diff --git a/small-sites/abstract-small-sites-drupal.md b/small-sites/abstract-small-sites-drupal.md index 9eadba9..53ea7da 100644 --- a/small-sites/abstract-small-sites-drupal.md +++ b/small-sites/abstract-small-sites-drupal.md @@ -75,6 +75,7 @@ Outside Drupal, there's a lot more examples, and a lot more economically thrivin * Wallabag, a pocket-like service * Standard Notes * Write.as (formerly Overleaf) + * [Loomio](https://loomio.org ) * WordPress.org See more at LibreSaas.org @@ -87,15 +88,38 @@ Some, like Slack or most infamously AWS, are making piles of money on a relative I'm giving this talk because I think part of the reason is lack of awareness as a business model. And therefore, lack of explaining its benefits. + + # SaaS + Democracy == Platform Cooperative A cooperative is a jointly owned and democratically-controlled enterprise formed by people voluntarily uniting to meet their common needs and aspirations. https://agaric.coop/blog/putting-powerful-platforms-under-cooperative-control +Localeyz, the closed-source Drupal-as-a-service mentioned earlier, is also cooperative platform. + + "If we're not focused on things that build scale, we're not building institutions that change society. And if we're not building institutions that change society, we're not doing what we need to do." — David Hammer (ICA) + +# Redecentralization + +I've essentially been talking about centralizing our way to being able to compete with the proprietary platforms. + +That hasn't been fashionable in tech circles since... ever. We're supposed to create decentralized protocols + +and of course, Mastodon is a pretty big success (find me on social.coop), but despite the relative decentralization, it's a fairly fragile ecosystem. + +Cooperative platforms can provide the business model which + +# Cooperative Platforms powered by LibreSaaS + + * [Social.coop](https://wiki.social.coop/home.html ) and [Sunbeam.City](https://sunbeam.city/about/more ) + * + +# Community + At the end of the decade, it's community that matters.