Podcast appearances and mentions of Nathan Schneider

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Best podcasts about Nathan Schneider

Latest podcast episodes about Nathan Schneider

Sustain
Episode 272: Maintainer Month 2025 with Sarah Rainsberger of Astro

Sustain

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 6, 2025 39:46


Guest Sarah Rainsberger Panelists Richard Littauer | Abby Mayes | Eriol Fox Show Notes In this special Maintainer Month episode of Sustain, hosts Richard, Abby, and Eriol talk with guest, Sarah Rainsberger, a documentation lead at Astro, who shares her journey from teaching high school mathematics to becoming an open source contributor. Sarah elaborates on her approach to documentation, emphasizing the importance of clear, supportive, and inclusive communication to onboard new contributors effectively. She also discusses using low-tech tools like Chromebooks and cloud-based editors for open source contributions. The episode highlights the strategies employed by the Astro Docs team to recognize and value contributions. Press download now to hear more! [00:02:30] Sarah shares her background, role at Astro, how she got involved in documentation that started by fixing a bad choir website, and why she chose Astro over Gatsby and quickly became a key contributor. [00:06:49] She reflects on the moment she connected her work with the concept of “open source.” [00:07:54] Sarah talks about becoming a leader using Chromebook, taking lessons on Scrimba, and using cloud tools like CodeSandbox and Gitpod, the Astro community embracing her methods, and how she built a reputation as someone making meaningful contributions regardless of hardware. [00:14:24] Sarah explains how docs are “self-serve support” and essential to project success. [00:16:28] The conversation turns to combatting the stigma that docs are low value and Sarah addresses the false perception that documentation isn't real development. [00:18:28] Sarah shares that Astro has over 1,000 docs contributors and details their intentional process of welcoming, crediting, and celebrating new contributors. [00:24:37] How does Astro handle lower-quality contributions? Astro uses the motto: “Not worse than what we had before.” They edit or mentor rather than reject, to build confidence and retain contributors. [00:29:12] Astro maintains a separate documentation site (“D Squared”) that outlines its processes for contributing to documentation. [00:33:25] Sarah shares where to find her work at the Astro Docs and where to find her. Quotes [00:05:26] “If I'm going in, let's go all in.” [00:12:50] “I have chosen to maintain low tech.” [00:12:59] “I am known for my evil devices.” [00:14:36] “Docs are so important to a project that you want someone else to use or contribute to.” [00:15:28] “Docs is the most scalable type of support that you can have.” [00:16:37] “Everyone complains about docs until it's someone else's project.” [00:26:51] “PRs don't just fall out of the sky; they are effort, and they are work.” [00:27:05] “There is some motivation behind this PR.” [00:31:41] “Several of our maintainers started by translating the docs.” [00:31:49] “If you want to find mistakes in your English docs, you want translators.” Spotlight [00:34:40] Abby's' spotlight is CommunityRule. [00:35:04] Eriol's spotlight is State of Docs. [00:35:19] Richard's spotlight is Nathan Schneider and the Protocol Oral History Project. [00:36:08] Sarah's spotlight is Better GitHub Co-Authors. Links SustainOSS (https://sustainoss.org/) podcast@sustainoss.org (mailto:podcast@sustainoss.org) richard@sustainoss.org (mailto:richard@sustainoss.org) SustainOSS Discourse (https://discourse.sustainoss.org/) SustainOSS Mastodon (https://mastodon.social/tags/sustainoss) SustainOSS Bluesky (https://bsky.app/profile/sustainoss.bsky.social) SustainOSS LinkedIn (https://www.linkedin.com/company/sustainoss/) Open Collective-SustainOSS (Contribute) (https://opencollective.com/sustainoss) Richard Littauer Socials (https://www.burntfen.com/2023-05-30/socials) Abby Cabunoc Mayes GitHub (https://abbycabs.github.io/) Eriol Fox GitHub (https://erioldoesdesign.github.io/) Sarah Rainsberger Website (https://www.rainsberger.ca/) Sarah Rainsberger Mastodon (https://mastodon.social/@sarah11918) Non-code contributions are the secret to open source success (The ReadME Project) (https://github.com/readme/featured/open-source-non-code-contributions) Astro (https://astro.build/) Astro Docs (https://docs.astro.build/en/getting-started/) Contribute to Astro (https://docs.astro.build/en/contribute/) Gitpod (https://www.gitpod.io/) Scrimba (https://scrimba.com/home) Hugo Server (https://gohugo.io/commands/hugo_server/) CommunityRule (https://communityrule.info/) State of Docs (https://www.stateofdocs.com/2025/introduction-basic-stats) Better GitHub Co-Authors (https://github.com/delucis/better-github-coauthors) Sustain Podcast-Episode 85: Geoffrey Huntley and Sustaining OSS with Gitpod (https://podcast.sustainoss.org/85) Sustain Podcast- 2 episodes featuring Nathan Schneider (https://podcast.sustainoss.org/guests/nathan-schneider) Credits Produced by Richard Littauer (https://www.burntfen.com/) Edited by Paul M. Bahr at Peachtree Sound (https://www.peachtreesound.com/) Show notes by DeAnn Bahr Peachtree Sound (https://www.peachtreesound.com/) Special Guest: Sarah Rainsberger.

Reimagining the Internet
110. Is there hope for democracy in a social media-driven world? Nathan Schneider sees it every day.

Reimagining the Internet

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 2, 2025 48:50


Nathan Schneider has spent roughly 15 years as a journalist and academic trying to understand democracy in the 21st century through Occupy Wall Street, cooperatives, the blockchain, and currently, federated social media. This week on Reimagining, Nathan explains how poor democracy on major social media platforms has eroded our actual democratic governance, and how practicing […]

The Laura Flanders Show
Resisting Trump & Authoritarianism: The “Beautiful Solutions” Toolbox (Full Conversation)

The Laura Flanders Show

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 21, 2025 47:01


Discover effective survival strategies under authoritarianism in "Beautiful Solutions: A Toolbox for Liberation," featuring insights from global contributors and activists.This show is made possible by you! To become a sustaining member go to https://LauraFlanders.org/donate Thank you for your continued support!How do people survive authoritarianism? With harsher policing, market chaos, mass layoffs and healthcare cuts, Americans are fearing the worst under Donald Trump and Elon Musk, and many are seeking effective survival tools. Arriving just on time, “Beautiful Solutions: A Toolbox for Liberation” was published last year by OR Books. It's packed with collective wisdom for surviving, and in so doing, creating a more just, equitable society. With over 70 contributions from the Americas, Africa, Asia and Indigenous peoples around the world, change is everywhere, it can start anywhere, and as “Beautiful Solutions” reminds us, “our problems are global and interconnected, and our solutions must be too.” To expand on some of the models in the book, Laura Flanders is joined by one of the co-editors Eli Feghali, former director of the New Economy Coalition, and contributor Nikki Marín Baena, co-founder and co-director at Siembra NC, a Latino base building and political organization in North Carolina. Lauren Hudson co-hosts. Hudson is a cooperative and Solidarity Economy organizer and researcher and teaches at the CUNY School of Labor and Urban Studies.“. . . How do we dream our big dreams about not just what we're fighting against, but what we're fighting for, and really hold onto those and also understand that the little projects and the little connections that we make with each other, those are the only things that can become those big dreams.” - Nikki Marín Baena“The only thing that I feel some fear about in this moment is that maybe some of us will give up ground that we don't need to give up out of anticipatory fear of what might happen . . . That's not to say that the risks aren't real, that's not to say that the plans that are being telegraphed and the news aren't real, but it's to say that we should not let go of what we fought for until we absolutely have to . . . We just have to trust each other and trust ourselves.” - Eli Feghali“I have to think as an educator . . . how do we teach this moment? . . . I think what [my students] will say is this was a rupture, and it was a rupture that forced many of us back into some corners, but it was also an invitation to participate in the world in a different way.” - Lauren HudsonGuests:•. Eli Feghali, Co-Editor, Beautiful Solutions; Former Co-Director, New Economy Coalition•. Nikki Marín Baena, Co-Director, Siembra NC•. Lauren Hudson, Organizer & Researcher, Cooperative and Solidarity Economy Watch the episode cut airing on PBS stations across the country at our YouTube channelSubscribe to episode notes via Patreon *Recommended book:“Beautiful Solutions: A Toolbox for Liberation” by Elandria Williams, Rachel Plattus, Eli Feghali and Nathan Schneider, *Get the Book(*Bookshop is an online bookstore with a mission to financially support local, independent bookstores. The LF Show is an affiliate of bookshop.org and will receive a small commission if you click through and make a purchase.)Related Laura Flanders Show Episodes:•  Cooperation vs Authoritarianism in Spain, Watch / Listen•  Taking Power vs Making Power: A Special Report from Greece, Watch / Listen  •  Armed with Art: Taking Down the Wall of Whiteness, Watch / ListenRelated Articles and Resources:•  Beautiful  Trouble, Sister Project to Beautiful Solutions Learn More•  Pandas And The Informal Economy of Mexico, by Medium• Prepare to Oppose Trump's Immigrant Purge, by Nikki Marín Baena, November 22, 2024, Progressive Laura Flanders and Friends Crew: Laura Flanders, along with Sabrina Artel, Jeremiah Cothren, Veronica Delgado, Janet Hernandez, Jeannie Hopper, Sarah Miller, Nat Needham, David Neuman, and Rory O'Conner. FOLLOW Laura Flanders and FriendsInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/lauraflandersandfriends/Blueky: https://bsky.app/profile/lfandfriends.bsky.socialFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/LauraFlandersAndFriends/Tiktok: https://www.tiktok.com/@lauraflandersandfriendsYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCFLRxVeYcB1H7DbuYZQG-lgLinkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/company/lauraflandersandfriendsPatreon: https://www.patreon.com/lauraflandersandfriendsACCESSIBILITY - The broadcast edition of this episode is available with closed captioned by clicking here for our YouTube Channel

