The Phone Co-op 2010

Ed Mayo talking to the Phone Co-op meeting
Ed Mayo talking to the Phone Co-op meeting

Yesterday I had the pleasure to be at the Phone Co-ops annual meeting, as those of you who follow me on identi.ca or elsewhere will already know. The proceedings included a speech from Cooperatives-UK Chief Exec Ed Mayo that included the co-op pub in Salford, spurning David Beckham’s gift and this summer’s Co-operatives Fortnight.

As ever, the bits I liked best were the lively question-and-answer sessions, both on Ed’s speech and the annual report. I took notes and reproduce them below, but I didn’t capture every question, or every answer and none of this is verbatim. Questions to Ed about UK cooperation included:

  • Can people in the co-op pub smoke? – No, there’s a bit of drinking in meetings, but not smoking. Some heated debates in meetings are defused by a break to go refill the glasses.
  • Gordon Brown and Labour are starting to talk about cooperatives more. What should we do? – We need to stand on our own two feet, but expect to be treated equally. A “Mutuals Manifesto” will be out online next month. In regulation, having the telecoms networks opened up to co-ops and not be so limited would help. One interesting possibility is with football co-ops / supporters trusts: it’s been suggested that a fan co-op should have the right to buy a club if supported by 75% of season ticket holders.
  • With all the business collapses and Cadburys being bought, what is the temperature of interest in mutuals outside the movement? – Good. The only AAA-rated bank in the world is the Rabobank co-op, but remember that co-ops are not immune to failure. Cadburys is not a co-op and was always vulnerable to the current investor-led rules changing its ownership. People are not necessarily thinking of co-ops, so we need to reach out. It’s a cynical, apocalyptic age, so we need to prove what we’re doing. coops14 is an opportunity. The co-op bank saw a surge in new accounts after it was highlighted in one newspaper as an alternative to excessive banker bonuses. We need to encourage people to act. Reminded of a quote that “the trouble with the rat race is that even if you win, you’re still a rat”. Research shows that Britain today is a brutal and competitive place to grow up in, with only 45% of children trusting their friends. People have heard of cooperatives. We should try to build a more cooperative nation.
  • Comment from the floor that the private sector won’t take substantial cooperative competition lightly. We must look behind us and never give them a chance.
  • Could the BBC become a co-op? – Yes.

Questions about the annual report asked about:

  • What is our target profit %? – No hard target. This year’s reduction was planned and it is still a profit.
  • Why are we using UKMail instead of the Royal Mail? – £10k price difference. It was a hard choice, debated by the board, but there is no co-op option and no particular preference for state ownership.
  • Why are we considering energy supply? – Telecoms is a deflationary market, so diversification is a wise move and energy supply is a top customer request.
  • What is our churn rate? – 1.5%/year, which is unsatisfactory to us, but still low by industry standards.
  • Was the Avoco acquisition price too high? – a good price by usual industry measurement (multiple of sales)
  • Will we support coops14 Free and Open Source Software events, because there is an overlap? – (I didn’t catch the answer)
  • Can we put leaflets in the shops? – Matt Lane is working on this and other opportunities
  • Can we encrypt bills and emails if customers want it? – exec will take and deliberate on that
  • Can we get some sales materials to Scotland? – details taken to send them out next week
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Welcome to Koha-Community.org

At last night’s #koha community hand-over meeting, it was felt that the LL/PTFS transfer could easily delay community control of the previous koha website for 3 months, so HLT should register a fan site for community members to put the latest Koha news and information on the web.

So welcome to Koha-community.org which will mainly be about updates about new releases, support listings and the manuals until the previous website reflects the community again. Well done to all involved for getting it online so quickly!

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World Economic Forum 2010

It still doesn’t seem to be getting the coverage, but this is the sixth year that I’ve written about the World Economic Forum, which is basically where large corporations try to tell governments how to rule their populations, as described in this VIRUS article. This year, it is overshadowed in the UK by war-starting former Prime Minister Blair giving evidence to the Iraq enquiry.

If you have satellite television, you can watch it live on SFinfo at 13e (schedule). There’s more detailed listings on Klack. In previous years, English audio has been on one side of the stereo channels. It looks like almost none of the SFinfo coverage is live this year. Maybe they’ve noticed comments like mine from 2005:

“I am convinced that if more people watched it for themselves, there wouldn’t be any need to publicise against them. Without the soundbiting and polishing of TV news, these people are scary. They’re less slick than the European Social Forum, too.”

If you find live coverage on any other stations, please could you leave me a comment here?
In that vein, BBC News has Ten things you didn’t know about Davos (thanks Policomm). Amongst other things, this isn’t the 40th WEF and Bill Clinton was the first sitting US president to attend, so its influence is a fairly recent mistake.

Once again, there an official programme, as well as @davos which seems to be talking much more than listening… seems appropriate for WEF, no?

