About Me

Hi! I'm Alina. I live in Barcelona. I'm a geek, I love the web and working with open communities. Here you can read about my thoughts and exploration in the space of civic engagement, distributed communities, open technology and the web.

From simplifying Webmaking to Webmaker ethics

Has been a long time since I started working (with others) on building a new model of (Mozilla) community here in Barcelona and around (and I know I have to write more about this experience).

“What is the future of learning, freedom and the web? It’s a slate of ongoing projects. It’s a percolating of new ideas. It’s a crossbreeding of old categories. It’s a building of new relationships. It’s a founding of new organizations. It’s the construction of new systems. It’s the coining of new words. It’s the creation of a new reality. Together. [..] What really keeps a community going? Shared work, shared goals, shared fun, shared vocabulary, and shared rituals. There doesn’t have to be one ultimate unified vision. The idea of what learning will mostly look like in ten years, 50 years, or 100 years remains fuzzy, and that’s by design, because one definition of an improved future is one that has a greater diversity of choices than in the past. [..] In many ways, the medium speaks louder than the message” – From the book Learning, Freedom and the Web.

When I refer to a new model of community, I mean designing new processes, creating new event frameworks that can invite others to participate and adopting new practices for community development. That can mean interacting with people you’ve never did before, start conversations with other communities of practice, delegate responsibility and act as a coach for the new, future community leaders. This may seem uncomfortable, but after starting doing it you’ll have a lot of fun.

 

Early this year, I wrote a post about computer users groups (which evolved into specific operating systems / programing languages / technologies groups) and how those groups kept alive the whole tech. community, the hacking spirit. Then, I asked myself if Web(maker) local groups/clubs could nurture a movement around the Open Web? And I think they could. There are a lot of good things to learn from Users Groups: their self-organizing / decentralized culture, their focus on sharing knowledge and help others to understand software.

The various user groups and communities of practice I belonged in the past years helped me not only to learn more about software and tech. platforms, but also nurtured my skills and, most importantly, made me adhere to a set of ethics of software/technology development. However, I believe we could innovate more in this space, from the community building perspective. We now have the tools and the platform to do this. The ethics stance has been one of the dominant values of groups around free software / GNU Linux.

Bellow, I’m highlighting some outputs and insights I got from some events I facilitated in the last six months. In concrete, I’ll take Hackasaurus program – because it demonstrates that can offer local groups and communities the building blocks needed to tinker, create and learn, and potentially helping build this kind of mixed, different local groups/communities.

Workshop

Photo by Samuel Huron

Mozilla’s Hackasaurus is a great tool that helps simplifying web making and learning, so a broader audience could at least understand what the Web is and how it works. But, it also opens a way to a lot more and engages curious users into building the web and take a more active part into a community.

 

Here are three events where we brought Hackasaurus to different audiences:

June, HackJam Barcelona, Citilab

 

Output: In June we organized the first HackJam in Barcelona. We spent one hour with 16 kids (10 – 12 years old), introducing them to the first phase of web making (understanding the remixable/buildable nature of the web). We started with a small, simple example of a “remixed paper magazine” (collage), so participants could see how they can change a story, remix a content just by experimenting and playing around. Then, we dived into playing with X-Rays Googles and remixing some webpages.

In this session we didn’t have enough time to deep into HTML/CSS and , but still, I learned a lot from it. And it was a great achievement to help kids discover that the web is something you can play with it, remix, build it, use it to express your feelings, vision, etc.

Although by the end of the sessions I had the feeling of “we should have done more… (dive more into making and the understanding HTML)”, after seeing the enthusiasm of participants presenting their “hacks” I realized that we actually unlocked a critical part of the web building blocks, opening the way to more. And most importantly, part of the participants wanted to learn more and play more with the tool.

October, facilitators HackJam, Televall Telcentre Output: This was a second HackJam Enric and I facilitated, this time in a village by the Pyrenees range, at Televall – the first telecenter built in Catalonia. The audience was very different from the first one: four facilitators from the very Telecenter. We spent almost two hours demoing with Hackasaurus X-Googles Rays and remixing content on webpages. The aim was to understand the potential that today’s web has: you can build almost everything on it and there are also tools as Hackasaurus that simplify the understanding and learning process and engage in a creative way.

Before the session, I had a conversation with people there about the activities and life at the telecentre. “Now, teens and kids have their own computers and access to Internet. They go straight to home after school”. It was somehow sad to see how those spaces that years ago pioneered the access to Internet and technology are at now risk of losing their role and impact in the local digital society. But, at the same time, I was thinking about the opportunity we, local community of practice as Mozilla, could offer to those spaces, making them again be at the heart of digital transformations.

How using Mozilla’s tools and learning programs such as Hackasaurus, Popcornmaker or Hive (a learning network concept) could make Telecentres think and be more like the Web, transform them from the simple “access to computers / Internet points” to community learning centers – building local communities and help local youth become web literates.