Kodsnack in English
Kodsnack 613 - Opt-in nations, with Corin Ism

Kodsnack in English

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 2, 2024 29:48


Recorded on-stage at Øredev 2024, Fredrik talks to Corin Ism about the power of developers to change the world for the better. Much of what we do is building virtual worlds - virtual nations if you will - and creating and enforcing their rules and power structures. We should take that power and responsibility seriously and think about what we build. If you think about the interfaces you build as essentially being the law in the system, will that change how you build them? We can easily fall into thinking about “the algorithm” as if it was some sort of rain god we pray to but can’t control - but we can and should use our control in everything we build. We think of things like evil puppet masters when we think of control, but everything we build controls in some way, and pretending we can abdicate control doesn’t help anyone. Corin talks about how to think positively in terms of making user of our power, how to see the possibilities, and where to look for inspiration. Oh, and don’t fall into the trap of thinking that what we have right now is set in stone and can’t and never should change. Let’s keep iterating! Finally, we talk a bit of disconnecting from the internet to do deeper and more focused work. Many thanks to Øredev for inviting Kodsnack again, they paid for the trip and the editing time of these keynote recordings, but have no say about the content of these or any other episodes. Thank you Cloudnet for sponsoring our VPS! Comments, questions or tips? We a re @kodsnack, @tobiashieta, @oferlund and @bjoreman on Twitter, have a page on Facebook and can be emailed at info@kodsnack.se if you want to write longer. We read everything we receive. If you enjoy Kodsnack we would love a review in iTunes! You can also support the podcast by buying us a coffee (or two!) through Ko-fi. Links Øredev All the presentation videos from Øredev 2024 Corin The era of the virtual world builder - Corin’s keynote The Chinese social credit system ESG - environmental, social, and governance ratings Liquid democracy Plato Support us on Ko-fi! Hamilton the musical The slow internet Platform cooperativeism Nathan Schneider Titles Thinking about what we’re building These aren’t inconsequential products Interfaces are basically the law Completely different worlds This is something I can change Building a maze for the user From a governance perspective The rest is footnotes We iterate We can do a lot Opt-in nations Part of the wealth nation Perform life

Everything Co-op with Vernon Oakes
Nathan Schneider discusses the role cooperatives play in creating a cooperative economy

Everything Co-op with Vernon Oakes

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 8, 2024 55:34


October 17, 2024 Nathan Schneider, a media studies professor at the University of Colorado Boulder, explores the significant role cooperatives have in restoring our belief in a creative and robust democracy. As a professor at the University of Colorado Boulder, Nathan Schneider leads the Media Economies Design Lab and is deeply involved with his students. He is an author on subjects like online democracy, cooperative businesses, the Occupy movement, and spirituality, and has edited publications on cryptocurrencies and cooperatives. His extensive writing spans articles in both popular magazines and scholarly journals, demonstrating his dedication to documenting ideas and investigating the practical applications of ideal worlds and the power of the everyday imagination. Schneider considers each word a hypothesis and a test, fully conscious that every utterance shapes our world irreversibly. His collaborative efforts in fostering a democratic economy keep him connected and responsible.

Chasing Elephants Audio Podcast
Hurricane Helene & Milton: The Aftermath (Florida Baptist Convention Disaster Relief) | Ep. 215

Chasing Elephants Audio Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 18, 2024 37:14


This two-part series consist of interviews with some of our disaster relief friends and partners, who are boots on the ground and being the hands of feet of Jesus. These interviews provide an in-depth discussion on the devastation that so many in Florida and North Carolina are still experiencing. For this interview, we talked to Nathan Schneider (nschneider@flbaptist.org), who is the Lead Catalyst for Next Generation Ministries at the Florida Baptist Convention. If you are interested in getting involved with disaster relief efforts in Florida, please visit the following website: https://flbaptist.org/dr-volunteer/

Accidental Gods
Governable Spaces: Solve for democracy on the internet and our outer politics becomes a lot more sane - with Nathan Schneider

Accidental Gods

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 7, 2024 65:55


The Western world is in a crisis of democracy - but we learn a lot of our principles from the ways we interact online and the internet is essentially a feudal space that gives absolute power to a few and robs the many of agency.  Nathan Schneidersuggests that if we were able to shape a more liquid democracy online, our experience of generative interactions would spill over into the outer world. Has to be worth a try, right?  So how do we do it? As we spend increasing amounts of our time, energy and emotional bandwidth online, so we are increasingly exposed to what passes for democracy online.  And then we internalise the inherent autocracy and are at risk of exporting this to the real world.  So what can we do to change things? What's democracy for in the first place and how can we experiment with increasing the scope and scale of agency and accountability so that we can build trust in the processes that define our lives.   Nathan Schneider is a professor of media studies at the University of Colorado Boulder, where he directs the Media Economies Design Lab and the Masters program in Media and Public Engagement. The book that drew me here is 'Governable Spaces: Democratic Design for online life',  - which you can buy as a paper copy, but you can also download for free.  He has also written 'Everything for Everyone: The Radical Tradition that is Shaping the Next Economy', 'Thank you Anarchy: Notes from the Occupy Movement' and God in Proof, the Story of a Search from the Ancients to the Internet.  He's edited other books about crypto and co-ops, writes numerous articles and his blog posts are essential reading. He serves on the boards of Metagov, Start.coop, and Waging Nonviolence. Follow his work on social media at @ntnsndr or at his websiteIn essence, discovering Nathan has been like discovering the well of life... He's deeply enmeshed in that liminal space where the best of human technologies meet the leading edge of digital technologies and he brings to it the sense of deep wonder, humility and humour that I've only otherwise met in meditators or contemplative mystics.   I feel I only scratched the surface of his thinking in this conversation and would dearly like to go back for a second round, but only after I've re-read everything he's written - and dived into some of the online spaces.   In the meantime, as a taste of what's possible, please do enjoy this podcast. Nathan's website https://nathanschneider.info/Governable Spaces https://nathanschneider.info/books/governable-spaces/Everything for Everyone https://nathanschneider.info/books/everything-for-everyone/Thank you, Anarchy https://nathanschneider.info/books/thank-you-anarchy/University of Colorado Media Economies Design Lab https://www.colorado.edu/lab/medlab/MetaGov https://metagov.org/

