333 lines
16 KiB
Markdown
333 lines
16 KiB
Markdown
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# Hacklabs to technological cooperatives
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Techno-political collectives mix technical and political concerns. A perfect
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example is Riseup which defines its mission as a provider of “online
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communication tools for people and groups working on liberatory social change.
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We are a project to create democratic alternatives and practice
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self-determination by controlling our own secure means of communications”.
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Nowadays the field is composed by very different types of organizations
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ranging from loose and informal networks of hacktivists, free software
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communities, formal organisations such as foundations, start-ups invested in
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the so-called civic tech and even public institutions and council towns.
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Some years ago, technological sovereignty meant the development of free
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technologies [^0] by and for the civil society. Empowering society by
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developing tools, hardware, services and infrastructure that meet social needs
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based on the ethics of free software and self-management. Nowadays, with the
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transition to open source things have become messy as big corporations
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promoting open source software basically for their own benefit have broken the
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relation between technological development and social responsibility.
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In this text I will rethink what role cooperatives have, or could have, as
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economic and social actors in reclaiming this relationship. To do so, I will
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depart from the broad galaxy of techno-political collectives [^1], and then
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focus on the format of technological cooperatives as they have been deployed
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in Spain.
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## A galaxy of initiatives
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We find foundations which can be committed to create open source and free
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software solutions and services (FSF, Mozilla, Blender, etc.) and/or to
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protect and defend digital rights (Electronic Frontier Foundation, La
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Quadrature du Net, X-net) mobilizing and pulling economic resources to make
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those project run in the mid and long term. People can support foundations as
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a donor, volunteer, intern. They normally look for experienced and qualified
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professionals and count with formal and legal structures when many
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techno-political collectives are based on informal groups and communities.
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Another weird aspect of the current scene consists in local government
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initiatives which are working towards openness and transparency based on
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citizen participation. Many “rebellious” council towns located in Spain are
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supporting the development of free software tools focused on citizen driven
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political participation [^2], and behind those developments, freelancers, small
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companies and cooperatives are working on setting up viable, robust and
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trustful systems to promote open democracy.
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Technological cooperatives can be found at the intersection of both previous
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options as they have an economical goal aiming towards sustainability and also
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a political and social approach to technology. Besides, as most of their
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clients come from the third sector (non‐profit oriented, such as NGOs,
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associations, collectives ) they can help build products based on their
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specific needs and desires. Examples include [^3] Candela (Amnesty’s activist
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management app), GONG (project/budget manager for NGOs), Oigame (online
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petition platform), Nolotiro (platform to exchange things), Mecambio
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(repository of energetic, financing and connectivity alternatives).
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## Creating a coop...
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From now on, I will focus on the particular story of how we founded a free
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software cooperative, Dabne, in Spain – but simultaneously others were doing
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the same [^4]. In the 90’s, when Internet started to be accessible, several
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projects [^5] wonder what it meant to escape from established identities,
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self-organize online transgressing borders, create a collective brain.
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Hacklabs, in squats or association offices, were places to experiment, learn
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about things that were not easily available as not everyone had an Internet
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access yet, nor a computer. Until then hackers were barely visible and
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hacklabs became that meeting point where “isolated” hackers came in contact
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with social movements. A passionate hybrid came out of that, it knock a
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strong free/libre software community which had a high impact on society’s
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approach to free technology.
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Spain has quite a long tradition of agricultural and industrial cooperatives
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and at some point, some of us started thinking that our hobby could turn
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through cooperativism into a way of living. As each cooperative have their
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own agreements regarding work and labour, I will share the terms under which we
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founded our own:
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* We wanted to make a living but not at all costs.
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* We wanted a shared decision making process.
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* We wanted transparency.
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* We wanted to define our goals, and change them when needed.
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* We wanted everybody to be treated equal and in a fair way.
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* We wanted to continue learning, have fun and promote free software.
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* We didn’t want to be slaves of our work but work with others in a
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collaborative and cooperative way.
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With that in mind, we analysed how the “enterprise world” worked and wonder if
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we could become “business people” doing something that until then we did for
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free. A key element lied in the belief that we were going to found companies
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and step into “the market”, that thing governed by capitalist rules which we
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were deeply against. Vertigo. There were no previous references of free
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technology cooperatives neither money to invest (we needed 250€ each). There
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was a strong determination and will to not work for big capitalist companies
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that make you uniform, dull and slave to their rules. The libre/free software
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community was there so we were not alone, we had our computers and skills, our
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beliefs that free technologies empower society, that free software brings
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sovereignty and that the digital era should make knowledge accessible, open
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doors to people and bring democratic alternatives to societies. We were
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choosing a way of living not just a job.
