Law in Contemporary Society

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OperatingNorms 11 - 26 Jan 2008 - Main.AndrewGradman
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I am interested in seeing if folks want to set up some guidelines for our online collaboration. I am going to add one or two here and then, if you think this will facilitate our collaboration, you should add your own. Hopefully this will increase comfort level with the medium and, as a result, increase engagement.
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 -- EbenMoglen - 26 Jan 2008
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It turns out that wiki is a very good medium for active listeners.
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I wrongly assumed that our only mandate was to make the TWiki "some kind of a learning tool," and read that to be our Declaration of Independence. Eben's post reminded me of a second mandate: It turns out that wiki is a very good medium for active listeners. (I say "mandate" because, like Kate, I listen his descriptive statements into prescriptive ones).
 
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I should have noticed this. I erred in saying that our only mandate was that the TWiki be "some kind of a learning tool." In isolation, I read that as our Declaration of Independence. Moglen's post reminds me of this second mandate. (I say "mandate" because I actively listen descriptive statements into prescriptive ones).
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I was not actively listening. In the land of active listeners, apparently I'm a revolutionary AND an illegal immigrant--a Lenin, who came to exploit a captive audience. I figured the TWiki would listen to me more actively than the classroom, and I thought the classroom sovereign had forged my passport.
 
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Apparently, in the land of active listeners, I'm not just a revolutionary but an illegal immigrant -- i.e., a poor active listener -- a Lenin, who came to exploit a captive audience of active listeners and hear himself talk. To clumsily extend the metaphor (as one does, when he is actively listening only to himself), I thought TWiki was a more fertile audience than the classroom, and besides, the classroom power had forged my passport. Blowback, as they say.
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It's scary to know that someone's going to refactor my words, I'm not gonna lie. It's painful for the writer to read what the readers were actively listening to. My flourishes will never survive translation, and they'll probably obfuscate my ideas as well. Lenin would have spoken more carefully had he known how his spokesmen refactored his words, but he got lucky and died.
 
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It scares me a little to know that someone's going to refactor my words, I'm not gonna lie. Had Lenin known how his words got refactored by his next spokesman, he might have spoken more carefully. Even he would have passed that active listening test. Unfortunately, he was dead.

It's tempting to insert footnotes under

Lesson learned: Revolutionaries die, but their words live on, and they're their words live aft, and now I get to suffer the indignity of watching them get "refactored" by a bunch of Trotskyites.

but the whole idea of "captive audiences"

of gradegivers The usual practice is to "refactor"--or consolidate--pages periodically, by replacing the long threads of discussion with a responsible summary of the points made; the person refactoring is accountable to the group for the clarity with which she or he renders the points made, briefly, transmitting the essence of each point of view. That's another part of the active listening test. I will soon begin assigning people to refactor the discussions that are building up on certain topics.

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I'm tempted to revise with that in mind. But I won't, because refactoring will be as much of an active listening lesson for the writer as for the refactorer, and I came to law school to learn to write.
 
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 -- AndrewGradman - 26 Jan 2008
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Sounds good. This might be a good page to start with- if we are going to have editing standards, it makes sense for them to exist as an editable list rather than a discussion.

-- TheodoreSmith - 26 Jan 2008

 
 
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OperatingNorms 10 - 26 Jan 2008 - Main.TheodoreSmith
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META TOPICPARENT name="WebPreferences"
I am interested in seeing if folks want to set up some guidelines for our online collaboration. I am going to add one or two here and then, if you think this will facilitate our collaboration, you should add your own. Hopefully this will increase comfort level with the medium and, as a result, increase engagement.
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 -- AndrewGradman - 26 Jan 2008
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Sounds good. This might be a good page to start with- if we are going to have editing standards, it makes sense for them to exist as an editable list rather than a discussion.

-- TheodoreSmith - 26 Jan 2008

 
 
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OperatingNorms 9 - 26 Jan 2008 - Main.AndrewGradman
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META TOPICPARENT name="WebPreferences"
I am interested in seeing if folks want to set up some guidelines for our online collaboration. I am going to add one or two here and then, if you think this will facilitate our collaboration, you should add your own. Hopefully this will increase comfort level with the medium and, as a result, increase engagement.
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 -- DanielHarris - 25 Jan 2008
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Some folks WANT a burger and fries without a soda, an HP without printer cartridges, a lift ticket without insurance. If you'll predict whether my half-baked ideas have a future, I'll withdraw the ones that don't, and save us both the misery.
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Some folks WANT a burger and fries without a soda, an HP without ink cartridges, a lift ticket without insurance. If you'll predict whether my half-baked ideas have a future, I'll withdraw the ones that don't, and save us both the misery.
 For example: now I won't tell you what rule N+4 was. (Hint: it violates rule 3)
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 -- EbenMoglen - 26 Jan 2008
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It turns out that wiki is a very good medium for active listeners.

