoroom member who has
spent the past few years primarily working on music and performance in New
Orleans. Thought I'd let you guys know :)
Hey Sudoers, what do you all think about the mesh project becoming an
Omni member collective?
---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Mai Sutton <mai.ishikawa.sutton(a)gmail.com>
Date: Wed, Apr 1, 2020 at 9:20 PM
Subject: [omni-discuss] Omni Member Application — Sudo Mesh
To: <consensus(a)omnicommons.org>, <discuss(a)omnicommons.org>
Cc: <info(a)peoplesopen.net>
Dear Omni Collective Delegates,
Below you will find Sudo Mesh's application to become a member
collective of the Omni Commons. We welcome your questions and any and
all input you may have about our application!
I plan to be present at the Omni Delegates meeting tomorrow, April 2,
to formally present our application and receive your feedback.
Best,
Mai
---
OMNI MEMBER APPLICATION - SUDO MESH
What do you do that makes a difference in the world?
Sudo Mesh develops software and assembles hardware systems to build
open community networks. We are building open technology that helps
connect our neighbors, support local businesses, and enable community
collaboration and cultural production. In the event of a natural
disaster or state censorship, community mesh networks can be a
resilient means of communication and sharing of information.
Our projects include People's Open Network, a community-owned and
-operated non-profit digital network in Oakland and disaster.radio, an
off-grid, solar-powered, long-range mesh network built on free, open
source software and affordable, open hardware.
Briefly recap your history as an organization.
Meetings to build the People’s Open Network began in January of 2013
at Sudo Room. Several founding members of the project, including Marc
Juul, Jenny Ryan, Daniel Arauz, Lesley Bell, Jehan Tremback, Jake
Sternberg, and Matthew Senate, continue to be involved to this day.
We have continued to build off of the contributions and experiments of
people who have been involved over the years. Our accomplishments over
the last seven years include:
Development of our own version of mesh routing firmware, SudoWRT,
which was built off of existing open source operating system OpenWRT
in addition to open source mesh routing protocol Babel.
Organized six Build Your Own Internet (BYOI) events where we’ve hosted
hands-on activities and presentations about how the internet works and
our digital network commons initiatives.
Installed 30+ antennas and routers in homes and businesses to become
wireless nodes in People’s Open Network. One includes a node at the
Internet Archive building in Richmond, CA, which we placed there in
order to distribute gigabits of donated, free bandwidth.
Raised over $180,000 in grants and individual donations to support our
work, including a $30,000 donation to Omni Commons and a $10,000
donation to Sudo Room (where we have hosted our meetings and storage
for years).
Laptops for All (another Sudo Mesh project) has given out dozens of
laptops to high-need individuals.
Our most active projects are the People's Open Network and Disaster Radio.
People’s Open Network empowers communities to build and operate their
own wireless networks without relying on last-mile ISPs. Using our
design built on open source software, off-the-shelf hardware, and open
educational materials, small groups of people can utilize existing
bandwidth to share their internet connections and cover public and
underserved areas. Those who connect to the network are not customers,
but community members, encouraged to learn, participate, host a node
or contribute to code.
Disaster Radio is an off-grid, solar-powered, long-range mesh network
built on free, open source software and affordable, open hardware. It
is being designed to be rapidly implemented in disaster areas by
anyone who can follow written instructions, acquire the necessary
components, and mount a nominal number of nodes. The nodes will be
small, entirely self-contained units running low-bandwidth web apps
that anyone can access with a WiFi-enabled device. We are designing
them to be solar-powered.
What is your incorporation status? (501c3? Unincorporated Association? etc.)
We are an incorporated 501c3 organization as Sudo Mesh, with EIN
46-4226376. We have our own bank account with UNIFY Credit Union,
including sub-accounts for each of our projects.
How do you make decisions?
We are currently undergoing a transition in our decision-making
process, which has been slowly evolving over the last two years.
Until 2018, major decisions were made by in-person votes at weekly
Tuesday night meetings by those actively involved in Sudo Mesh
projects. Otherwise, decisions were made on an ad hoc, individual
basis by those who had the capacity to work on different aspects of a
project.