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Dabne was founded in 2005 and it took us one year to understand what it meant
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to create a company, to manage a business and to decide a legal form that
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would favour our values of collaboration, transparency and responsibility. We
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went to workshops, talks, trainings, wrote business plans, attend appointments
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at the Chamber of Commerce. It seemed endless but little by little things
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began to take shape.
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Becoming a coop happens in a specific environment of cooperatives advisers
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which is by far more friendly and easy to ask than in the start up world for
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instance. Mantras like “success”, “fame”, “competitiveness”,“big profit” are
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not part of their vocabulary. They gave us a social approach, an
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understanding of how to address our impact and empower social organisations in
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the technical aspect.
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Our friends xsto.info had founded one year before a free software cooperative
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in Madrid, they were a small group of sysadmins, web developers, wireless
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experts also committed to the free software community. Their experience
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helped us, we could share our doubts, difficulties, and see how others had
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gone through similar situations.
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All in all, we managed to set up the company, and one good thing about
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software is that to start up, you basically need nothing but knowledge, a
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laptop and Internet access which means that costs are minimum – but the first
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challenge is to get the first clients. Through friends and contacts, we
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started our way, then the word spread mouth to mouth and slowly we had our
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group of clients.
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Our mainly technical profile made us look for alliances like with noez.org
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focused on design and innovation centred on people. With them we could share
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different perspectives of technologies and made our work more understandable.
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Then Dabne became in an unplanned way a women's free software cooperative. So
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far we do not know of any other women’s software development cooperative in
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Spain. This led Dabne to IT counselling: as active listeners we could make
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technologies comprehensible to non-technical people, adjust projects rhythms,
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be honest and able to say no when we cannot do it.
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## Building a multi-verse of communities and networks
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Cooperatives are most of the times fragile. But by working together, building
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and taking part in existing communities, creating and nurturing networks, they
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can strengthen their resilience and sustainability over time.
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Through a cooperatives’ platform (UMCTA) we got in contact with environmental,
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agroecology, social work and social adviser cooperatives willing to share
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their longer experience and knowledge. To become a coop also meant to enter
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the social and solidarity economy community [^6]. At that time Coop57-Madrid,
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an ethical financial service cooperative was founded and its goal has been to
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finance social and solidarity economy projects thanks to investments from
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civil society. Red de economía alternativa y solidaria (REAS) and the social
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market are networks for the production and distribution of goods and services
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based on the principles of social and solidarity economy. Among those we
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found ones concerned with social transformation, environmental sustainability,
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commons, gender equality, transparency, participation, self-organization,
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internal democracy.
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Interestingly, most social and solidarity economy networks share a lack of
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interest towards techno-political issues, making difficult to include the
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concerns of free software cooperatives in their agenda. Because of this, in
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2007 technical cooperatives set up the initiative “Software libre y ONGs”,
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dedicated to promoting the use of free software and free technologies. A call
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for breakfasts while having short talks complemented with a conference focused
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on Free/Libre software and Third sector organizations. At a bigger scale, in
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2008, the Federal Association of Free software companies (Asolif) and other
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platforms [^7] were created for promoting free software, create new business
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models and achieve responsible wealth.
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On the other hand, communities were built around each specific technology,
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programming language, content management system, operating system distribution
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or hardware, in order to advance knowledge, share good practices, come up with
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improvements, and welcome newbies. A small cooperative uses several
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technologies, so the best option would be to participate in the different
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technical communities and attend their events (conferences, meet-ups, etc).
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But being able to take part of IT community events requires people, time and
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money, which is very difficult to handle in a small cooperative with limited
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resources...
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Yet, time has shown that new people are founding cooperatives and collectives
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[^8] around free technology, so the wheel keeps rolling.
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## SWOT for coop
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I will recap dimensions introduced previously using a Strength Weakness
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Opportunities Threats (SWOT) analysis where:
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Strengths refers to characteristics and internal factors of the cooperative or
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project that give it an advantage over others:
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* Small team can change and adapt quickly
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* Flexible working environment (home, office, client’s office)
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* Ability to make decisions and define company goals
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* No initial capital needed
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* Define own timing
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* Good corporate image
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* Creativity
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* Curiosity
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* Have fun
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Weaknesses refers to characteristics of the cooperative or project that puts
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it at a disadvantage relative to others:
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* Strain of working
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* 24/7 involvement
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* No business management experience
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* No specialized profiles
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* Difficulty to grow
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* Communication
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* No financial cushion
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* No legal counselling
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Opportunities refers to external factors of the environment that the
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cooperative or project could exploit to its advantage:
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* Able to develop own ideas & projects
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* Ability to chose partners & projects
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* Be part of different networks & communities
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* Capacity to respond to concrete and uncommon needs and desires
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Threats are external elements in the environment that could cause trouble for
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the cooperative or project:
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* Exhaustion and burn out
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* Uncertainty about future
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* No update on technical issues
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* Price reduction
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## Now some open questions remain
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Cooperatives can make possible the building of new autonomous zones while
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responding to many challenges:
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* **Economy**: how to shape an economy of the commons, social and supportive?