I should have noticed this. I erred in saying that our only mandate was that the TWiki be "some kind of a learning tool." In isolation, I read that as our Declaration of Independence. Moglen's post reminds me of this second mandate. (I say "mandate" because I actively listen descriptive statements into prescriptive ones).

Apparently, in the land of active listeners, I'm not just a revolutionary but an illegal immigrant -- i.e., a poor active listener -- a Lenin, who came to exploit a captive audience of active listeners and hear himself talk. To clumsily extend the metaphor (as one does, when he is actively listening only to himself), I thought TWiki was a more fertile audience than the classroom, and besides, the classroom power had forged my passport. Blowback, as they say.

It scares me a little to know that someone's going to refactor my words, I'm not gonna lie. Had Lenin known how his words got refactored by his next spokesman, he might have spoken more carefully. Even he would have passed that active listening test. Unfortunately, he was dead.

It's tempting to insert footnotes under

Lesson learned: Revolutionaries die, but their words live on, and they're their words live aft, and now I get to suffer the indignity of watching them get "refactored" by a bunch of Trotskyites.

but the whole idea of "captive audiences"

of gradegivers The usual practice is to "refactor"--or consolidate--pages periodically, by replacing the long threads of discussion with a responsible summary of the points made; the person refactoring is accountable to the group for the clarity with which she or he renders the points made, briefly, transmitting the essence of each point of view. That's another part of the active listening test. I will soon begin assigning people to refactor the discussions that are building up on certain topics.

-- AndrewGradman - 26 Jan 2008

 
 
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OperatingNorms 8 - 26 Jan 2008 - Main.EbenMoglen
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META TOPICPARENT name="WebPreferences"
I am interested in seeing if folks want to set up some guidelines for our online collaboration. I am going to add one or two here and then, if you think this will facilitate our collaboration, you should add your own. Hopefully this will increase comfort level with the medium and, as a result, increase engagement.
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 Rule N+5: No prior restraint.

-- AndrewGradman - 25 Jan 2008

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Please Take Note

  1. On the specifics of draft marking and so on, I should point out for those who aren't experienced with wikis that one property of wiki systems is that they save every version of every document. If you haven't yet experimented with the diffs button, you might want to do so. You can and should draft in the wiki. People can then see how your thinking (and their thinking, and everyone's thinking) evolves. The usual practice is to "refactor"--or consolidate--pages periodically, by replacing the long threads of discussion with a responsible summary of the points made; the person refactoring is accountable to the group for the clarity with which she or he renders the points made, briefly, transmitting the essence of each point of view. That's another part of the active listening test. I will soon begin assigning people to refactor the discussions that are building up on certain topics. Once refactoring begins, the diffs of the page become even more important, because they show what was summarized and allow judgment of the quality of the editing.
  2. On the question of freedom to mark up, I'm going to use the technology at our disposal to enforce the following standards:
    • Any topic not specifically restricted can be edited by anyone. Remember that all previous versions can be restored by anyone else, which simply makes a new version in turn. The latest version and all the diffs constitute a complete history of the topic's evolution, and no one version is "final" or "right" as against all other versions. Freedom to revise is not dependent on format: Just because a topic doesn't have a Comment box doesn't mean you can't edit it. The edit button means what it says around here, which is also the local definition of freedom of speech.
    • All topics consisting of essays submitted as part of the evaluation process will be restricted. Only I and the student submitting the paper will initially be allowed to mark it up. Students submitting papers can however opt at any point in their evolution to put a comment box on their paper's topic page, after which discussion can then be generated there in the usual way and editability will be restored. I would ordinarily expect people to work their papers through the evaluation process with me, placing the comment box on each essay when it is in the finished form in which it was or will be graded.
    • Other topics can be technologically restricted when created, at the request of the topic's initial author.

-- EbenMoglen - 26 Jan 2008

 
 
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OperatingNorms 7 - 25 Jan 2008 - Main.AndrewGradman
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META TOPICPARENT name="WebPreferences"
I am interested in seeing if folks want to set up some guidelines for our online collaboration. I am going to add one or two here and then, if you think this will facilitate our collaboration, you should add your own. Hopefully this will increase comfort level with the medium and, as a result, increase engagement.
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 stick out tongue

-- AndrewGradman - 25 Jan 2008

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Rule N+5: No prior restraint.

-- AndrewGradman - 25 Jan 2008

 
 
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Revision 11r11 - 26 Jan 2008 - 20:31:42 - AndrewGradman
Revision 10r10 - 26 Jan 2008 - 19:32:39 - TheodoreSmith
Revision 9r9 - 26 Jan 2008 - 19:31:41 - AndrewGradman
Revision 8r8 - 26 Jan 2008 - 07:30:53 - EbenMoglen
Revision 7r7 - 25 Jan 2008 - 19:03:27 - AndrewGradman
Revision 6r6 - 25 Jan 2008 - 06:50:19 - AndrewGradman
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