For the last two years, we have been experimenting with the
decision-making platform, Loomio. We collectively selected active
members as “Stewards” who are empowered to vote on any major
decisions, particularly those involving financial expenditures. We are
also using Loomio to discuss ideas and proposals before they go up for
a vote. Currently, proposals must be approved by consensus of approved
Stewards. Stewards are not able to block if they are the sole person
opposed to the decision — they must work with the proposer to come to
a proposal that works for them.
This has largely worked for us, but we still lack many protocols that
could ensure a stable governance process. For example, we do not have
minimum involvement requirements for those to remain as Stewards. We
hope to address such issues in the coming months.
State your goals for becoming an Omni member collective. How would
your presence in the Omni contribute to its purpose and Statement of
Solidarity?
We believe in the power and potential of the commons as an alternative
to capitalism, which justifies the extractive, violent, and depraved
treatment of humans, animals, and the Earth. Networked communication
has not only become critical for people to access and share
information, it’s a necessity for community connection, social justice
organizing, and to inspire and disseminate stories and art.
Sudo Mesh is a small project out of many thousands of digital commons
organizations that are fighting for a more just and equitable
internet. Our goal is to build network infrastructure that is truly
owned by and for the public, with a more specific aim to create
technology that addresses the information and communication needs of
Bay Area neighborhoods.
Sudo Mesh has also long been a pillar organization of Omni Commons.
Several of its members have and continue to contribute their time and
expertise to maintain the wireless network in the space. Our members
have helped with building maintenance and we have also used the space
for our BYOI events. Our donation of $30,000 to the Omni Commons in
2018 is also a testament to our commitment to support Omni as a
critical community resource in Oakland.
Explain how you will finance your Omni membership dues/rent.
We currently have some savings that would allow us to pay our
membership dues for the near future. However, we will continue to
apply for grants, seek individual donations and other recurring
sources of funding to fund our work and all our expenses, including
our rent and Omni membership dues.
Describe what dedicated physical space (if any) you need. What will
you do in the dedicated space? What can you do in shared space? Will
you need to make any modifications of the building? Include floor
plans if that makes your proposal clearer.
We already use some space in Sudo Room: a walk-in storage space in the
southeast corner mezzanine. We have considered using more space at the
Omni as a regular workspace, but we currently do not have plans to
expand our use beyond that space.
_______________________________________________
discuss mailing list
discuss(a)lists.omnicommons.org
https://omnicommons.org/lists/listinfo/discuss
I've got a roommate who would be at risk if I got the virus, so I am going
to skip the Tuesday meetups for a while. If someone is there on Tuesday
please let Ross know I can help him more once this thing blows over, but I
invite him to email me directly and we can collaborate remotely.
But we're all expected to socially isolate more than normal, so I thought I
would start a social thread for anyone interested. What have y'all been
doing to stay sane? I've started scheduling video calls with friends I'd
otherwise see in person. I have been getting a bit more time to do 3D
printing and other stuff like that though. Anyone working on something fun
to pass the time?
Taylor
Hello, I was asked by a friend to share the link below. She works at a UCSF
hospital.
SF Community Resources in response to COVID-19
Compiled by the SFGH UCSF Community | Updated 4/01/2020
Please email nhi.tran(a)ucsf.edu or philip.herrera(a)ucsf.edu to update or add
local resources & services
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1zoH6ePZifPy9F7Ho90z0lY2PyamW5yMkPtv3HDe…
Thank you,
Daniel
Hey Sudoers - anybody want to be Omni's treasurer, secretary or
president? Or can you think of anybody who would be a good fit? These
positions are unpaid, low on decision-making power and medium on
responsibility.
---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: MaryAnn Tenuto-Sanchez <enapoyo(a)gmail.com>
Date: Mon, Mar 30, 2020 at 10:35 AM
Subject: [omni-consensus] Nominations Open for Officers of the Omni Commons
To: <consensus(a)lists.omnicommons.org>, discuss <discuss(a)lists.omnicommons.org>
Dear Omni Collectives,
At the Omni Delegate’s Assembly (Executive Board) meeting on Thursday,
March 26, I agreed to act as Interim Secretary to initiate an election
of officers; specifically, President, Treasurer and Secretary. To
follow through on that responsibility, I am announcing that
nominations are officially open for those 3 positions. All 3 positions
have a 1-year term of office. Only members of Omni collectives and
community members actively participating in Omni working groups are
eligible to be nominated. Nominations will remain open until Noon on
April 5. Please send nominations to me at: enapoyo(a)gmail.com and be
sure to include the email address and phone number of the person you
nominate so that we can reach them to verify acceptance.
