I might ask the same of you, Sonja, wrt why sudo's mailing list would need
input from people who don't really participate in our community?
On Sun, Jul 27, 2014 at 1:53 AM, Sonja Trauss <sonja.trauss(a)gmail.com>
wrote:
Why would you need input from people who aren't
very invested in the
project?
On Friday, July 25, 2014, Rabbit <rabbitface(a)gmail.com> wrote:
Hey all!
Recently there was a controversy at Gittip which resulted in a project to
fork or rebuilding it with better governance structures and more focus on
the needs and safety of marginalized users.
They are figuring out how to run a web application in a cooperative
democratic way that focuses on the needs of the users, as opposed to a
TaskRabbit like model where a central corporation controls or extracts
value from their users and makes unilateral decisions.
They're working on bylaws and legal structures for this, and would
appreciate advice or connections to people with advice. Talk to them in
IRC at #atunit, particularly @adrienneleigh, or send me resources to pass
along.
This is an exciting frontier for the cooperative movement. What if
TaskRabbit was owned by the rabbits? Websites have very concentrated power
structures compared to the number of users; what are effective ways to get
input from so many people who might not all be very invested in the
project? What other models can we draw from -- credit unions? What
lessons can be learned from Wikipedia? Etc.
This especially matters for this particular use case, recurring
donations, because some people will be making their living off of proceeds
from the site and it's important that their voice is heard.
Sudoroom may be one of the largest users of this site when it launches,
like we are now with Gittip.
-Rabbit
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