Rehash: A Web3 Podcast
S8 E10 | Organizational Design and Governance Frameworks w/Amy Jung (Safe)

Rehash: A Web3 Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 20, 2024 54:57


On this episode of Rehash, we're speaking with Amy Jung, Governance Lead at Safe and an OG in the Ethereum and specifically DAO space, about all things organization design, governance, and her hottest takes about DAOs.Amy joined the Safe team back in March of this year and also has her own DAO operations and strategy consultancy called Shared Realities, where she helps organizations and teams with their progressive decentralization strategy and execution, organizational design, and community development. Previously, she worked at MakerDAO for two years as their Head of Community Development and ConsenSys as their Design Operations Lead.In this episode, Amy reveals many of her strategies and frameworks she uses to help organizations decentralize, starting with questions any organization should ask themselves to decide first and foremost whether it even makes sense for them to decentralize.Amy presents information in really clearly thought out frameworks that anyone can take back to their organization and implement, and her dedication to the space and deep expertise in DAO organization design is unmatched. COLLECT THIS EPISODEhttps://www.rehashweb3.xyz/ SUBSCRIBE TO REHASH PODCAST CLUB (RPC)https://hypersub.withfabric.xyz/collection/rehash-podcast-club-s9c8bb45vg1s?referrer=0x4b65caf44055f910fd94eae4f14307ffe3233b12 SPONSORS:Forage FOLLOW USRehash: https://twitter.com/rehashweb3Diana: https://twitter.com/ddwchenAmy: https://twitter.com/itsamyjungSafe: https://twitter.com/safe LINKSS8 E1 | Multiparty Ops Onchain w/Jonah Erlich (Den): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ErdxzFt1rEo“Working in Public” by Nadia Eghbal: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Working-Public-Making-Maintenance-Software/dp/0578675862Rehash Podcast Club on Hypersub: https://hypersub.withfabric.xyz/collection/rehash-podcast-club-s9c8bb45vg1s?referrer=0x4b65caf44055f910fd94eae4f14307ffe3233b12“Owning is the New Sharing” by Nathan Schneider: https://nathanschneider.info/2014/12/owning-is-the-new-sharing/ TIMESTAMPS0:00 Intro2:53 Amy's background in DAOs5:26 Frameworks for decentralized organizational design13:20 How do DAOs scale?17:37 How to balance growth with quality20:08 How to make tradeoffs between decentralized and centralized components of DAOs27:48 Decentralization process for Safe38:28 Compensation in DAOs44:22 Best and worst examples of governance in DAOs48:05 Amy's hot take on the one thing all DAOs are doing wrong49:32 Can You Not52:11 Follow Amy DISCLAIMER: The information in this video is the opinion of the speaker(s) only and is for informational purposes only. You should not construe it as investment advice, tax advice, or legal advice, and it does not represent any entity's opinion but those of the speaker(s). For investment or legal advice, please seek a duly licensed professional.

Gottesdienst
Gottesdienst vom 19.05.2024

Gottesdienst

Play Episode Listen Later May 19, 2024 49:53


SRF überträgt den Pfingstgottesdienst live aus der Pfarrkirche St. Georg in Küsnacht im Kanton Zürich. Pfarrer Karl Wolf erinnert in seiner Predigt an die Kraft des Heiligen Geistes für die Jünger Jesu damals und die Menschen heute. Angst und verschlossene Türen kennzeichnen die Gemeinschaft der Jünger in Jerusalem damals und die Welt heute. Die Evangelien berichten, wie der verwundete Auferstandene bei den Jüngerinnen und Jüngern eintritt. Er zeigt ihnen seine Wunden und spricht mit ihnen. Pfarrer Karl Wolf zeigt in seiner Predigt, wie Versöhnung möglich ist, wenn Menschen es wagen mit Jesus ihre eigenen Wunden und ihre Verantwortung anzuschauen. Pfingsten erinnert an die Sendung des Heiligen Geistes. Der sanfte und kraftvolle Hauch Gottes ermöglicht den Aposteln eine vollkommen neue Erfahrung. Gottes Heiliger Geist will in dieser unfriedlichen Welt einen neuen Anfang mit ihnen ermöglichen. Wenn Menschen sich ergreifen lassen und die Wunden der Menschen von heute wahrnehmen, kann in ihnen heilsame Versöhnung und ein neues Miteinander entstehen. Der Kirchenchor der Pfarrei St. Georg und ein Bläserensemble musizieren unter der Leitung von Joachim Schwander. Es erklingen die «Messe Breve» von Leo Delibes sowie Gemeindegesänge zu Pfingsten. Die Orgel spielt Nathan Schneider.

The Blockchain Socialist
Governable Spaces: Designing Democracy for the Internet

The Blockchain Socialist

Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2024 44:56


Send me your questions or comments about the show and I'll read them out sometime. I´m once again speaking with Nathan Schneider about his newly released book, Governable Spaces: Democratic Design for Online Life.  In Governable Spaces, Nathan Schneider argues that the internet has been plagued by a phenomenon he calls “implicit feudalism”: a bias, both cultural and technical, for building communities as fiefdoms. The consequences of this arrangement matter far beyond online spaces themselves, as feudal defaults train us to give up on our communities' democratic potential, inclining us to be more tolerant of autocratic tech CEOs and authoritarian tendencies among politicians. But online spaces could be sites of a creative, radical, and democratic renaissance. Using media archaeology, political theory, and participant observation, Schneider shows how the internet can learn from governance legacies of the past to become a more democratic medium, responsive and inventive unlike anything that has come before. The book is freely available in digital format on Nathan´s website here.If you liked the podcast be sure to give it a review on your preferred podcast platform. If you find content like this important consider donating to my Patreon starting at just $3 per month. It takes quite a lot of my time and resources so any amount helps. Follow me on Twitter (@TBSocialist) or Mastodon (@theblockchainsocialist@social.coop) and join the r/CryptoLeftists subreddit and Discord to join the discussion.Support the Show.ICYMI I've written a book about, no surprise, blockchains through a left political framework! The title is Blockchain Radicals: How Capitalism Ruined Crypto and How to Fix It and is being published through Repeater Books, the publishing house started by Mark Fisher who's work influenced me a lot in my thinking. The book is officially published and you use this linktree to find where you can purchase the book based on your region / country.

Techdirt
Democratic Design For Online Spaces

Techdirt

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 9, 2024 48:39


One very important thing to understand in the conversation about online speech is that there are many different kinds of online communities, big and small, and they all have their own needs when it comes to rules and governance. This fact is a key element of a new book, Governable Spaces: Democratic Design for Online Life by media studies professor Nathan Schneider, and this week Nathan joins the podcast to talk about how democracy does (and doesn't) manifest in online communities.

The Sunday Show
Nathan Schneider on Democratic Design for Online Life

The Sunday Show

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 6, 2024 39:10


On this show, when we talk about technology and democracy, guests are often talking about the relationship between technology and existing democratic systems. Today's guest wants us to think more expansively about what doing democracy means and the role the technology can play in it. Nathan Schneider, an assistant professor of media studies at the University of Colorado Boulder, is the author of Governable Spaces: Democratic Design for Online Life.

Frontiers of Commoning, with David Bollier
Nathan Schneider on Building Democratic Governance on the Internet

Frontiers of Commoning, with David Bollier

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 1, 2024 50:18


To counter the "implicit feudalism" that is the norm on the Internet, activist-scholar Nathan Schneider explains the potential of democratic governance in online life and its importance to "real world" democracy. A professor of media studies at the University of Colorado Boulder, Schneider argues that "online spaces could be sites of creative, radical and democratic renaissance." But this will require progressive activists to heed the lessons of various social and decolonial movements throughout history, and to find the resolve to use the technologies in creative ways.More on the commons at Bollier.org.  

