Loomio
Mon 14 Aug 2017 5:09PM

Objective of the Open App Ecosystem

D Draft Public Seen by 410

Hi all,

Seems we need to agree on the objective (thought I had made a thread with it, but apparently I didn't :D )

I took the @olisb and @gregorycassel and @lynnfoster proposition and made up another one, I put in () the name of the person who made the proposition.

Objective

A suite of interoperable tools (olisb) easy to use, install, configure and contribute to (lynn). This ecosystem will enable :
* the emergence of open, inclusive economic and social systems (greg).
* connections between people who build and use open systems (greg-mikey).
* transparent and decentralised collaboration (olisb).

If we agree on this it will become the new objective for the OAE.

OS

Oli SB Mon 14 Aug 2017 7:05PM

This is exactly why I am suggesting we relaunch the CTA.

I didn't write this definition of the OAE, the people who worked on CTA v1 and the OAE to date did:

"The Open App Ecosystem is a suite of interoperable tools which support transparent, democratic, decentralised collaboration."

Which makes the OAE pretty much already defined in my book...

We could debate the objective of the CTA / OAE but the vision (which is pretty similar to an objective) of the CTA has already been defined too:

The CTA vision
We envisage the future of the social web as an ecosystem of open source tools designed to enable groups, communities, and co-ops everywhere to share resources, and collaborate at a scale. We call this ecosystem of open source tools "The Open App Ecosystem": A suite of interoperable tools which support transparent, democratic, decentralised collaboration.

Together, we aim to knit together a flexible, collaborative open social web  -  facilitating the creation of a culture of creativity, collaboration, and mutual support, for the rejuvenation of the commons  -  at the scale required for a connected and collaborative humanity.

which seems pretty similar to what we're now trying to define for the OAE above...

GC

Greg Cassel Mon 14 Aug 2017 7:52PM

Relaunching CTA is fine as far as I'm concerned. I just think everyone should try to be clear about whether or not OAE has any official or formal relationship to CTA, and vice versa.

If they are to have any formal relationship to each other, then I will want to know exactly what that relationship is. I'm personally very technical and precise in such matters.

D

Draft Tue 15 Aug 2017 6:12PM

I prefer the new objective. It's shorter and more concrete. Do we disagree on that ?

For me a vision = an objective. A prefer the word objective which is more concrete. Do we disagree on that ?

LF

Lynn Foster Mon 14 Aug 2017 10:21PM

I didn't write this definition of the OAE, the people who worked on CTA v1 and the OAE to date did:

@olisb interesting, I wasn't aware of such an overlap in people in original CTA and original OAE, although I knew there was some connection around Enspiral, at least a social one. Can you give more history there? Who, and how it occurred? (I do like to respect the history of these things as we figure out how to move forward.)

SG

Simon Grant Tue 15 Aug 2017 11:17AM

I'm noticing some difficulty with responding to this thread and proposal. Draft, I like the way you have taken parts of what other people have said and put them together.

My difficulty relates to the overall concept, that an ecosystem is "a suite of interoperable tools". Yes, such a suite is a valuable objective, but surely our "real" objective goes way beyond creating such a suite?

So I'm wondering if we can see the objective suggested here, not as the whole objective of the OAE, but of the technical product side. To which I would add, that the tools need to be in keeping with our core shared values, and the way in which we build and agree these tools also needs to be consistent with the kind of society, and economy, that we envisage as desirable.

To me, a clue to more inclusive objectives of an "ecosystem" is given in the word, "ecosystem". A set of tools is not, by itself, an ecosystem, as it only lives and thrives through use by people. The people who use the tools are perhaps the most fundamental part of the ecosystem, and I would include the organizations of people that the tools are designed to enable, promote, or facilitate, better than the current set of tools. Looking further outwards, I personally can't imagine an "ecosystem" other than one that includes the society, and the culture, that surrounds the tools and the organisations using those tools.

Note, that I'm not saying it's easy, nor even maybe wise, to formulate objectives at those scales. I do believe, however, that it is vital to bear in mind the wider picture, and at least to include the objective of tool adoption. It's obvious — what use is a set of tools if no one uses them? — and I for one would be keen on thinking through whatever can be thought through about the conditions surrounding widespread adoption. To me, that's all about the real ecosystem.