A number of people have already been nominated, and now the elections
group (myself, Patrik and Matt) will contact them to find out if they
accept the nomination. Meanwhile, nominations remain open until noon
on April 5 to give the collectives time to nominate other folks if
they wish. Delegates should forward this announcement to the internal
list of members of your collectives because not all members of
collectives are on the consensus list.
Once we have determined who the candidates are we will send the names
to the consensus list and delegates will inform their collectives,
hold a meeting and determine for whom their delegate will vote at the
annual meeting on April 23. My understanding of the process is that
the delegate for each collective has one vote on each officer
position.
Candidates should submit a statement of why they want to be an officer
and send it to the consensus list so everyone can read it before the
collectives vote. No Negative campaigning; just statements of why you
want to be an officer.
I am also attaching the Omni Commons Bylaws, which spell out the
duties of each office.
In advance, I want to thank everyone for their cooperation in this process.
In solidarity,
Mary Ann
_______________________________________________
consensus mailing list
consensus(a)lists.omnicommons.org
https://omnicommons.org/lists/listinfo/consensus
In Fed'sBook, someone mentioned that will be going out of town (Oakland) to
get WiFi access, so she can work from "home".
I direct her to go Omni's main door, since that is the closes WiFi Access
Point that we installed.
It got me thinking that perhaps would be a good idea to bring an access
point to the door, outside so the signal spreads out to the street. This
can be put outside from the second floor window over the main door. It
would pick up the power (PoE) and signal from the second floor switch.
What do you folks think?
Daniel
Hello Sudoroom, and NoiseBridge Folks,
There is an activist that need help from someone to repair her broken phone
screen. It seems that places where she can go are closed these days. Her
location is in Oakland is "near Downtown, Chinatown, east or west is fine."
Please let me know, if you are interested so I let her know. Many thanks in
advance, Daniel Signal: 415.336.9143.
Jenny Ryan
*Nonprofit Bookkeeping and Technology Consulting*
315.292.4656 | jennyryan.net
---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: robb <sf99er(a)gmail.com>
Date: Wed, Mar 25, 2020 at 7:12 PM
Subject: [omni-consensus] omni delegates meeting tmrw 3/26
To: <consensus(a)lists.omnicommons.org>
hi,
just a reminder that the delegates decided to meet weekly at the last
meeting
if using a browser or mobile phone app, the address is:
https://meet.jit.si/omninom
if calling in from a POTS phone or using voice only
dial: 1-512-402-2718
PIN: 5832 24366#
_______________________________________________
consensus mailing list
consensus(a)lists.omnicommons.org
https://omnicommons.org/lists/listinfo/consensus
Biohackers at BioFoundry in Australia are making their own experimental
COVID-19 test kits, which purport to diagnose the disease in just 30
minutes, and which patients can potentially perform themselves.
The open-source (OS) community proposes ditching the expensive capital
> equipment in favor of a reaction that requires only a set of biological and
> chemical reagents in a single tube that gives a reliable diagnosis. We are
> currently sourcing the reagents to replicate the experiments being shared
> within the community. BioFoundry proposes setting up the facilities to
> synthesize the required biological reagents at scale, while collaborating
> with our sister company Argent Scientific to source the required chemicals.
> We would then focus on producing self-diagnosis kits to fill the diagnostic
> gap in Australia, before moving our focus to Africa and South-East Asia to
> help support their containment efforts as well.
https://foundry.bio/coronavirus-covid-19/
Hi all! Hope you’re all safe and isolated - I found this, seems to be the
best resource for organising efforts around Corona virus:
www.coronavirustechhandbook.com
<http://www.coronavirustechhandbook.com/?fbclid=IwAR3jkY_J_Zk8bdXyARGgL0xR_U…>
All the data and graphs you could ever want, tips for remote working, tools
for organising mutual aid groups, and crowdsourced specialist advice for
doctors, teachers, charities, all kinds of things. Have a look.
