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Articles

Sustaining platforms as commons: perspectives on participation, infrastructure, and governance

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Pages 243-255 | Received 31 May 2018, Accepted 08 Jun 2019, Published online: 26 Jul 2019
 

ABSTRACT

This work finds its place within Participatory Design (PD) as a specific approach to co-design that focuses on the politics of technological innovation and socio-technical transformations. In particular, the article contributes to the repositioning of co-design in the age of platform capitalism by engaging with the question: how can participatory designers approach interventions for the long-term sustainability of platforms as commons? As the contradictions and limitations of platform capitalism become increasingly evident, to engage with such a challenge is a way to pursue PD’s renewed political agenda. The article foregrounds the concept of platforms as commons to bring designers’ attention towards those platform arrangements which are antithetical to platform capitalism exploitative ones. By building on Free and Open Source Software (FOSS), as a paradigmatic case of platform as commons, the article outlines participation, infrastructure, and governance as relevant perspectives for framing broad areas of sustainability concerns; and it articulates them along four approaches for supporting long-term sustainability in practice: maintaining, scaling, replicating, and evolving. Ultimately, this article provides participatory designers with a map of possible orientations to frame and support their work, research or interventions around the long-term sustainability of platforms as commons.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.

Notes

1. By means of a simple example, in the case of the online encyclopaedia Wikipedia, commoners are not only those who write and revise articles, they are also the Wikipedia’s software maintainers, the servers and database administrators, as well as the moderators for dispute and conflict resolutions, the fundraisers, and, to some extent, the donors.

2. For a detailed explanation of the possible use in the practice of these approaches, I defer readers to Iversen and Dindler’s work (Citation2014).

3. Often, these tools are also Free and Open Source Software.

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by the EU/H2020-MSCA-IF-2016 funding programme, under grant nr [749353].

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