About

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Networks

User guidelines, community rules, Codes of Conduct, collaboration protocols, network etiquette, community covenants, a group pact, a collective agreement. The difficulties of managing online behaviours prompt different communities to create and apply informal rules into their networks. Codes of Conduct aim for comfortable interactions between the members; they set expectations for users, put in evidence the values of a community, making explicit which behaviours are allowed or discouraged, possibly decreasing unwanted hate. These guidelines can help to deal with internal and exterior abuses, especially when the documents are upheld by a network of people who acknowledges the differences in privilege, power, experiences, money and time of different users.

of Care,

Discussing Codes of Conduct isn't only considering the potential of text, but recognising the labour intensive routines that imply human effort and involve the community. The caretakers are essential — to write the guidelines, to manage reports, to moderate, to document, to listen, to grant support. A Code of Conduct also needs visibility and a plan for distribution. Furthermore, the desire to share different guidelines from corporate-owned social platforms requires other competencies, such as moving to other platforms, or self-hosting our social groups. Care work is highly skilled, and it needs to be further discussed, recognised and cherished.

a field guide

This field guide will lead you through the attempts, accomplishments and missteps of moderators, writers, users and custodians of social networks. It collects and comments on existing Codes of Conduct, listens to different experiences, and proposes other projects to explore. The field guide goes through the work of groups of arts, design, libre and open software, feminists and LGBTQ users, aiming to facilitate future work for other circles. It's exciting to consider which gestures may contribute to increasing autonomy and cooperation in digital platforms, whether Codes of Conduct can be useful to reduce hate and improve interactions, or even desirable. Let's explore the networks of care generated together.


Structure

Networks of Care is divided into three parts.

Archiving — to collect and annotate Codes of Conduct, creating a collection that is possible to browse, dissect and analyse.

Networking — to interview and document the work of moderators, writers of Codes of Conduct, facilitators, community members and networks' administrators.

Linking — to point other ways forward, useful templates, resources, and experiments.

Technical Documentation

In the forefront of the fight against hate, there are users committed to creating better social media experiences for them and for others. These users offer support with their work on moderation, technical knowledge, emotional labour, and many others.


Technical knowledge is relevant to:

  • use moderation tools
  • adapt, fork, customise moderation tools
  • create new tools
  • adapt, fork, customise social platforms
  • create new platforms
  • use software and hardware
  • question autonomy
  • experiment with protocols
  • self-host
  • understand tutorials
  • write and send reports


These actions can be challenging. Networks of Care goes through a few of these technical hurdles, documenting along the way the experience of creating and maintaining this project.

Networks of Care is hosted on a Raspberry Pi and uses MediaWiki software to organise the content. It uses extensions such as Semantic MediaWiki and Page Forms. The main page shows a diagram that uses the API to get access to wiki features. It also uses Leaflet, a JavaScript library.

Go here for for detailed Technical Documentation.

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