Dear Sudo Room,
Here's your invoice! We appreciate your prompt payment.
Thank you for stewarding the commons.
Love and solidarity,
Omni Commons
------------------------ Pledge Summary --------------------------
Invoice # : 2052
Invoice Date: 04/01/2020
Due Date: 04/25/2020
Terms: Net 25
Amount Due: $4,000.00
The complete version has been provided as an attachment to this email.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Hey all!
While I'm replying to Roberto's message, I'm also cc'ing various Omni
mailing lists (including member collectives):
Yes, I think we should be a dropoff point - but only if the organizers will
staff it *fully* and abide by *extremely high hygiene/sanitization
standards*.
We all need to be talking more about next steps as a community place-based
organization. I've revived our Slack channel here so we can have real-time
conversations:
*Click Here To Join Chat!
<https://join.slack.com/t/omnicommons/shared_invite/zt-coe108tt-rd~SdFHo_DN_…>*
*Questions for the community:*
- *Should we send a request to our mortgage lender to belay payments for
a month or two?* We have $30K as bare-minimum operating reserves (which
I'd rather not touch), and an additional $15K in the kitchen fund. Our
checking account is currently at a little over $3K, with March mortgage and
utilities paid, but we are not receiving ~$1K in member collective
payments, and half our necessary monthly income (~$5K of ~$11K) comes from
event rentals... that have all been cancelled...
- *Builders/handypeoplez: *I have put out a call/request for someone to
install the touchless soap dispenser i bought last year - it is powered by
rechargeable C batteries and needs to be mounted onto tile with masonry
drill bits - all materials (dispenser, batteries, charger, masonry bits and
drill) are in the secure storage; foaming unscented hand soap is in massive
quantities in the cleaning closet (please lock! but share combo lock code
liberally with trusted folks who won't steal all the TP ;) - it could also
be wired to existing electrical. I personally can't do it as I'm currently
a probable asymptomatic vector of covid-19. At my home in W Oakland, we
have a box of N95 masks (I believe CCL ordered more?) and lots of food as
well as herbs and some meds, so ping me if you need and I will leave it
outside our door for you <3 Can also order things online if anyone needs
and doesn't have the resources right now.
- Per requests from Robb, I have purchased 4 bottles of 70% Isopropyl
alcohol with spritz bottles, as well as a dozen air filters. Who is
currently regularly at Omni (Robb? Sierk? AB? anyone else?) that can be my
point of contact for delivery updates? If you think of other things we need
you can make a purchase request here:
https://omnicommons.org/budgetrequest
*Some relevant announcements:*
- CCL has recently purchased various supplies for decontamination and
cleanliness. Also a good resource for people with questions about the
virus. Patrik, lmk if you need to go halfsies with Omni on the sanitizer
dispensing station - if CCL is strapped, that is - cuz Omni will be in
coming months.
- *Please donate* to Omni <https://omnicommons.org/donate> and/or Sudo
<https://sudoroom.org/donate> right now! Also, consider making a
donation to CCL member (and my former beloved housemate!) Craig, who is
working on a vaccine - he is currently trying to raise $1500: You can send
PayPal donations to: finance(a)renegadex.bio - or Venmo: Craig-Rouskey
<https://venmo.com/Craig-Rouskey>
- I'll be sending out a financial report with coming-month prospectives
by the end of March. This is one of my priorities right now, and I'm
downshifting my full-time job and other gigs to do it and will not be
charging my $25 bookkeeper contract rate for those hours. I am concerned
about the lack of financial support from events (most all of which have
been cancelled or postponed), as well as from Phat Beets (4 months unpaid
rent, $2,518) and FYE (1.5 months unpaid rent, $525) - PB & FYE - please
let us know how your orgs are doing and what we can do to best support you
and in turn, Omni Commons as a whole!
