Inspired by France's Mutu Network, a group has formed with a view to creating
Local Autonomous Media here in the UK. There has perhaps never been a bettertime. ---- Weeks ago, SubMedia joined the likes of Crimethinc and It's Going Downon the ban list of Twitter, whose censorship of antifascist and anarchist groupshas picked up pace under the ownership of Elon Musk, joining Mark Zuckerberg'sFacebook in the increasing assault on radical media (1). These internet entitieswere never "platforms"; never "town squares" - because they're companies, notcommunities. ---- We should not have been surprised when, under capitalism,digital spaces were subjected to the same ruin as our physical spaces - virtuallandowners controlling large swathes of space and polluting them withadvertising, treating those of us using those spaces as mere target markets. Withcity councils and companies alike relying on Facebook or Twitter pages, so manymore of us followed their lead as journalists portrayed them as the forum of keydiscourse.While the "Fediverse" has offered alternatives to such social networks -decentralised, open source instances such as kolektiva.social - media in generalhas lacked similar offerings, beyond excellent efforts such as kolektiva.media, avideo-sharing site built on PeerTube (an alternative to Google's YouTube).With faith in established media falling, and as internet use has risen,"alternative" media websites emerged in the early 2000s in a pattern reminiscentof public-access cable stations in the 1970s and 80s - and, sadly, with similarmisinformation and conspiracy theories. Many of these sites capitalised on theanti-war movement and anti-imperialist sentiments in the West at the time, yetoften became apologists for the Russian and Syrian states (2).There have been other "alternatives" too - usually limited companies led byrenegade media personalities overseeing teams of ambitious journalists who, inturn, gain exposure on establishment media such as The Guardian or the BBC.Granted, some are more non-hierarchical, even workers' cooperatives in a fewcases. But they all exist in silos; all competing against each other for clicks;all ultimately lost in a sandstorm of "alternative" media. Rejecting thiscommercial aspect is useful to developing our own media on the ground - and fromthe ground up.Now, imagine an online space where you could go to not only receive the latestnews about actions in your locality, but also share information about campaignsor events, without giving the surveillance capitalists more clicks.People have engaged in "citizen reporting" for years. In fact, the term "freedomof the press" was not originally describing the commercial media marketplace atall, but literally the freedom to publish using a printing press (3).Those of us who remember IndyMedia will recall that it started out fairlypromising - enabling us to report on radical actions in a matter of minutes,uploading content freely and easily, including photos and videos. But withoutbetter defined standards or enough editorial oversight, IndyMedia eventuallycollapsed under the weight of conspiracy theories and anti-Semitism that have noplace in antifascist media by and for the people.In France, Austria, and Switzerland, an actually effective media began to emerge.Covering striking workers, occupying students, and other intersectional workingclass struggles, it was called the Mutu Network - an interconnected series ofradical media sites disseminating information with core values ofanti-authoritarianism and mutual aid (hence the name).The Mutu Network's media model has succeeded perhaps because of its passion to"push forward emancipatory ideas and practices...and anti-capitalist ideals"alongside shared technical resources for all of its local websites via acollective interface, and the fact that participatory publishing content goesthrough a transparent editorial process before going live on the sites - sitesthat are not owned by any one particular group (4).With shared resources, they are able to "fight the hegemony of big groups thatcontrol the mass media, and therefore to build our autonomy in times of socialmovements and react against the offensive of far-right media."Those of us residing in the UK will undoubtedly recognise the need for somethingsimilar here, since just 3 companies dominate around 80% of British news media -the Murdochs' News UK, the Rothermeres' Daily Mail Group, and Reach (5).The last few years has seen Mutu receive significant attention and admirationover here, with an article on both Freedom (6) and Libcom (7) sparking muchinterest in developing a comparable media model in the UK just before theCOVID-19 pandemic. But the pandemic at least highlighted the importance of mutualaid to much of the population, as is often the case in times of significant crisis.Now, in recent months, momentum has been gained, with more activists comingforward to share ideas on how we can replicate the Mutu model with our own LocalAutonomous Media that can develop separate from - and in fact complement - thosepre-existing, proven resources such as Freedom, Libcom, and others that perhapsexist on a broader scale rather than just a localised level."Website collectives in every major town and city could act as vitalinfrastructure for local struggles while also serving as an entry point toradical politics which we're sorely lacking," the aforementioned article stated."Rather than having to navigate various blogs and social media accounts to findout about local activity, there could be a central resource for people interestedin their area's social movements."With some digital infrastructure now in place via Organise itself - with thepotential to be scaleable and adaptible - anti-capitalists across the UK have theopening to step forward and get started with their own local contributions tosuch a network, becoming the media we wish to see, bit by bit, town by town;building a new media world in the shell of the old.With "solidarity not charity," this Local Autonomous Media sets itself apart fromother regional media in that it isn't a private company fighting for clicks -rather, non-hierarchical and anti-authoritarian, it is to be run in the spirit ofmutual aid.This model is different to anything else, able to emerge beyond the sandstorm ofwhat we've come to expect from "alternative" media. This is true radical media.We can make it happen, together!To get involved, email loam (@) riseup.net or join us on Discord.1.https://crimethinc.com/2020/08/19/on-facebook-banning-pages-that-support-crimethinccom-and-the-digital-censorship-to-come2.https://www.bellingcat.com/news/2019/09/30/pro-assad-lobby-group-rewards-bloggers-on-both-the-left-and-the-right/3. https://core.ac.uk/download/pdf/217205355.pdf4. https://reseaumutu.info/Presentation-of-the-Mutu-Network-0045. https://www.mediareform.org.uk/media-ownership/who-owns-the-uk-media6. https://freedomnews.org.uk/2019/06/15/mutu-rethinking-our-radical-media/7. https://libcom.org/article/mutu-rethinking-our-radical-mediahttps://organisemagazine.org.uk/loam-local-autonomous-media-theory-and-analysis/_________________________________________A - I N F O S N E W S S E R V I C EBy, For, and About AnarchistsSend news reports to A-infos-en mailing listA-infos-en@ainfos.ca
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