7.9 KiB
Bots of Conduct
a workshop by Cristina Cochior and Joana Chicau for Constant's work session Collective Conditions, Brussels 2019
15:00-15:30 - collective digital infrastructures
Varia is a collective-space 1 in Rotterdam focused on everyday technologies. We keep a trail of photographs of what we've done.
Together, we try to experiment with various tools for collaborative processes, as well as collective infrastructure making and self-hosting.
In October 2019, we wrote our own first CoC.
In June 2019, during Relearn Rotterdam, some of the participants had discussions about codes of conduct and conducting codes and bots of conduct.
What would bots of conduct act like?
Bots can have an important infrapunctural role that provides a new logic. What would it mean to become more entangled with bots, redistribute the labour of making and maintaining a collective, but without falling into the metaphorical understanding of bot as a servant?
Varia members use XMPP as a chat protocol because it enables us to self-host our own instance and federate with other chat servers. We use bots both to communicate and to document our exchanges. Our initial idea was to develop new forms of note-taking based on our interaction habits. We share a lot of different types of information in group chats, from news to recommendations of articles to instigations to clean the fridge. Starting from the conversational nature of our exchanges, we are experimenting with two different bot-users in the chat: one that gathers images shared on the main Varia channel and displays them online, and another one, focused specifically on the topic of digital interdependencies, that gathers images, quotes and looks for books' citations.
Working on our own digital infrastructure allows us to adapt the tools to our own needs and behaviours; meaning that these bots make sense to us, but they may not make sense to someone else.
Currently, we use:
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Streambot: a bot that saves the images sent to the main Varia group chat and creates an html page for them.
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You can find a genealogy of the bots around Varia in this footnote 2
15:30-15:45 - bot as conductor or bot as conductive
Conducting: "the art of directing the simultaneous performance of several players or singers by the use of gesture." [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conducting]. There are many roles as conductors [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conductor] Also, in connection to the enviroment: "a substance, body, or device that readily conducts heat, electricity, sound".
Looking into the bots examples
name: cross.py;
action mode:
situation:
name: gather.py;
action mode:
situation:
name: greet.py;
action mode:
situation:
name: spark.py;
action mode:
situation:
name: whisper.py (we don't have this one yet)
action mode:
situation:
15:45-16:25 — creating situations
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split into groups of maximum 5 (mixed interest in code)
- imagine you are a collective-space with your group peers and you have been active for 2 years
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create a name for the chatroom:
- to open up the imagination (rooms /sites of action/ environments);
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imagine a situations:
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from your own experiences working in collaboration, or with a collective, or having read a CoC, try to recall a specific moment which can define an action mode;
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which situation to think through? / if a code of conduct would exist for a situation?
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embody the situation through a conductor / conductive bot:
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in relation to the situation, does your bot act as conductor or as conductive?
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what are your "action modes" (for eg.: sitting; dancing; witnessing; listening; gathering; greeting; sparking; whispering; reminders is a specific kind of action); action modes that create (or perform within specific) situations (for eg.:conversation is unbalanced);
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how can bots be embodied / physically enacted? what gestures would it perform?
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what apart from language can be used as a way of conducting? what other modes of expression (non-linguistic)?
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other possibilities for bot behaviour:
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iteration, repetition;
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lack of memory
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other temporalities (duration / tempo);
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will your bot perform in other space extensions? speaking to other (chat)rooms? to other spatial formats (file systems, like the glossary and the txt file);
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will your bot be a channel between private to public? semi-public to semi-public? semi-public to private? private to private?
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will your bot relate to other bots?
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thinking of distance and proximities between members and bots: is it listening to a specific member? is it listening to other bots?
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16:25-16:40 - round of ideas-sharing
16:40-17:10 - installing
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create an account and choose nickname on converse: https://conversejs.org/fullscreen.html#converse/register
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once you are logged in, join the group chat named tuwazap@muc.vvvvvvaria.org
optional: for anyone who would like to install and run the bots:
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are there any Windows users?
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open the Terminal application on your computer
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install python3
dependencies (pip install slixmpp requests, install python3, pip3, text editor)
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download the bots: https://git.vvvvvvaria.org/ccl/bots-of-conduct/src/branch/master
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run a bot in the terminal (be sure to be in the same directory of the files):
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show & explain the parts where one can intervene
$ python3 bot.py -j user@vvvvvvaria.org -p password -r tuwazap@muc.vvvvvvaria.org -n nickname -o .
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-j means JID (the xmpp protocol)
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-r means room
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-n means bot nickname
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-o output
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. means here
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if you dont have a code editor, we can suggest (among others): https://www.sublimetext.com/
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if you don't have python3 installed:
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to install the conversations app on your phone click here
17:10-17:30 - bot in the situation
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experimenting with bots: either adapt the ones we provided (experiment with code) or enact the bots' behaviours iteratively (bot behaviour);
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bot behaviour: iteration, repetition
17:30-18:00 - present and perform
Footnotes
Link to reference's pad — further references and materials assembled by Joana and Cristina - feel free to add your owns!
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https://gitlab.com/relearn/relearn2017/blob/master/xmpp-bots/timekeeper-bot/timekeeper.py (Relearn 2017)
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https://gitlab.com/relearn/relearn2017/blob/master/xmpp-bots/collection-bot/collection-bot.py (Relearn 2017)
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https://gitlab.com/relearn/relearn2017/tree/master/xmpp-bots/archive-bot (Relearn 2017)
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https://gitlab.com/relearn/relearn2017/blob/master/xmpp-bots/cake-bot/cake-bot.py (Relearn 2017)
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https://gitlab.com/lidia_p/author-is-not-present/blob/master/xmpp-vbot.py (Cristina and Lidia's bot, 2019)