Difference between revisions of "Telekommunisten"
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(Created page with "'''Telekommunisten''' is a Berlin-based collective whose work investigates the political economy of communications technology. Core themes include the incompatibility of c...") |
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'''Telekommunisten''' is a [[Berlin]]-based collective whose work investigates the political economy of communications technology. Core themes include the incompatibility of capitalism with free networks and free culture, and the increasing centralisation and enclosure that results, as well as the potential for distributed producers employing a collective stock of productive assets to provide an alternative economic basis for a free society. Members include [[Dmytri Kleiner]] and [[Baruch Gottlieb]]. [https://transmediale.de/content/telekommunisten (2017)] | '''Telekommunisten''' is a [[Berlin]]-based collective whose work investigates the political economy of communications technology. Core themes include the incompatibility of capitalism with free networks and free culture, and the increasing centralisation and enclosure that results, as well as the potential for distributed producers employing a collective stock of productive assets to provide an alternative economic basis for a free society. Members include [[Dmytri Kleiner]] and [[Baruch Gottlieb]]. [https://transmediale.de/content/telekommunisten (2017)] | ||
+ | |||
+ | ; Publications | ||
+ | * Dmytri Kleiner, ''[https://monoskop.org/log/?p=1407 The Telekommunist Manifesto]'', Amsterdam: Institute of Network Cultures, 2010. | ||
; Links | ; Links | ||
* https://telekommunisten.net/ | * https://telekommunisten.net/ | ||
* https://twitter.com/telekommunisten | * https://twitter.com/telekommunisten |
Latest revision as of 19:33, 12 November 2022
Telekommunisten is a Berlin-based collective whose work investigates the political economy of communications technology. Core themes include the incompatibility of capitalism with free networks and free culture, and the increasing centralisation and enclosure that results, as well as the potential for distributed producers employing a collective stock of productive assets to provide an alternative economic basis for a free society. Members include Dmytri Kleiner and Baruch Gottlieb. (2017)
- Publications
- Dmytri Kleiner, The Telekommunist Manifesto, Amsterdam: Institute of Network Cultures, 2010.
- Links