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* **Self-organization**: how to be sustainable in a long term run, while
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questioning unquestionable truths like, consensus, horizontality,
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participation, leadership?
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* **Technological freedom**: how to fight for free software, digital rights,
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open knowledge and copyleft?
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As years pass by, technological cooperatives still looks like a small field
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based on strong personal relationships, which are key to building trust and
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assuming new challenges, but that can be also a limitation when there is a
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need to scale up. Besides, the precarious and uncertain economic situation
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makes it difficult to integrate new people. However, there is always a moment
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when the project grows and with it, should the team grow, how … or not?
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Then who should be part of the cooperative? Should they have specific
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technical skills? Should they have a versatile profile? Are technical skills
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always needed? Is it affordable and ethical to have apprenticeships?
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And what about decision making processes? Cooperativism is about sharing the
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decision making process but experience shows that not everyone wants to take
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part of it – should they be excluded from the cooperative? Is the ability to
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make decisions key to be part of a cooperative? Should all decisions be taken
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in common?
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These challenges give a comprehensible vision of the times to come, and the
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creation of these autonomous zones opens possibilities to different ways of
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understanding work, the commons, sustainability and economy.
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[^0]: As a reminder, free technologies, in a nutshell, are the technologies
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and services based on the freedom given by free/libre software and it’s
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philosophy:
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* **Freedom 0**: The freedom to run the program for any purpose.
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* **Freedom 1**: The freedom to study how the program works, and change it to
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make it do what you wish.
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* **Freedom 2**: The freedom to redistribute and make copies so you can help
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your neighbour.
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* **Freedom 3**: The freedom to improve the program, and release your
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improvements (and modified versions in general) to the public, so that
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the whole community benefits.
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[^1]: * http://riseup.net (USA)
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* http://autistici.org (ITA)
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* http://www.free.de/ (GER)
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* http://so36.net (GER)
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* https://www.boum.org/(FR)
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* http://nodo50.org (ESP)
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* http://pangea.org/ (ESP)
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* https://www.immerda.ch/ (CH)
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* https://mayfirst.org(USA)
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[^2]: * https://github.com/AyuntamientoMadrid/consul
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* https://github.com/AjuntamentdeBarcelona/decidim
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[^3]: * Candela: https://github.com/amnesty/candela
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* Gong: https://gong.org.es/projects/gor
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* Oigame: https://github.com/alabs/oigame
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* Nolotiro: https://github.com/alabs/nolotiro.org
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* Mecambio: http://www.mecambio.net/
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[^4]: * Dabne: http://dabne.net
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* Xsto.info: http://xsto.info/
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* aLabs: https://alabs.org/
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* Semilla del software libre: http://semillasl.net/
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* Enreda: http://enreda.coop/
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* Gnoxys: http://gnoxys.net/
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* Grupo Ikusnet
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[^5]: Some of the projects:
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* http://sindominio.net (ES)
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* http://autistici.org (IT)
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* http://samizdat.net/ (FR)
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* http://espora.org (MX)
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* http://thing.net (USA)
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[^6]: * http://coop57.coop/
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* http://www.economiasolidaria.org
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* https://madrid.mercadosocial.net/
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* http://tangente.coop/
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[^7]: * Asolif: http://www.asolif.es/
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* Esle: http://esle.eus/
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* Olatukoop: http://olatukoop.net
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[^8]: * Deconstruyendo: http://deconstruyendo.net/
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* Interzonas: https://interzonas.info
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* Talaios: http://talaios.net
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* Shareweb: http://shareweb.es
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* Reciclanet: http://www.reciclanet.org
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* Buenaventura: http://www.buenaventura.cc/
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* Itaca: http://www.itacaswl.com
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* Saregune: http://www.saregune.net
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* Cooptecniques: http://cooptecniques.net/
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Some other cooperatives, groups or initiatives working around free/libre
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technology:
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* Latino América Kefir: https://kefir.red/
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* Vedetas: vedetas.org
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* Cooperativa tierra comun: https://social.mayfirst.org/tierracomun
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