Background Briefing with Ian Masters
March 21, 2024 - Nathan Schneider | Thomas Mockaitis | Dr. Lance Dodes

Background Briefing with Ian Masters

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 21, 2024 60:15


Can the Public Own Giant Tech Companies Who Operate as Monopolies? | In a Major Shift, the US Drafts a UN Resolution For an Immediate Ceasefire in Gaza and a Hostage Deal | The Ethical Obligation to Warn the Public About Trump's Dementia backgroundbriefing.org/donate twitter.com/ianmastersmedia facebook.com/ianmastersmedia

USF BCM
Goodness | Bear Fruit

USF BCM

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 12, 2024 38:12


Our friend Nathan Schneider joins us to talk about the goodness of God and how this can be present in our own lives as we follow Him!

The Daily Sun-Up
Author Nathan Schneider talks about his book examining online networks and democracy

The Daily Sun-Up

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2024 28:52


Today - Since it's Friday, it's time once again for a look at Colorado's literary landscape. This week Sun writer and editor Kevin Simpson chats with an author whose latest book examines democracy, both in online spaces and beyond.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Sustain
Episode 222: Nathan Schneider on his new book "Governable Spaces: Democratic Design for Online Life"

Sustain

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2024 36:38


Guest Nathan Schneider Panelist Richard Littauer | Leslie Hawthorne Show Notes In this episode of Sustain, host Richard is joined by Leslie Hawthorne, and features a discussion with guest Nathan Schneider, an assistant professor of media studies and the director of the Media Economics Design Lab at the University of Colorado Boulder, about his new book,”Governable Spaces: Democratic Design for Online Life.” The conversation explores the motivations of the book, which stems from Nathan's experiences in running online spaces and his realization of the inadequacies in tools available for practicing democracy in these spaces. Richard, Leslie, and Nathan delve into the historical development of online spaces, the challenges in creating democratic governance online, and the potential impact on global democracy. The discussion also touches on open source sustainability, governance failures and potentials in open-source projects such as Git, and the role of protocols in shaping online communities. Additionally, Nathan argues for diverse forms of governance and shares examples of successes in opensource governance. Press download now to hear more! [00:01:40] Nathan explains the motivation for his book, “Governable Spaces.” [00:05:24] The discussion dives into the concept of the book with Richard questioning the practical existence of such spaces based on the book's definition. Nathan confirms the book focusses on the absence of democratic infrastructures in digital lives and the lack of support for cooperatives online. [00:09:09] Richard relates the discussion on culture and democracy to media archaeology and questions how this relates to open source sustainability. Nathan acknowledges the importance of the topic and brings up the example of Git to discuss absences in open source governance. [00:13:41] Leslie asks Nathan to elaborate on his views regarding the lack of governance and democratic sharing of responsibilities within the structure that have developed, particularly in open source. Nathan responds by identifying two approaches to this issue. He first addresses the cultural aspect, and then the technical and legal aspects. [00:16:44] Leslie further inquires whether Nathan has considered in his book that the lack of governance could be due to the backgrounds of early internet designers, who were not from marginalized or vulnerable populations and thus did not prioritize governance structures. He talks about the colonization metaphor in the early internet's language, specifically the term “homesteading,” and how it reflects a flawed understanding of democracy and governance. [00:18:18] Nathan mentions Jo Freeman's essay, “The Tyranny of Structurelessness,” which warns against the absence of explicit governance leading to the rise of implicit governance by those already privileged. He also emphasizes that despite the dominant structures, there are examples of democratic practices in online spaces, especially among non-dominant identity groups. [00:20:33] Richard questions the robustness of democracy and brings up a point from Nathan's book that raised some questions to him. He also wonders it was difficult for Nathan to use terms that don't hold up under scrutiny for his book, and Nathan acknowledges the complexity of the term “feudalism,” and expresses gratitude for medieval governance structures. [00:24:50] Nathan and Richard discuss the topic of crypto, and Richard appreciates how Nathan's book puts together the chapter on crypto with transformative justice and brings up that the book doesn't go deep into the specifics of internet protocols. Nathan expresses a strong interest in protocols as a means of social organization and elaborates on the significance of crypto and blockchain protocols in breaking away from traditional centralized models. [00:30:30] Leslie asks Nathan about the Fediverse and federated social networking. Nathan shares his positive view on the Fediverse and discusses his experience co-founding a Mastodon server, acknowledging the potential for creating governable spaces while also recognizing the challenges in ensuring democratic governance. [00:32:40] Find out where you can get Nathan's book for free and to purchase. Quotes [00:02:52] “The tools we have are really crappy for practicing democracy.” [00:05:57] “While working on this book, I started realizing how much my interest is in what we don't have, it's in the absence of our digital lives.” Spotlight [00:33:40] Leslie's spotlight is her community devroom co-organizers for FOSDEM'24: Shirley Bailes and Laura Czajkowski. [00:34:04] Richard's spotlight is the Vermont Arts Council. [00:34:32] Nathan's spotlight is a group called the Exit to Community collective. Links SustainOSS (https://sustainoss.org/) SustainOSS Twitter (https://twitter.com/SustainOSS?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5Eauthor) SustainOSS Discourse (https://discourse.sustainoss.org/) podcast@sustainoss.org (mailto:podcast@sustainoss.org) SustainOSS Mastodon (https://mastodon.social/tags/sustainoss) Open Collective-SustainOSS (Contribute) (https://opencollective.com/sustainoss) Richard Littauer Socials (https://www.burntfen.com/2023-05-30/socials) Leslie Hawthorne LinkedIn (https://www.linkedin.com/in/lesliehawthorn/?originalSubdomain=de) Nathan Schneider Website (https://nathanschneider.info/) Nathan Schneider X/Twitter (https://twitter.com/ntnsndr?lang=en) Governable Spaces-Democratic Design for Online Life by Nathan Schneider (https://www.ucpress.edu/book/9780520393943/governable-spaces) The Tyranny of Structurelessness by Jo Freeman (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Tyranny_of_Structurelessness) Start.coop (https://www.start.coop/) FOSDEM '24 Community devroom (https://fosdem.org/2024/schedule/track/community/) Shirley Bailes LinkedIn (https://www.linkedin.com/in/shirleybailes/) Laura Czajkowski LinkedIn (https://www.linkedin.com/in/lauraczajkowski/) Vermont Arts Council (https://www.vermontartscouncil.org/) Exit to Community (https://e2c.how/) Credits Produced by Richard Littauer (https://www.burntfen.com/) Edited by Paul M. Bahr at Peachtree Sound (https://www.peachtreesound.com/) Show notes by DeAnn Bahr Peachtree Sound (https://www.peachtreesound.com/) Special Guest: Nathan Schneider.

Team Human
Nathan Schneider

Team Human

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2024 72:38


Director of the Media Economies Design Lab and author of Governable Spaces: Democratic Design for Online Life., Nathan Schneider shows us how the styles of governance embedded in our online platforms change the way we understand governance in real life.

Glad You Asked
Did Mary experience labor pains?

