On Sat, Dec 27, 2008 at 06:19:19PM +0100, Alessio L.R. Pennasilico wrote:
> [this mail was blocked in my outbox since 25th)
>
> On Dec 25, 2008, at 8:34 PM, jaromil wrote:
>
>> as a result, none of the submitters to the book are from the south,
>> not even  the south of  europe, this is  a dramatic split.  i think
>> this is SHIT.  i  don't know who the fuck is behind  this way to do
>> things.
>
> This book is the result of the  work of a lot of usa hacktivist like
> Bre  (the blog owner),  Nick Farr  (and many  others).  This  is the
> evolution of  some meetings they organized  in the past  in (you may
> call them shitty) places like hope (2600's conference) or defcon.
shitty? why shitty?
after watching the stream and seing them desperately trying to recover
the  lack of  south  in the  whole,  i believe  it  is actually  their
extremely limited  view and lack of "hacking  across differences" that
is tainting the whole project.
for instance at HOPE 2600 people might remember Tati being around, she
is  an hacker  active in  The Fiber  - Amsterdam  and  originally from
Argentina. these hackerspace people might have missed both her and the
2600 *real people* hooking up ...
> IMHO the  problem isn't about them  excluding us from  the book: The
> problem is  about southern (is it  a geographical problem?  I do not
> think   so...)   hacklabs  being   completely   isolated  from   the
> international network...
no the  problem is to have fake  yuppies like you being  around with a
BMW  Z3  and  money  to  pay  international  flights  to  misrepresent
completely our  scene and  throw bullshit around,  then back  to italy
collaborating  with police  forces to  "profile" criminal  hackers.  i
just hope the face you are putting on top of "italian scene" drawns in
your rotten grappa.
> They aren't ignoring us: we are  ignoring them, we are not trying to
> be involved in their activities, and so on.
i'm  not ignoring  them. metalab,  tmp/lab and  more: is  US  (not you
indeed) and we are struggling a big deal to network. the *method* this
initiative is handled is raising walls.
> I think that if freacknet,  loa, reload, someone else would start in
> being involved  it should  lead to a  lager, stronger  network.  and
> problems like "the book" will easily disappear.
i think it is obvious how to solve the problem: build a proper network
of trust to empower more people to be editors of the book and adopt an
open publishing with periodical "stable releases".
we are hackers! i'm just SO SURPRISED this is not already obvious.
> [update because I am now here at CCC] I talk with my friend bre last
> night: the  deadline was abou the  pdf to be presented  at 25C3, but
> can be edited in the future  months, so all the missing hacklabs can
> be integrated.
right. it wasn't clear so far.
what  about  enlarging  the  editorial  group?   and  opening  up  the
submission  committee  with people  that  is  actually *visiting*  the
places -  and not like "oh  i received a  phonecall from south-africa,
how exciting!
ciao
- -- 
jaromil, dyne.org developer, 
http://jaromil.dyne.org
GPG: 779F E8B5 47C7 3A89 4112  64D0 7B64 3184 B534 0B5E