To close with a quote that’s also in the VIRUS article:
‘But I don’t want to go among mad people,’ Alice remarked.
‘Oh, you can’t help that,’ said the Cat: ‘we’re all mad here. I’m mad. You’re mad.’
‘How do you know I’m mad?’ said Alice.
‘You must be,’ said the Cat, ‘or you wouldn’t have come here.’
-Lewis Carroll, “Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland” (Puffin Books, 1946)

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Critical Eye: Google, China, DNS and an Event

My Google Bugs page started off as a blog post back in 2006, but I’ve moved it to a more permanent home and started to bring it up to date.

Recent additions include the China Controversy updated, a recent search bug added andDNS service added.

In just over a month, BathLitFest will be holding a debate on Is Google Good For You? Sunday 28 Feb, 1pm – 2pm. The key questions are:

“In the data-sharing and database age, how much information are we prepared to give away about ourselves – and who, ultimately, controls that information? Is the price of convenient, high-speed communication an almost total loss of privacy? And is it right that one company knows more about us than our government, or even than we know ourselves?”

Tickets are on sale, priced £7.

That’s pretty much what I was pointing out back in 2006. I don’t hate Google or anything, but we should be realistic: it is a for-profit company, so probably won’t be doing anything truly for free. There’s always a payback and we should recognise it as part of making an informed choice about whether to trade with them. It’s nice to see these questions getting a more mainstream airing.

If you’ve got any updates for the Google Bugs page, please let me have them.

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Home Access Scheme or Hope Abandoned to Scandal?

After its puff by Prime Minister Gordon Brown, in newspapers and his podcast (mp3 file link) I’ve had a few people asking about the Home Access Scheme where families apply for a package from a closed list of six suppliers of new PCs, software and internet access. No Free and Open Source Software, no recycled PCs, no greener options, no community networking, the minimum amount of memory for the bundled software and it looks like no mix-and-match to get the best fit, as noted by Watfordgap.

Broadly, I agree with Ian Cuddy (of #ukgovoss fame) that the scheme is one in a long line that Does Not Compute and I’m very disappointed that Cooperative Party MP and Schools Minister Ed Balls is so supportive of it. It does nothing to help cooperatively-developed Free and Open Source Software. If anything, it’s a market distortion that will hinder development.

Even worse during this debt crisis, Becta ignored warnings about the costs from Mark Taylor and others who have been fighting the brave fight with ukgov FOSS adoption recently. Home laptops increase achievement (apparently) by derek.wenmoth suggests that educators are not particularly convinced that this is a good thing, either.

In reply to such criticisms, Becta’s HomeAccess homepage has one of their executive directors commenting:

“Recent evidence suggests that young people with a computer at home could get a B, rather than a D, at GCSE.”

Well yes, they could, but they could get a D rather than a B too. What’s the context for that quote? Where’s the link to the evidence? Or should we just believe him because he wears a jacket and smiles?

So, where does this leave us? There’s no funding for councils to promote the £300m #homeaccess
scheme to residents. [PDF]
Can anyone rescue any crumbs of comfort from this basket case for me, please?

Posted in Cooperatives, SPI | Comments Off on Home Access Scheme or Hope Abandoned to Scandal?

In Berkeley or Boston? Want to work for a co-op?

Our four comrades over at Quilted co-op are looking for a new worker-owner, either a project manager, a developer (Drupal, WordPress, Rails, Perl and/or PHP), or a designer based in Berkeley or Boston. The eventual plan is to all be in one location, probably SF bay.

The job ad mentions encouraging “LGBTQQ people”. Lesbian, Gay, Bi, Trans and … I’ll show my ignorance, but what’s the QQ?

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Get the Survey Monkey Off Your Back

I’ve been asked why I dislike surveymonkey surveys, I don’t want to reply fully in that forum (because it’s off-topic there) and I want to publish this for your feedback now.

surveymonkey really frustrates me. In short, it’s often confusing, I think it doesn’t follow UK accessiblity laws and I’m unsure if it complies with our privacy laws. It seems like another triumph of marketing over good sense. It’s a free market failure, possibly based on lack of information on the drawbacks of this option.

If a survey is on Surveymonkey, it’s easiest for able-bodied users of full-fat browsers with low security and privacy settings to answer. Using NoScript or a privacy tool? You’ll get an error message (which contradicts the VPAT_SurveyMonkey.pdf description). Unable to see graphics clearly? The forms will be hard to read because they’ve replaced the browser form widgets (such as checkboxes and radio buttons) with javascript-driven images for no good reason.

Those sort of faults will probably bias results a bit – how much will depend on the subject. It’s a particular case of a problem I first mentioned in the last-but-one bullet point on my debian surveys page back in 2006. Basically, I think you should keep open surveys as open as possible. Statistics literature is littered with bizarre spurious results from when the survey method accidentally favours some particular subset of the population.