Glad You Asked

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 22, 2023 28:31


When Mary gave birth to Jesus, what was it like? Did she experience the same anxiety, fear, mess, and pain that any woman can expect when preparing for childbirth? Many people might find this question strange. Of course Mary, being fully human, and not God, would share in all the usual feelings and emotions—both pleasant and unpleasant—associated with bringing a baby into the world. Wouldn't she? For centuries of church history, many Catholics would have answered this question with a resounding “no,” or at least with a “probably not.” This is because of a complex intertwining of beliefs and theories, some associated with theologies of sin, others associated with ideas about women's bodies. Even today, there are many Catholics who are appalled at the idea that Mary experienced pain when she gave birth to baby Jesus. On this final episode of this season of the Glad You Asked podcast, the hosts talk to theologian Julia Feder about the background of this tradition, why it has been so popular among some Catholics, what the church actually teaches, and what's at stake for people trying to assess what they should believe. Feder is the assistant director of the Center for the Study of Spirituality, as well as an associate professor of religious studies and theology at Saint Mary's College, and is the author of Incarnating Grace: A Theology of Healing from Sexual Trauma (Fordham University Press). Learn more about this topic and read some of Feder's writing in the links below.  “The Pregnancy of Mary,” by Nathan Schneider https://www.americamagazine.org/issue/pregnancy-mary  “There would have been a midwife at the stable,” by Christine Schenk https://www.ncronline.org/opinion/simply-spirit/there-would-have-been-midwife-stable  “What are we missing in our depictions of the nativity?” by Kelley Nikondeha https://uscatholic.org/articles/202212/what-are-we-missing-in-our-depictions-of-the-nativity/  “Mary, Mary, quite contrary,” by Elizabeth Johnson https://uscatholic.org/articles/201101/mary-mary-quite-contrary/  “Reclaiming the virgin martyrs from purity culture,” by Julia Feder https://uscatholic.org/articles/202302/reclaiming-the-virgin-martyrs-from-purity-culture/  Glad You Asked is sponsored by the Claretian Missionaries. https://claretiansusa.org https://myclaret.org   

USF BCM
Jesus Is The Bread of Life | John 6

USF BCM

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 11, 2023 32:29


Tonight we're kicking off our new series, "Jesus Is"! Nathan Schneider, our previous BCM director, brings us through John to talk about Jesus as the bread of life.

The Ownership Economy
Episode 061 - Why DAOs (and crypto) need a Policy Platform more than ever, with Nathan Schneider

The Ownership Economy

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 15, 2023 73:14


In this episode of the Ownership Economy, Jahed and Martin welcome back Nathan Schneider, a thought leader who enlightened us on the intricacies of platform cooperatives, DAOs, and the burgeoning Ownership Economy in our 2021 conversation. In this episode, we catch up with Nathan to understand the remarkable transformations that have swept these spaces over the last two years, and how these shifts have influenced his perspective. Together, we dissect Nathan's profound assertion about the dire need for democratic financial mechanisms analogous to venture capital and a supporting software stack for enhancing democratic governance. We further analyze Nathan's provocative piece on creating a robust policy platform for DAOs, its crucial importance, and how Section 230 has shaped the digital world. This discussion delves into the unique features of network-native organizations, and issues of transparency, sufficient decentralization, and participant control within the DAO space. Our conversation culminates with an exploration of Nathan's vision for DAOs: a tool to pivot the online economy away from digital feudalism towards shared ownership, fostering a culture of effective self-governance in our communities and governments. Join us for this riveting conversation as we journey through the evolving contours of the digital economy and governance.

What We're Learning About Learning
Chat GPT & AI in Higher Ed

What We're Learning About Learning

Play Episode Listen Later May 22, 2023 26:13


At a recent forum we hosted on AI in the classroom, faculty shared their excitement, concerns and approaches to integrating AI into their teaching practice. In this episode, we'll bring you highlights from their conversation, as well as interviews and statements with other GU faculty. There have been so many chat GPT articles and insights that it's hard to remember why it's dominating the news cycle. We spoke with CNDLS' executive director, Eddie Mamloney; computer science professor, Grace Hui Yang; Nick Lovegrove from the McDonough School of Business; Georgetown Computer Science and Linguistics professor Nathan Schneider; and  Andy Zeitlin from the McCourt School of Public Policy, as well as Camber Vincent, a junior in the School of Foreign Service at Georgetown, who serves as the president of the student body. In this episode of What We're Learning About Learning, you can expect to hear more about the ways Chat GPT is already integrated into daily processes, and is evolving. Topics include: The ways Chat GPT resembles human intelligence, as well as the ways it doesn't; How Chat GPT affects students, especially in conversation with Georgetown's Honor Code; How Chat GPT affects assignment design; What Chat GPT can be used for, as well as where it is not as successful; Considerations for Chat GPT's use in language-building and idea generation. To take a deeper dive into both emerging and longstanding literature, see our Resources and Additional Research sections below. There, you'll find links to various resources and articles cataloging Chat GPT experiences and proposing best practices. For an even more extensive collection, see this Zotero Library curated by CNDLS staff. Here are two sources of syllabus statements: 1) Georgetown faculty and 2) open source document of various university and course statements. Bios Featured in this episode: Grace Hui Yang, Associate Professor in the Department of Computer Science Nick Lovegrove, Professor of the Practice at Georgetown University's McDonough School of Business Nathan Schneider, Associate Professor in the Departments of Linguistics & Computer Science Andy Zeitlin, Associate Professor at the McCourt School of Public Policy Camber Vincent,  SFS, ‘24 Georgetown University Student Association President Eric Saldanha, graduate student representative from Georgetown's GradGov Resources Georgetown Resources ​​Chat GPT and Artificial Intelligence Tools - CNDLS website MCEF-CNDLS Forum on Chat GPT Resources Georgetown's Honor Code Policy Chat GPT's website Center for New Designs in Learning and Scholarship (CNDLS) The Prospect blog Additional Research "How AUC Faculty Are Addressing AI in Their Teaching Spring 2023," The American University in Cairo "Inside Higher Education's Page on Artificial Intelligence," Inside Higher Ed "How AI is Shaping the Future of Higher Ed," Inside Higher Ed "I'm a Student. You Have No Idea How Much We're Using ChatGPT," The Chronicle Chat GPT Zotero Library curated by CNDLS

The Decentralized Justice Broadcast
Episode 17: Nathan Schneider - Cooperatives, DAOs and Decentralized Communities

The Decentralized Justice Broadcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 22, 2023 46:17


Join Federico Ast (President, Cooperative Kleros) and Nathan Schneider, activist, journalist and a professor of Media Studies at the University of Colorado, Boulder. Nathan Schneider is an scholar of cooperative movements and the conversation takes us from Occupy Wall Street and craving for deeper democracy, Ethereum and nascent digital economies to self-governance and how cooperative culture can impact DAOs in the future.

The Blockchain Socialist
Overthrowing The Network State: Dictatorship by Tech CEO with Nathan Schneider

The Blockchain Socialist

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 12, 2023 71:32


Nathan Schneider comes back on the show to speak to Primavera and I to continue Overthrowing The Network State. During the conversation we talk about his experience at ETH Denver, the issue with using tech venture capital as a model for governance, and being intentional when exploring new political possibilities.  Mentioned Writing from NathanWeb3 Is the Opportunity We Have Had All AlongLighten the Load of the Nation-StateOverthrowing the Network State (OTNS) is a series in collaboration with Blockchaingov where we critique The Network State  by Balaji Srinivasan while also pulling out the salvageable parts and concepts in discussion with a variety of guests. We are overall critical of Balaji's specific ideas in the book, but we want to discuss it with intellectual honesty and highlight the larger concepts around how these technologies are and could subvert state structures. You can find the first episode of OTNS where we give our initial criticisms and  alternatives here.Blockchaingov is a 5-year long, transdisciplinary research effort aimed at restoring trust in institutions at the community and global levels, by promoting better on chain and off chain distributed governance practices. Throughout the series, each discussion will include me and a member of Blockchaingov with either a new guest each episode or just a discussion between us to tackle various topics from the book.If you liked the podcast be sure to give it a review on your preferred podcast platform. If you find content like this important consider donating to my Patreon starting at just $3 per month. It takes quite a lot of my time and resources so any amount helps. Follow me on Twitter (@TBSocialist) or Mastodon (@theblockchainsocialist@social.coop) and join the r/CryptoLeftists subreddit and Discord to join the discussion.Support the show

Spark from CBC Radio
559: Tech solutionism, mutual aid and cooperatives

Spark from CBC Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 25, 2022 54:01


Big Tech aims to solve large social issues, from housing to urban transportation. We discuss tech solutionism with Paris Marx, host of Tech Won't Save Us podcast, author of Road to Nowhere: What Silicon Valley Gets Wrong About the Future of Transportation. And, with massive layoffs happening all over Silicon Valley, and the sale of Twitter throwing social media into chaos, is it time to rekindle the cooperatives movement in tech? Nathan Schneider, professor of media studies at University of Colorado, Boulder and director of the Media Enterprise Design Lab, talks about tech co-ops. Then, Greg Lindsay, urban tech fellow at Cornell Tech University and a senior fellow at MIT's Future Urban Collective, talks about peer-to-peer solutions focused on mutualism and solidarity in times of crisis.