- Current costs and recurring income sources have been regularly updated
on the Finance Wiki Page: https://omnicommons.org/wiki/Finances
*Additional Resources:*
- COVID-19 Mutual Aid Resources- Huichin/Oakland
<https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/u/1/d/1q8gPladEOi0vI8oU7Z37AYJQsy22SKd…>
- https://bayrising.org/organizingduringcoronavirus/
- https://covid19freelanceartistresource.wordpress.com/
- https://www.needhelppayingbills.com/html/alameda_county_food_banks.html
- Alameda County Public Health Deptartment's COVID-19 resource hub
<http://www.nikki4oakland.com/r?u=Qw7BN9spnH2-QGQihzneFoQv17feW3ezjwg15mnJvs…>
- http://www.alamedacounty.info/content/housing-and-renting-aid
- Bay Area Financial Solidarity <http://Tiny.cc/covidmutualaid>
Mad love & solidarity - and hope to see you on the chat! (link above)
<3 jnny
On Mon, Mar 16, 2020 at 10:07 AM Roberto Martinez via commons <
commons(a)lists.omnicommons.org> wrote:
> Hello all,
>
> I got a request about using the Omni as a location for dropping off
> donating goods. Are we doing something already? If not are we open to have
> the Omni as a drop of place?
>
> I’ll ask them to submit a formal request and take it from there.
>
> Thanks,
> RM
>
> Sent from my iPhone
>
> Begin forwarded message:
>
> *From:* Cc Raye <viviraye(a)gmail.com>
> *Date:* March 15, 2020 at 8:16:01 PM PDT
> *To:* Margot Brennan <margot(a)seedsandstones.org>
> *Cc:* Roberto Martinez <rcm00189(a)gmail.com>
> *Subject:* *Re: Omni as a distribution point*
>
>
> Hi Roberto,
> Thanks Margot for connecting us.
> Some of us are trying to coordinate some mutual aid and wanted to suggest
> a centralized location for dropping off donated goods that could then be
> redistributed.
> Do you think Omni might be open to this for some period of time?
> Would we need to have designated times?
> Looking forward to being in touch if y'all are open to this.
> Thanks!
> Cici
>
> On Sun, Mar 15, 2020, 8:07 PM Margot Brennan <margot(a)seedsandstones.org>
> wrote:
>
>> Hi Roberto,
>>
>> Cc'd on this email is Cici who has a question for you all about possibly
>> using the space for something. Cici, this is Roberto my contact for the
>> Omni.
>>
>> Thanks,
>>
>> Margot
>>
> _______________________________________________
> commons mailing list
> commons(a)lists.omnicommons.org
> https://omnicommons.org/lists/listinfo/commons
>
Join us this weekend to build local services for peoplesopen.net!
People's Open Network endeavors to provide communication services, so that
it offers value to its users beyond mere connectivity to the Internet. What
can be done to help strengthen ties among Oakland residents, and to benefit
the community?
Services (such as maps, file-sharing, email, contacts, and calendar) should
be provided based on existing free/open source software. See some ideas and
examples here: https://sudoroom.org/wiki/Mesh/Distributed_Services
Chat with us here: https://peopleopen.net/chat
Coordinate here: https://peoplesopen.net/pad/p/hackathon
Post code here: https://github.com/sudomesh
Learn more about deploying services on the network via this tutorial:
https://github.com/sudomesh/babeld-lab/blob/master/services_guide.md
This is a 48-hour ongoing hackathon - we welcome participation in any form,
even if you don't code!
Mad love and, as always, HACK THE PLANET!
Jenny
I discovered as I prepared to shelter-in-place that one of my Vive base stations is on the fritz. Anyone have one they're not using, to help a buddy quarantine in the metaverse?
Since we all have to keep from leaving our homes except for safe and essential
activities (including exercise)
Don't come to sudoroom for Hardware Hacking Tuesdays until further notice!
That said, we should try to get together on IRC chat in #sudoroom
apparently you might be able to join by using this web portal that Adam wrote:
http://civilpedia.org/c/?&channel=%23sudoroom
you can also use freenode
https://webchat.freenode.net
if you are familiar with the terminal, you can run Irssi which is what I do,
and I use mosh and tmux or screen to keep my session open even when my computer
or phone is off
and I can get into the same session from my phone or computer, so it's always
the same experience
see you in cyberspace!
-jerkey (aka Jake in meatspace)
Sudo Discuss List,
A regular meetup on Fridays on solar punk is proposed.
All of us are sick from the legacy dogmatic patterns that permeate all our
mainstreams.
This meetup will focus on design to realize the nearly forgotten promise of
solar punk.