In loving, living memory, John Melançon 1928 – 2007
[Very initial first rough start of a beginning of a draft.]
PWGD rules for being a PWGD service:
1. People rule. People who use your service can communicate with everyone else should they make a collective decision to do so. (This is why the democratically moderated communication is the base functionality.)
2. Free software (ideally, Affero GPL).
3. Transparency in the service's decisionmaking. Even though the code is viewable by all, there is a further need to 1) make processes clear to non-technical (and simply time-bound) people and 2) strive for transparency in decisions about the tool.
Note: You do *not* have to make decisions about the tool's feature sets or other things democratically. Aside for the necessity of most any open source free software project to be a do-ocracy, innovation and effectiveness have roles for individual and small group vision, creativity, and creating.
For an organization, rather than a service provider, it is the same three rules become guiding principles. Only the first can be a definite condition of being part of the PWGD network:
The web development firm Agaric Design Collective offers 50% off projects for people who give a damn about what we're trying to do and agree to follow these principles.
[Note: This does not mean they can do your project, as all web consultancies can only do a fraction of projects that come their way– from people paying full price or not.]
Update: I put this more succinctly in an e-mail to some true movement builders, the people at May First People Link, describing the new distillation of purpose: "it's really one point: give up some of your organization's control over communicating with the people you serve or who work for you, so that we can all build a more powerful movement together."
Comments
Thanks, Ben. FOR PWGD,
I replied:
To Boston Indymedia
To repeat a point in here so that I do not forget it: I am now limiting my volunteer and subsidized time to organizations and groups that can get on board with People Who Give a Damn's vision for building a network of networks based on democratic communication.