November, demoing Hackasaurus and Popcornmaker, Digital Humanities event, CCCB Output: Last month we were invited to join the Center of Contemporany Culture of Barcelona and Institute of Innovation and Research Center at George Pompidou from Paris to participate at the annual Digital Humanities event. More than 30 mediators, facilitators, educators and representatives of public, cultural and research institutions participated. Enric, Toni and I helped with a one hour hands-on session demoing Popcornmaker, Hackasaurus and Universal Subtitles. Then we participated in a broader conversation – “Education and contributions in the future of Digital Humanities”, where we explored the impact that informal, community-learning education has in shaping the future of Digital Humanities. The debate around education and Digital Humanities was very insightful for me. One of the starting points of this debate was about the decrease of attention coming as a natural effect of new technologies (as Internet, Web, Social networks), especially among teens and kids. This raised a series of questions and answers around how we can use the same technology to transform those effects into something good to society (adapt to technological/connected life and not remain indifferent, make efforts to understand how technology works instead of taking it for granted, start using technology to create not just consume it). And in a way, Hackasaurus or Popcorn can transform those effects and focus the attention to creating/building/remixing/experimenting. Humanities, a critical part of our education system, need to adapt much more to new technologies. Around the topics brought into discussion were: thinking about the creation of a new school, how community based learning models and programs could reshape the education in a digital, connected age.

One of the most interesting parts was when discussing about the need of building new communities of practice (communities that could drive innovation, initiate new processes and, above all, be driven by a desire to create and make things) and build relationships between local communities of practice and cultural/research public institutions (museums, public libraries etc.).

 

There were more events this year that influenced part of my thinking about communities in general (and Mozilla Community in a first place) – the GlobalMelt workshop, Design Jam Barcelona, the small and informal Barcelona UX/WebDev community meet-ups, MoJo Hackfest. And this year I also focused more on working with local civic centers and public spaces – which I consider critical for building new healthy communities (more on this in the following blogposts). Mozilla started two years ago to explore new ways to advance in its mission, grow and rejuvenate the community, diversify our interest domains and expand focus (go beyond Firefox). Now, with programs and tools as Hackasaurus and Popcorn that are getting stronger, the work on Identity and Apps Ecosystem is a huge opportunity to put efforts on building a new kind of community (both local and global), inspire others and promote a new way of working and building relationships. Building a community of Webmakers with an ethics stance at its core (build web using native web technologies, work in open, share, respect the user) is one of the long-term goals Mozilla has. And there are lot of things to do to achieve this, a lot of things to change and some exciting upcoming years for designing this community. In the next blog posts I want to highlight some of my experiences and share some concrete steps on how we might do this, at least at the local level. This is the first post from a series through I’ll try to express my personal thinking and vision on Community Building and Development.

 

 

What makes a movement? Users? (Mozilla) Local groups?

Last week, Mark Surman wrote a couple of articles about Join Mozilla initiative. I was not very surprised as probably other fellows, since I knew about this from Whistler Summit.
We talked during engagement sessions about different ways to make Mozilla more visible as a movement for the (open) Web and for the commons.
Indeed, this is something that Mozilla needs now, critical for the Web and for a healthy community of contributors and users. .

Bogo wrote in his last post wondering about the role of people who will join Mozilla and how they will connect with the community, how they will become advocates for the open web.

LUGs were an example of movements created around users and a software platform, which built a strong base of evangelists and open source advocates some time ago, including myself.

I was 16 when I first attended a first Linux Install Fest and started running the first Linux Users Group in my city with some friends, just for fun. I had no idea about free software, Commons, open source, etc. and I was able to only write 2 or 3 commands in the terminal.
LUGs were engaging, easy to join, and nobody asked you about your experience. City-based groups helped to arrange monthly or bi-weekly meet-ups. The main aim was getting people to use the operating system and helping beginners to fix their problems and offer support.
InstallFest-like events, with non-fixed agenda, no slides or presentations, helped to set up the dynamics, and make both experienced and unexperienced users to attend.

During the years, I organized myself a couple of InstallFests/Hackfests and other low or 0 budget events, connected with other users and LUGs across the country, revitalized the group from my faculty and extended it all around city, in hacking camps, workshops and open source conferences around the country, unified the forces faculty’s web group and start organizing more diverse events, wrote articles in community and school magazines.
Community centers, co-working spaces, Students house, laboratories, libraries and coffees or empty spaces in the underground Faculty’s building usually served for hosting the meet-ups and local events.

In a few years this movement brought new users, from power users to advocates of the platform and, indeed, influenced a lot its adoption on servers and embedded devices. But also, it formed advocates for other free software projects and kept the hacker culture alive.

LUGs offered you the freedom to choose, to stay as a simple user or go further. It also created this affinity between communities and people sharing the same principles, so connecting to people from outside your country became far easier.

I never became an active contributor in a Linux distribution, a localizer or package maintainer, because I wasn’t too comfortable with writing code, but that didn’t made me to not feel part of the movement or name myself a Linux Users group member.

So users are never “death souls” in the community, as far as they are engaged and empowered.

Hopefully, Join Mozilla! will offer all the support and material to turn Firefox users into platform advocates and a strong voice for the (open) Web. It is a chance for current Mozilla communities to build the user engagement efforts and start facilitating and supporting in a creative and participatory way Firefox users in all cities.

As LUG how-to says: “Computer user groups are not new. In fact, they were central to the personal computer’s history: Microcomputers arose in large part to satisfy demand for affordable, personal access to computing resources from electronics, ham radio, and other hobbyist user groups. Giants like IBM eventually discovered the PC to be a good and profitable thing, but initial impetus came from the grassroots.

PS: Happy to see this open, so all Mozillians from community can contribute to build the program through Mozilla community marketing calls (and on #marketing IRC channel): http://wiki.mozilla.org/JoinMozilla .