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The Immaterial Aristocracy of the Internet Editorial content | Articles
Submitted by mute on Monday, 5 May, 2008 - 18:33
Harry Halpin

Taking issue with the argument that, after decentralisation, control is embodied within the protocols of networks, Harry Halpin gives a historical account of the all-too-human actors vying for power over the net. Not technical standards but immaterial aristocrats rule cyberspace and their seats of power are vulnerable to revolutionary attack


Ventrellaquism OpenPublishing | POD Park
Submitted by lexhan on Sunday, 3 February, 2008 - 15:13


Irony 2.0 Editorial content | Articles
Submitted by mute on Tuesday, 11 December, 2007 - 13:45
Pil and Galia Kollectiv

Ironic distance is ambiguous. It grounds both critique and detached resignation to the status quo. What becomes of it in the viral world of web 2.0?, ask Pil and Galia Kollectiv


Swarm Forms: On Platforms and Creativity Editorial content | Magazine
Submitted by mute on Monday, 29 January, 2007 - 16:43
Olga Guriunova

Will the ‘hive mind’ of social networking replace classical forms of knowledge production? Comparing Web 2.0 and small-scale, self-run cultural platforms, Olga Goriunova maintains the possibility for originality in both contexts, while identifying how the same old commercial and institutional pressures still operate


The Long Tale Editorial content | Magazine
Submitted by mute on Monday, 29 January, 2007 - 16:42
Giorgio Agostoni

Web 2.0 relies heavily on identikit forms of self-representation and sociability. Parallel to the ‘authentic’, self-promoting personae of MySpace, multi-user virtual worlds such as Second Life (SL) appear to offer a more malleable, playful version of life online. But as the imperatives of commercial exchange penetrate deeper into the networked imagination, is the gap between RL and VR what it used to be? Giorgio Agostoni reverse engineers material from across the net to construct a fictional readymade suspended between self-reinvention and self-management


The Social SoftWar Editorial content | Magazine
Submitted by mute on Monday, 29 January, 2007 - 16:41
Angela Mitropoulos
Do blogs and social network-based sites offer the prospect of a democratic sociability without borders or wars? Should unpaid producers of content struggle for fair compensation? Or does the very sense of ownership, justice and right founded on labour need to be shaken up?

Angela Mitropoulos takes a critical look at the dissident pragmatism of the startup and the ‘alternative’ economies of the digital commons


InfoEnclosure 2.0 Editorial content | Magazine
Submitted by mute on Monday, 29 January, 2007 - 16:35
Dmytri Kleiner & Brian Wyrick

The hype surrounding Web 2.0’s ability to democratise content production obscures its centralisation of ownership and the means of sharing. Dmytri Kleiner & Brian Wyrick expose Web 2.0 as a venture capitalist’s paradise where investors pocket the value produced by unpaid users,  ride on the technical innovations of the free software movement and kill off the decentralising potential of peer-to-peer production


Mute Vol 2 #4 - Web 2.0 – Man's best friendster? Editorial content | Vol II
Submitted by mute on Wednesday, 13 December, 2006 - 17:14

vol 2_4 cover imageBuy | read the full version onlinePDF | low graphics | designed PDF | cover
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Web 2.0’s democratisation of media produces a wealth of new perspectives. Some of those formerly excluded from the public sphere have the chance to make their voices heard. But this wave of participation is as important for business as it is for the newly included. Mute's Web 2.0 special uncovers the work in social networking and, behind the 'dotcommunist' spin, a centralisation of the means of sharing.


Minibar 2 - An OpenMute collaboration OpenPublishing | News & Analysis
Submitted by simon on Friday, 8 December, 2006 - 16:45

Since the Web 2.0 tornadoes have all but touched down in London, OpenMute along with a number of partners thought it was a good time to set up a social event which looked at new technical developments and projects as well as contemplating the Network Effect more generally.


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