Gave a talk on the future of work, thinking: the issue here is that work is broken but higher ed can't find the words for this so instead we say "everything is awesome".

The gig economy, work on demand, uberisation, everything is awesome.

And the thing is, it's really not, not if you get sick or you want to raise kids or you have a tiny hope of owning a home or you want to pay off college debt.

None of these ways of working are awesome, except for the people who profit from your work.

So now I'm cranky, because if people withdraw from the economy like employers have withdrawn from the obligations they used to have towards workers, then the entire economy is not-awesomed.

Except for those 8 men who are worth more than 50% of the rest of us. They seem to be doing OK.

#grumpy

Thinking: it's actually pretty remarkable to think of a platform like this as a place to come and pull up a chair and be grumpy among friends.

This is stuff I'm not saying on Twitter.

So I do have an instinctual trust of something here. I wonder what that is?

#perkingup

@katebowles for me it's less worry about family & future employers looking me up I guess
@kcsaff I think that's it. I have a profile on Twitter that my employer is aware of. That makes me a little careful.
@kcsaff But I think something about the community values on mastodon has also made me inclined to trust the many strangers here. Why is that?
@katebowles idk :) but it seems a lot of web forums have a certain half-life before they're either forgotten, or become a ripe enough target for bullies to take over. hopefully there will be a long, beautiful future here <3

@kcsaff @katebowles

I agree that this is the pattern, but that only happens because the forum tech is somehow treated as "oh it can't pick a side, what happens happens" (I.e. FB news team debacle)

As in, the engineers of these systems- Twitter, forums, Reddit, facebook- decided a-priori it "wasn't their job" to culture community, and build according to their needs.

They build gardens but refuse to put up fences & weed regularly, then wonder where all the pretty flowers went.

@twryst @kcsaff This question of how to culture community is really critical.

I keep thinking that mastodon's asset is in staying fairly small and low profile (@Tdorey has really educated me about small acts).

But you're also exactly right that it's about seeing how people are treated here. It sets a standard of care, across wildly different demographics.

@katebowles @Tdorey @kcsaff I agree- building community is beautifully complex and difficult. While I agree the low-profileness is critical now, I wonder-

considering that this medium follows rules that the devs decide, there exists potential to make the space itself block certain styles of toxicity. Imagine recognizing harassment by ML- currently, very feasible, tho bullying evolves- and silently putting the post behind a "this is likely harassment; view or report/block sender?" alert.

@katebowles @Tdorey @kcsaff

(Sorry to just totally flop down on your conversation/observation, I hope it's ok and if not I can ofc abstain in future)

For better explanation underlying how I've been thinking, check out Dr Donna Riley's ?2013?2015? "Engineering and Social Justice" book; I can only read a little at a time cause there is so so much to talk about, and it may interest y'all based off your prev toots.

@twryst @katebowles @kcsaff No apologies needed so far as I am concerned. I looked up the reference you provided and it looks really interesting (and aligned with lots of the stuff I spend my time thinking about...) I'll definitely try to spend more time digging into it.

@Tdorey @katebowles @kcsaff oh cool!

I have, tbh, struggled to find ppl willing to rethink these assumptions/the myth of "apolitical engineering as merely a tool to fight entropy, with no moral valence to its actions", at my university.

I would very much love to hear y'all's thoughts & inferences re: that book/these topics; like i'd honestly be 200% interested in forming a book/reading club re: these topics

@twryst @Tdorey @katebowles I went ahead and picked up the ebook, this subject is pretty important to me right now

@kcsaff @katebowles @twryst Wheels are spinning... A book club on this topic sounds interesting.

I'm also an organizer of the LAK17 Hackathon (https://lakhackathon.wordpress.com/) which I need *good* challenges for. Any interest in rolling in some brainstorming on interesting challenges in with the reading?

@Tdorey @katebowles @kcsaff
OMG YES 1000%

Admittedly, my exposure to pedagogy literature is both v limited depth and exclusively critical service-related, but I for sure would love to contribute to the extent that I could.
To make sure I understand, the LAK challenges are intended to focus on the use/acquisition of data in order to improve learning/empower teachers/increase retention?

@twryst @katebowles @kcsaff All right then we'll be fine because my exposure to engineering is limited to well - none! So we'll all learn something new.

What did you have in mind for book club? Trying it in Mastodon or somewhere else? Personally, I have strong preference to asynchronous discussion, but am open to ideas and options.

@Tdorey @twryst @kcsaff I love the idea of a mastodon book club. I wonder (noting my horribleness at reading whole books) if it could be smaller, like an article club?

I really like the idea of reading together, especially things I don't know. I think @lauraritchie might be interested in a chapter or two of John Berger, for example.

@Tdorey @lauraritchie @twryst @kcsaff What I like about this is that I wouldn't have found Donna Riley's work by myself, so it's already introduced new ideas to me.

Looking at this and Berger, the common theme might be social justice.

I'm just also pursuing a reading recommendation on life and narrative that might have a similar focus.