CoinDesk Reports
CONSENSUS REWIND: DAOs for Humanity

CoinDesk Reports

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 10, 2022 30:51


Even before the pandemic, social scientists knew that the infinite social-media scroll and offline social isolation left humans more depressed. At the same time, faith in traditional party politics continues to wane.Kevin Owocki, founder of Gitcoin; Nathan Schneider, an assistant professor of media studies at the University of Colorado Boulder, Ellie Rennie, a professor, and researcher at RMIT University in Australia; and Tanisi Pooran, a partner at The Ready join David Morris, CoinDesk's chief insights columnist, to discuss how DAOs can help address both challenges by offering a new model for tighter-knit digital communities and better incentive models for public goods.-The panel discussion took place on June 10, the second day of CoinDesk's Consensus 2022 festival in Austin, Texas. The executive producer for CoinDesk Reports is Jared Schwartz. Nia Freeman edited this episode.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Seed Club Podcast
Nathan Schneider — Ownership As Citizenship

Seed Club Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 2, 2022 45:34


Nathan Schneider is a teacher in Media Studies at the University of Colorado at Boulder where he runs the Media Enterprise Design Lab. He's the originator of the “exit-to-community” meme, and as the co-founder of Start.Coop, Nathan thinks deeply about what crypto can learn from the long history of economic justice. In this episode, Jess and Nathan unpack the provocative concept of innovation amnesia that accompanies moments of great technological disruption. He argues for a rethinking of ownership as citizenship, inviting people to be more than just economic actors in relationship to an entity. Ownership enabled by blockchain creates the possibility for people to define their relationship to productive activities and the fundamental human pursuit of a more just, democratically-owned future.

The Ezra Klein Show
Ethereum's Founder on What Crypto Can — and Can't — Do

The Ezra Klein Show

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 30, 2022 97:18


When most people hear “crypto,” the first thing they think of is “currencies.” Cryptocurrencies have skyrocketed in popularity over the past few years. And they've given rise to an entire ecosystem of financial speculation, get rich quick schemes, and in some cases outright fraud.But there's another side of crypto that gets less attention: the segment of the community that is interested in the way the technology that powers crypto can decentralize decision making, make institutions more transparent and transform the way organizations are governed. That's the side I find far more interesting.There are few individuals as central to that latter segment of crypto as Vitalik Buterin. When he was still just a teenager, Buterin co-founded Ethereum, a decentralized platform whose token Ether is the second most valuable cryptocurrency today, surpassed only by Bitcoin. But the vision behind Ethereum was that the blockchain technology could be used for more than digital money; it could create a sort of digital infrastructure on top of which organizations and companies and applications could be built — ostensibly free of centralizing structures like banks and governments.Over the last decade, Buterin has become arguably the core public intellectual on the nonfinancial side of crypto. His new book, “Proof of Stake,” is a collection of long, thoughtful essays that taken together lay out a vision of crypto as a truly transformative technology — one with the potential to revolutionize everything from city governance to voting systems to online identity.I myself have dueling impulses about Buterin's vision. On the one hand, I believe many of our governing systems and institutions are badly in need of the kind of reimagining he is engaged in. On the other hand, I'm deeply skeptical of whether the issues Buterin and his ilk are focused on are actually technological problems that blockchains can solve. So this is a conversation that sits squarely within that tension.Mentioned:Seeing Like a State by James C. ScottBook recommendations:The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich by William L. ShirerHarry Potter and The Methods of Rationality by Eliezer YudkowskyAlgorithmic Game Theory by Noam Nisan, Tim Roughgarden, Eva Tardos and Vijay V. VaziraniThoughts? Guest suggestions? Email us at ezrakleinshow@nytimes.com.You can find transcripts (posted midday) and more episodes of “The Ezra Klein Show” at nytimes.com/ezra-klein-podcast, and you can find Ezra on Twitter @ezraklein. Book recommendations from all our guests are listed at https://www.nytimes.com/article/ezra-klein-show-book-recs.“The Ezra Klein Show” is produced by Annie Galvin and Rogé Karma. Fact-checking by Michelle Harris, Mary Marge Locker and Kate Sinclair. Original music by Isaac Jones. Mixing by Sonia Herrero, Isaac Jones and Carole Sabouraud. Audience strategy by Shannon Busta. Special thanks to Kristin Lin, Kristina Samulewski, Will Wilkinson, Alex Tabarrok, Glen Weyl and Nathan Schneider.

Boundaryless Conversations Podcast
S3 Ep.20 Gigi Levy Weiss – Investing in Platforms today: Learning, Data drivenness, and Web3

Boundaryless Conversations Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 1, 2022 66:49


A Founding Partner at NFX, Gigi heads up NFX Israel and is widely known as one of the most prolific investors in the region. Gigi has founded several startups, including Playtika, Beach Bum (acquired by Voodoo), InceptionVR and Ridge. He was also the CEO of 888 Holdings, one of the world's leading online gaming companies, and a Division President of Amdocs, a leading billing and CRM provider. In 2014, Gigi was appointed to Facebook's EMEA Client Advisory Council. In 2015 he joined the supervisory board at Bertelsmann, one of the world's largest media companies.   As a pilot in the Israeli Air Force, he learned the value of striving for excellence at all times, building learning organizations, and that working together as a team is the real secret to winning.   Tune in to this episode as we explore what other industries can learn from gaming companies, the four layers of the evolution of Web3 marketplaces, the existential role of technology - and why Web3 hasn't changed the world yet.   At the end of the episode, we give a short wrap-up of season 3 of the podcast - as this is the last episode for the season - and we focus on what we learned and what are the key topics, in the context of organizing at scale, that are on our minds. We cover the seemingly ramping importance of modularity and composability in markets - also check out this piece - https://boundaryless.io/blog/towards-modular-and-composable-markets/ - that captures some of the ideas - and some additional thoughts around the questions concerning our relationship with technology, adopting a regenerative mindset and convivial organizational models.    A transcript of the episode can be found on our website:   Key highlights from the conversation We discussed: > What we can learn from the gaming industry in the context of platforms, ecosystems and marketplaces > What it means to be a learning organization > Designing products for people to engage in learning > How Gigi approaches Web3 as an investor > The role of centralized services in platforms > Solving real-world challenges through the Web3   To find out more about Gigi's work: > LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/gigilevy/ > Twitter: https://twitter.com/gigilevy > NFX: https://www.nfx.com/   Other references and mentions: > Fabrice Grinda and Matias Barbero, 'Crypto-Enabled Marketplaces', 2022: https://fabricegrinda.com/crypto-enabled-marketplaces/ > Showing the way with Web3 Marketplaces: Braintrust - with Gabriel Luna-Ostaseski: https://boundaryless.io/podcast/braintrust/ > Nathan Schneider, "Web3 Is the Opportunity We Have Had All Along: Innovation Amnesia and Economic Democracy": https://osf.io/2wg6s?view_only=709f1f87528943a4b27de2b5eb0f9eef   Find out more about the show and the research at Boundaryless at  https://boundaryless.io/resources/podcast/   Thanks for the ad-hoc music to Liosound / Walter Mobilio. Find his portfolio here: https://boundaryless.io/podcast-music   Recorded on 20 July 2022.

