2021-02-25 ------------------------------------------------------------------ So, in the previous post about my little thought tool I defined a way to rate different structures along three axis'. How would digital social platforms be aligned within this system? It may seem that we can just say they are large, anarchic and socialistic, from the user's perspective. People are exchanging information freely with anyone who will listen. This is actually not the case. The like button makes this an exchange. Also, there are subgroups that have authority figures in them. If you post a message, you have a feeling of responsibility. You are the authority and have some role in keeping the discussion on topic. There's also another type of exchange that was not explicitly written in, but is more of an emerging phenomenon, or even some legacy leftover from the real social dynamics. There are special memes that you have to repeat. This memetic amplification buys you a place in a group. Also called virtue signalling, but I don't like that term as good as memetic amplification, since the latter seems more neutral and honest. I don't think it is about showing that you have virtue, it is about showing you will chant along, carry the same flag etc. In gopherspace we of course have no like button. People do sometimes refer other's posts and sometimes send email saying they appreciate the content. It's not clear to me if we should consider these more like "nods" or are they exchanges. I suppose the difference is sort of like the difference of money in a capitalist system versus money in a tribal system. I mean the physical object: money, coin. In a capitalist system, where money flows as an abstract value and emergent notation system of power relations, the object called "coin" is a different entity than in a premodern tribe that has traded something and now has the one coin in the village. If a person gives a coin to another, it may have completely different meaning in these two contexts. In the same way, I think that a compliment is not exchange when it happens within gopherspace. When there is a specific "compliment" button then it turns into something else. So, I would say that gopherspace is socialist. Is it anarchist, though? I suppose yes, it is anarchist when we look at the collection of gopherholes as a unit. Anyone can say whatever to the ether and anyone can listen or not listen. But within my gopherhole I do have authority over what I do. The gopherhole is an avatar. It is my face here, and comparable to my individual identity. It is still subject to SDF rules. I assume that if I went mad and started spreading hate speech, there would be some meeting or a vote in an anarchic socialistic group within SDF that would pass along their decision to the authoritarian capitalist system that it's boundaries have been breached. Actually, I take that back. The implementing "spine" of SDF is probably closer to authoritarian socialist system, while the capitalist component is anarchic to a large degree, since there is a give-what-you-can model, pledge, and more traditional capitalist systems of exchanges. This is not an exhaustive list of all possible components that could be rated within the framework. Just putting it out there as an example of how it actually gets a bit complicated quite fast. ------------------------------------------------------------------