Monday, August 8, 2005
Vienna net.art community to distribute its own grants using social software
Former BB guestblogger Johannes Grenzfurthner reports on an unusual development
in how the Vienna government funds net.art/culture projects. The Commissioner
For The Arts, a member of Vienna's Social Democratic Party, is supporting a
consortium of more than 100 net.art groups, called Netznetz, in the development
of a reputation-based software system that the group will then use to help decide
how to distribute the grant money it receives from the government. From Johannes's
post at the monochrom blog:
The new funding system strives for guaranteed and dispersed distribution of
funding in the sector while the parameters of the distribution are meant to
remain flexible, providing a dynamic scope. The aim is to encourage project-based
collaborations by distributing various smaller grants. Therefore, everybody
who is involved in the sector is subject to the principle of permanent reconfiguration
of the system and the network...
The beneficiaries of the so-called 'network grants', a yearly spending account
for approximately 20 groups, is to be evaluated with the aid of a social software
tool -- a reputation system currently under development. Even before it has
been coded, criticism as well as scepticism and fear start pouring into the
media sphere. While even computer veterans criticise the alleged blind trust
in a 'computer program', so-called left circles brand it as 'too neo-liberal'
as the structure strives for 'collaboration instead of institution'.
netznetz is preparing a protoype in the course of a programming 'sprint' this
week and is inviting international experts for an upcoming symposium in autumn
2005 in Vienna.
posted by David Pescovitz at 10:23:34 PM