The Blockchain Socialist
Democracy as a Design Space (Interview with Nathan Schneider)

The Blockchain Socialist

Play Episode Play 59 sec Highlight Listen Later Jul 19, 2022 67:40


Nathan Schneider (@ntnsndr) is a professor of media studies at the University of Colorado Boulder and the editor of “Proof of Stake: The Making of Ethereum and the Philosophy of Blockchains,” a collection of essays by Vitalik Buterin that will be published this September. He is also one of the most prominent thinkers on cooperativism and the creator of the term Exit to Community.He has to be one of my favorite thinkers involved in the crypto space as you may have noticed that I've mentioned his work throughout the podcast and in my own writing. During this interview we spoke about his story of getting interested in crypto, his recent piece on encoding human rights on the blockchain, and so much more.  It was a great conversation.If you liked the podcast be sure to give it a review on your preferred podcast platform. If you find content like this important consider donating to my Patreon starting at just $3 per month. It takes quite a lot of my time and resources so any amount helps. Follow me on Twitter (@TBSocialist) and join the r/CryptoLeftists subreddit and Discord to join the discussion.ICYMI - The first documentary teaser was just released! You can watch it here. Be sure to subscribe to the channel on YouTube and follow the account on Twitter. You can read a lot more information about the documentary on the website at www.cryptofuturesdoc.comSupport the show

The Ownership Economy
Episode 024 - Investing in and Building the New Open Internet with Dermot O'Riordan of Eden Block

The Ownership Economy

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 16, 2022 65:50


In this episode, Jahed and Martin sit down with Dermot O'Riordan, a Partner at Eden Block who is focused on supporting and building what they refer to as the new Open Internet. In the course of the conversation, we dive into how new, efficient markets in compute, machine learning, and other sectors of technology can actually democratize access to the services that result from innovation in web3, the role of culture in company building and innovation, and the role that DAOs can play in spurring organizational innovation. This episode will be of particular interest to new founders looking to organize their companies in a decentralized fashion, as well as those trying to understand the implications of blockchains for more functional, efficient markets. Show Notes: ​​Culture eats capital for breakfast Investment Thesis for Gensyn Pocket Network Investment Thesis Understanding “New Power” Episode 001 - Cryptoeconomics, Economic Democracy, and Networked Governance in Web3 with Nathan Schneider by The Ownership Economy Episode 006 - Worker Ownership and the future of the “Gig Economy” with Jason Prado of the Driver's Cooperative Sociocracy 3.0

We Are Jobs Podcast
Episode 149 - Nathan Schneider

We Are Jobs Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 26, 2022 19:59


Chuck Sexton, CEO of Next Move Group, sat down with Nathan Schneider, Vice President of Bismarck Mandan Chamber EDC, to talk a little about the strategic plan that Next Move Group is currently doing for their organization.

Web3 Revolution
005 Nathan Schneider | Expanding the ownership of communities could be the future of web3

Web3 Revolution

Play Episode Listen Later May 18, 2022 42:40


Summary: Nathan Schneider is a professor, journalist, and author who extensively covers social movements in the United States and beyond. He speaks to us about Elon Musk's proposed acquisition of Twitter, what it means to have a community-owned company, and Proof Of Stake, a book he worked on with Vitalik Buterin. Panelists: Nathan Schneider Host: Hana Hehe Post production: Waylen Roche Episode breakdown: 1:03 Guest introduction: Nathan Schneider 2:53 The importance of Twitter to Nathan 5:20 How should Twitter be governed if it was a public utility? 7:34 How can we enable community ownership of companies? 10:52 The shift in power dynamics from centralised corporations to decentralised communities 13:26 Elon Musk's acquisition of Twitter 19:40 Are "benevolent dictators" possible? 23:50 Expanding the ownership of communities to minority groups, such as non-English speakers 29:26 On Twitter being an archive of human history 33:01 Nathan shares his thoughts on his upcoming book with Vitalik 37:37 The future of Ethereum About Web3 Revolution: A podcast that dissects the web3 revolution Twitter/Media bio: Follow us on Twitter @w3revolution_io Visit our website w3revolution.io

FBC Alachua Podcast
Reaching The Next Generation

FBC Alachua Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 1, 2022 43:27


Morning sermon presented by Nathan Schneider at First Baptist Church of Alachua on May 1, 2022.

Reimagining the Internet
How do we reimagine Twitter?

Reimagining the Internet

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 28, 2022 26:47


With news that Elon Musk is purchasing Twitter, we recorded a rare hot takes episode. In addition to Ethan sharing his thoughts, we invited Deepti Doshi from New Public and Nathan Schneider on to talk about the need for platforms that bolster democracy.

The Ownership Economy
Episode 002 - Democratizing Ownership and Governance via Exit to Community with Pia Mancini

The Ownership Economy

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 9, 2022 69:32


In this episode, Martin & Jahed sit down with Pia Mancini, co-founder and CEO of Open Collective. In the conversation, we explore Pia's early work broadening access to democratic governance and starting a digital-first political party in Argentina, borderless democracy, commons-based projects, and the future of Open Collective as a community-owned project as it explores Nathan Schneider and co-authors vision for exit-to-community. Here are the show notes: Pathways for Open Collective's “Exit to Community” Early musings on "Exit to Community" for Open Collective How to upgrade democracy for the Internet era (TED Talk) Exit to Community: A Primer Steward Ownership

The Ownership Economy
Episode 001 - Cryptoeconomics, Economic Democracy, and Networked Governance in Web3 with Nathan Schneider

The Ownership Economy

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 9, 2022 61:59


In this episode, Martin & Jahed sit down with Nathan Schneider, Assistant Professor of Media Studies at UC-Boulder, the co-author of Exit to Community, and principal invesigator of the Metagovernance Project. In the conversation, we cover the history of the cooperative movement, what DAOs and cooperatives can learn from each other, the perils of digital governance design, and the future of community-based democratic governance. Here are the show notes: Beyond Cryptoeconomics: Platform Cooperativism and the Future of Blockchain Governance Article on a democratic counterpart to venture capital for financing, and a software stack that supports creative democratic governance Cryptoeconomics as a limitation of governance Cryptoeconomics is fundamentally about the use of economic incentives together with cryptography to design and secure different kinds of systems and applications.” - Buterin 2018 A Pre-History of DAOs by Kei Kreutler DAOs are the natural evolution of organizational forms after tribes, institutions, markets, and networks. A Preface to Economic Democracy by Robert Dahl A functional political economic liberal democracy might require economic democracy and other mechanism designs Markets in the Name of Socialism: The left-wing origins of neoliberalism by Johanna Bockman (George Mason) How functional markets require competition, and what market socialism organizational forms can teach us about current democratic forms

Develop This: Economic and Community Development
DT #387: The Value of Placemaking with Nathan Schneider

Develop This: Economic and Community Development

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 9, 2022 28:03


In this episode, Jason interviews Nathan Schneider, CEcD, Vice President at Bismark Mandan Chamber EDC in North Dakota.  They talk people attraction, the value of wide open spaces, outdoor recreation, and placemaking.  In particular, Nathan draws a clear distinction between the terms 'quality of life' and 'placemaking'. This episode was recorded on site at the Mid-America EDC Conference. Mid-America Economic Development Council Connect with Nathan Schneider

Reimagining the Internet
Nathan Schneider, Pt. 2 (Blockchain Governance)

Reimagining the Internet

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 13, 2022 17:58


scheme? In Part 2 of our interview with Nathan Schneider, he tells us about the flurry of experiments in democracy that get drowned out by NFT hype.

Reimagining the Internet
Nathan Schneider, Pt. 1 (Platform Coops)

Reimagining the Internet

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 12, 2022 28:09


hy don't users get a say in how platforms operate? Nathan Schneider thinks it might be because we don't own them. In Part 1 of this week's interview, Nathan tells us about how online spaces could be cooperatively owned, and what the US government could do to help.

Stories of Growth
#31 - Nathan Schneider

Stories of Growth

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 6, 2022 60:02


In this episode, I catch up with Nathan Schneider, professor of media studies at the University of Colorado in Boulder. Nathan has authored books about cooperative enterprise and the open internet as well as the widely circulated “Exit to Community" which is a playbook for how you can put ownership back in the hands of your community. This was recorded live in the Protein Discord and to find out more about what our community is up to, make sure you follow our socials or visit protein.xyz.