D

Draft Tue 15 Aug 2017 6:24PM

I think we agree on that. I think you are talking about the CTA objective which could be : to gather people that creates open apps.

Here, it's the Open App Ecosystem objective, it's pretty concrete so I like it.

Plus, you can see in the objective : " This ecosystem will enable the emergence of open, inclusive economic and social systems ", which is a very large objective, maybe not large enough for you, you may want to change this part though.

My question would be : Do you have any concrete change to make ? :D

SG

Simon Grant Wed 16 Aug 2017 2:00PM

"Here, it's the Open App Ecosystem objective, it's pretty concrete so I like it. ...

Plus, you can see in the objective : " This ecosystem will enable the emergence of open, inclusive economic and social systems ", which is a very large objective, maybe not large enough for you, you may want to change this part though."

To me, names do matter, because they bring up associations and expectations in people. What I'm saying is that your @draft formulation of the objective doesn't, to my mind, belong to an "ecosystem", but to a technical sub-system, and that matters, to me at least.

You could indeed say something like "This technical tool set will be designed to support the emergence of a whole Open App Ecosystem" and that is absolutely fair enough, but you're not talking about the objectives of the Ecosystem as a whole, but just its technical sub-system. And we could evaluate a candidate set of apps based on how well, in our collective view, it would in fact enable the greater Ecosystem. I'd be asking for us to try to be reasonable and measured with our use of the term "Ecosystem".

And at some point evaluation is important. How can we expect to be able to evaluate how much, or how far, an interrelated, interoperable set of apps actually supports our wider objectives? To me, one of the vital, positive points of writing objectives is so that one can evaluate potential strategies against those objectives — after all, we do and will need to make decisions about which way to go on some matters, and it would be great if we can make those decisions in view of criteria which have been agreed by consensus (and which can be changed by consensus). Otherwise, decisions are liable to be made for reasons of personal power, popularity, or other such criteria that do not necessarily relate to our long-term goals.

LF

Lynn Foster Tue 15 Aug 2017 1:16PM

I personally am not ready to put enough time and thought into a formal statement, although I see its usefulness. I am very happy we did enough to establish basic understanding among ourselves, I thought that was important - but it was quickly dashed off in a get-to-know-each-other mode, and remains that way in this statement. And since then, at least one fundamental issue has been discussed but not resolved. And anything that someone disagreed on, or just initiated more nuanced discussion about, was just removed from the statement.

I would suggest these steps:
1. Nail down any remaining big issues on goals/objectives/values/governance, involving everyone.
2. People who focus on aggregating ideas and clear writing can deepen and improve the statement, representing the group's agreements on content.

For myself (I am a better coder than writer), I need to be focusing on creating software. (For OAE, this also includes researching and discussing technical architecture, vocabulary, etc.)

I don't mind if this goes on a website or loomio group or wherever as is, saying something like we don't have a formal statement yet, but this is how we are thinking initially. But let's do a decent job when we formalize. And personally, I would just wait until we're ready.

GC

Greg Cassel Tue 15 Aug 2017 6:47PM

I appreciate your strong efforts to spark dialogue and progress, @draft . I think it's always fine to launch formal proposals, and I also think that it's fine for proposals to not pass.

Personally, FYI, I barely ever launch formal proposals anywhere. (For instance, I was very active in Enspiral for the last few years without launching any Loomio proposals.) I usually see formal proposals and agreements as fundamental "constitutional" elements, and I rarely feel compelled to engage groups on that level. (When I do engage in that way, I focus intensely on it.)

Hope that makes sense and seems relevant to my activity here.

OS

Oli SB Tue 15 Aug 2017 10:23PM

To try and bring several threads together... ;)

I think this proposal is the perfect example of the lack of governance in this OAE Loomio group.

What is quorum for this decision?
Who should really be voting on this?
If it is decided here, where does this 'objective' get enshrined into what 'charter'?
Who's signed up to that...?

If only a few people vote, we will have all wasted our time because the decision will never be binding or useful in any way...

I would suggest that (given its' long and hard won history) defining the objective of the OAE is only appropriate, or worthwhile, if the decision is taken by a much larger group of people than we have here participating in these discussion today.

Which is why I think we need an "organisation for collaboration", like the CTA, which could more effectively manage large group discussions and important decisions like this by pulling together it's "signed up" members, from it's various working groups... :)

Load More