The “social./bill-of-rights” is a fresh example of a well-meaning but toothless attempt at defining ethical tech. It’s the same process and project as the existing #4opens, but framed in a way that’s more palatable to liberal and capitalist interests. The difference? The #4opens isn’t an appeal to values, it’s a functional way of judging, thus pushing developers and projects. #KISS
For those who actually want to build a better #openweb, the real work is here: https://unite.openworlds.info/Open-Media-Network/4opens This should not be about reinventing the wheel. We really don’t need another set of guidelines that sound good but change nothing. What we need is accountability and practical tools that push projects directly to align with the open principles they often claim to support.
- The #4opens isn’t an ideal, it’s a framework for action.
- If a project doesn’t hold up under scrutiny, it’s not open.
The hashtag #nothingnew comes to mind, but diversity is not necessarily bad, diversity in approaches is good, but fragmentation isn’t. To fix this these initiatives need to be linked together in a meaningful way, rather than diluted into disconnected efforts. This is basic #openweb thinking, connect, build, and push back against the corporate creep. If the #deathcult of #neoliberal tech has taught us anything, it’s that soft reforms lead to endless co-option. The effective path to take is through grassroots accountability and practical, enforceable openness #KISS
UPDATE: then you have the #fediforum implosion to learn from https://kolektiva.social/deck/tags/fediforum
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