The Encrypted Economy
We Need to Build More Than Tokenomics. Nathan Schneider, Author and Asst. Professor University of Colorado - E62

The Encrypted Economy

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 4, 2022 64:21 Transcription Available


This week on The Encrypted Economy, our guest is Nathan Schneider, author of Thank You, Anarchy: Notes from the Occupy Apocalypse and Assistant Professor at the University of Colorado. Nathan joins the podcast to discuss potential developments of decentralized governance in Web 3.0 and creating organizations that serve the common good. Be sure to subscribe to The Encrypted Economy for more perspective on revolutionary emerging technologies and governance structures.Topics Covered:·Introduction·Nathan's Background·Distinguishing Between Anarchy and Anarchism·Was Occupy Wallstreet Reflective of Underlying Sentiment?·What has Become of the Cyberpunk Anarchist Movement?·Defining Politics and The Significance of the Common Good·A Modern Perspective on the Polanyi and Hayek Debate·Understanding the Intersection of Politics and Crypto Projects·Are Our Systems Set Up to Care About Diversity and Inclusion? ·How Will Web 3.0 Decentralize Concentrated Power Structures?·Political Discourse in the MetaverseResource List:·Nathan's LinkedIn·Nathan's Twitter·Nathan Schneider Website·Thank You, Anarchy: Notes from the Occupy Apocalypse·Occupy Wall Street ·Cypherpunk Anarchist Movement·Karl Polanyi ·Friedrich Hayek·1hive·Tim Berners-Lee  Follow The Encrypted Economy on your favorite platforms! Twitter LinkedIn Instagram Facebook      

Upstream
NFTs with Nathan Schneider and Cory Doctorow (In Conversation)

Upstream

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 24, 2021 62:39


In this episode we're talking NFTs. If you don't know what this latest phenomenon in the crypto, blockchain, asset speculation world is, if you've heard of NFTs but wanna know more, or if you wanna hear why NFTs might be leading us to an (even more) dystopian future — we've got you covered. We've brought on two guests to help unpack the NFT craze: Nathan Schneider is an Assistant Professor of Media studies at the University of Colorado, Boulder, journalist, founder of the Media Enterprise Design Lab, and author most recently of Everything for Everyone: The Radical Tradition that Is Shaping the Next Economy, published by Nation Books. Cory Doctorow is an author, activist, journalist and blogger, editor of Pluralistic dot net, former European director of the Electronic Frontier Foundation, and author of the novels Attack Surface and Walkaway, as well as nonfiction books like How to Destroy Surveillance Capitalism. Thank you to Beulah for the intermission music. Upstream theme music was composed by Robert. Support for this episode was provided by the Guerrilla Foundation and by listeners like you. Upstream is a labor of love — we couldn't keep this project going without the generosity of our listeners and fans. Please consider chipping in a one-time or recurring donation at www.upstreampodcast.org/support Also, if your organization wants to sponsor one of our upcoming episodes, we have a number of sponsorship packages available. Find out more at upstreampodcast.org/sponsorship For more from Upstream, visit www.upstreampodcast.org and follow us on social media: twitter.com/UpstreamPodcast Instagram.com/upstreampodcast You can also subscribe to us on Apple Podcast and Spotify: Apple Podcast: https://apple.co/3HRN2OX Spotify: spoti.fi/2AryXHs

Untangled
From co-ops to crypto

Untangled

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 21, 2021 45:28


You came back! That warms my writerly heart. If someone forwarded you this email, definitely thank them - they just get your wonky sensibility. Then, if you're so inclined, become a subscriber.

NLP Highlights
133 - PhD Application Series: Preparing Application Materials, with Nathan Schneider and Roma Patel

NLP Highlights

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 6, 2021 43:54


This episode is the first in our current series on PhD applications. How should people prepare their applications to PhD programs in NLP? In this episode, we invite Nathan Schneider (Professor of Linguistics and Computer Science at Georgetown University) and Roma Patel (PhD student in Computer Science at Brown University) to share their perspectives on preparing application materials. We start by talking about what factors should go into the decision to apply for PhD programs and how to gain relevant experience. We then talk about the most important parts of an application, focusing particularly on how to write a strong statement of purpose and choose recommendation letter writers. Blog posts mentioned in this episode: - Nathan Schneider's Advice on Statements of Purpose: https://nschneid.medium.com/inside-ph-d-admissions-what-readers-look-for-in-a-statement-of-purpose-3db4e6081f80 - Student Perspectives on Applying to NLP PhD Programs: https://blog.nelsonliu.me/2019/10/24/student-perspectives-on-applying-to-nlp-phd-programs/ Homepages: - Nathan Schneider: https://people.cs.georgetown.edu/nschneid/ - Roma Patel: http://cs.brown.edu/people/rpatel59/ The hosts for this episode are Alexis Ross and Nishant Subramani.

POWER PLAYS
Professor Nathan Schneider on Platform Cooperativism

POWER PLAYS

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 20, 2021 41:33


Professor Nathan Schneider of the University of Colorado Boulder speaks with POWER PLAY's Ayden Férdeline about the rise of platform cooperativism and his vision for a fairer Internet. He suggests that we combine the rich heritage of cooperatives with the promise of 21st-century technologies in order to create a new kind of online economy, one free from the economics of monopoly, exploitation, and surveillance. A transcript of today's conversation can be found here: https://www.powerplays.xyz/podcast/s2-e3

Angst & Daisies
EP 81 - Thanks For Popping My Balloon

Angst & Daisies

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 12, 2021 48:36


EP 81 - "Thanks For Popping My Balloon!"Steve and Caroline talk about the NYC mayoral race and ranked choice voting and Caroline takes the pulpit to rant about how misinformation has contributed to a lower vaccination rate. Finally, we chat with Nathan Schneider, a journalist, author and professor of media studies at University of Colorado - Boulder, where he focuses on building democratic ownership and governance over online platforms. An interesting discussion about the dangers of misinformation, building successful co-operative models, and how we can apply protocols from past/ancient systems of governance to build a better online community.You can find Nathan's book, Everything for Everyone: The Radical Tradition That Is Shaping the Next Economy at bookshop.org - a terrific online bookseller that supports local bookstores.Hosted by Caroline Aaron and Steve Saporito. Produced by Eric Anderson.

Startups for Good
Nathan Schneider & Danny Spitzberg, Organizers, Exit to Community Project

Startups for Good

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 29, 2021 48:31 Transcription Available


Nathan Schneider is an assistant professor of media studies at the University of Colorado Boulder, where he leads the Media Enterprise Design Lab. His most recent book is Everything for Everyone: The Radical Tradition that Is Shaping the Next Economy. Danny Spitzberg is a user researcher for a cooperative economy.Nathan and Danny join me today to discuss their Exit to Community report that they have been recently working on. They share with us recent examples of other exit to community companies that we would be familiar with. They also talk about another effort, Start Co-op. We also discuss if innovation is tied to risk taking and they share their advice with us.“The cool thing that this startup culture is good at is, is being nimble and being a pivot and enabling really creative exploration to figure out where the market fit is where the who the true community really is, and sometimes it takes some time to figure that out.” - Nathan SchneiderToday on Startups for Good we cover:Policy changes that are needed when to support exit to communityThinking about the exit during the start up phaseBlockchain compared to co-op modelsSharing equity with users and the SEC take on itHow tech enabled co-ops can access capitalIf co-ops can scale quicklyLearn more at the exit to community websiteSubscribe, Rate & Share Your Favorite Episodes!Thanks for tuning into today's episode of Startups For Good with your host, Miles Lasater. If you enjoyed this episode, please subscribe and leave a rating and review on your favorite podcast listening app.Don't forget to visit our website, connect with Miles on Twitter or LinkedIn, and share your favorite episodes across social media. For more information about The Giving Circle. Please share your feedback with us by going to our listener survey here.

The Greed for Ilm Podcast
EP 20 – Nathan Schneider author of “God in Proof”

The Greed for Ilm Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 30, 2013 44:15


Does God exist? Is there proof that God exists? Nathan Schneider joins us this episode and talks about his book, “God in Proof.” He is a writer and editor based in Brooklyn. He writes articles for a variety of publications — from The New York Times and Harper's and The Nation to his personal website... The post EP 20 – Nathan Schneider author of “God in Proof” appeared first on Greed for Ilm.