Finally, surveymonkey surveys can be left with answer requirements which make no sense, such as ticking “Other” requiring a text input, but the text box not accepting input. Is that the fault of the survey owner not being able to work the admin interface, or the interface having some subtle flaws? I’m not completely sure, but I’ve had that experience a few times.

So, can I persuade people to use limeservice, doodle or even Google Docs rather than Surveymonkey, please?

I think Limeservice is better because it’s based in Germany (so EU data protection and privacy laws apply) and is cooperatively-developed FOSS software. Doodle and Google aren’t, but are quicker and easier to use for straw polls.

If you want something to install on your own site and the downloadable limesurvey software seems a bit heavy, then askpeople seems another good option. Our co-op can host either of those if you’re willing to pay. (If someone would be willing to sponsor it, we’d host some free surveys too – let me know.)

Lots of people use surveymonkey, but popularity doesn’t always mean it’s the best tool. Please consider the alternatives and pick the best tool for the job.

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Unable to Register .CN Domains

Our co-op registers domain names for others. Like most registrars, we now cannot register Chinese (.cn) domains. There’s a bit of background discussion on WebmasterWorld.

While it’s always disappointing to offer fewer services, I don’t think we’ve ever registered a .cn domain and especially not for anyone in China. Most of the .cn domains we see are in spam. If this tighter control makes any dent in the amount of spam and scam sites, that’s probably a good thing.

I’ve not felt any significant reduction in spam since this change, though. I suspect the scammers have just moved to another top-level domain with a long-time idle government, while a few legitimate users of cn domains will also be punished along with the scammers. Will we ever shut out the spammers? Even if we kick them out of all domains, they’ll find some way of using IP addresses or something. The price of freedom is eternal vigilance.

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The Koha Company-go-round

While I was under snow last week, the world saw a flurry of Koha company news. We found out that PTFS is to acquire LibLime and ByWater Solutions and BibLibre are partnering for the U.S. With the past ByWater Solutions and PTFS, Inc. partnering, it seems like four of the younger Koha companies (established 2005, 2007, 2008 and PTFS started with Koha in 2008 I think) are now linked together, so it’s not entirely surprising that ByWater congratulates PTFS on the purchase of LibLime. What did surprise me is the “impressed with PTFS’s resources” quote from Liblime owner Josh.

Some librarians are asking “What will the acquistion of Liblime mean to Koha libraries?” but I’m wondering what does this mean for the Koha project?

Well, there’s still our co-op (established 2002) and the other older private Koha companies (Calyx, Katipo and so on), as well as the rest of the younger ones, so I think there’s still the motivation for a vendor-neutral non-profit group to host the project. Recent history has shown that it’s too painful if any one private company hosts it. It’ll be interesting to see how the recent private company deals help that work. If all goes well, a bright new day for Koha, as wizzyrea hopes.

On another level, I’m a bit disappointed that a theoretical Free and Open Source Software player (even if things like LibLime Enterprise Koha had muddied the water) has been sold to a mixed FOSS+proprietary player. I’m almost cross with Liblime’s owners for selling up, but I don’t know if that’s fair. Selling up is a fairly common exit move in private companies, so shouldn’t I expect it? Do librarians expect it? Is this why some seem reluctant to buy from start-ups which are still independent?

As you may know, TTLLP software.coop is in common ownership, so we can’t really be bought. This is a self-defence or legacy-guaranteeing mechanism for our cooperative, where our assets are pledged to other common ownership cooperatives if our corporation dies. I think it also has the fringe benefit that we’re a fairly safe home for things like trademarks.

This unbuyability means that I feel I’m watching the sales and cross-linking of our competitors from the sidelines, from a viewpoint more like Koha users than the other vendors, waiting for the dust to settle and the chips to fall where they may. Whatever happens there, software.coop will still be here.

Unsurprisingly, there have been a couple of new entrants into Koha support, although the Liblime-controlled Koha project website doesn’t show them yet and reportedly its “new support company” submission form has been broken for weeks, which is irritating.

Interesting co-op-y things are happening in the wider library systems world, too, with Karen Coombs going to work for the OCLC library cooperative and Polaris Library Systems workers buying the company although I’m not sure yet if they’re becoming a worker co-op or “merely” employee-owned. I suspect many of these announcements are timed for #alamw10 which is a big US library conference. Has anyone seen more co-op or Koha announcements which I haven’t spotted in the conference PR flood?

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Gnus added to List-friendly Mail Clients

It’s nice to see that Emacs isn’t being outdone since Thunderbird 3 Introduced Reply-To List: Alok G. Singh got in touch and pointed me at Gnus’s support for List-* headers. I’ve updated my page of email clients that support mailing lists.

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