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Update 'content/fhm-servers-migrations.md'
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summary: The work session focuses on the migration of mailing lists between an old and a new server ran by feminists involved in the Systerserver project. It opens a discussion around volunteering time, skill-sharing and technical tasks within grassroots tech communities. Autonomous feminist servers projects often operate with hardware that has to be assembled as opposed to cloud hosting, and recreational care as opposed to paid work. The work session is co-hosted together with Mara (https://psaroskalazines.gr/) and is made up of two parts. The first part is a technical hands-on backup/migration process and the second is a discussion around the connections between feminist servers and the travel path of this migration.
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summary: The work session focuses on the migration of mailing lists between an old and a new server ran by feminists involved in the Systerserver project. It opens a discussion around volunteering time, skill-sharing and technical tasks within grassroots tech communities. Autonomous feminist servers projects often operate with hardware that has to be assembled as opposed to cloud hosting, and recreational care as opposed to paid work. The work session is co-hosted together with Mara (https://psaroskalazines.gr/) and is made up of two parts. The first part is a technical hands-on backup/migration process and the second is a discussion around the connections between feminist servers and the travel path of this migration.
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We invite you to an online day, hosted by Varia and facilitated by the infrastructure of Constant, dedicated to feminist servers. This work session focuses on the migration of mailing lists between the old server, Jean and the new server, Adele, ran by feminists involved in the Systerserver project. It opens a discussion around volunteering time, skill-sharing and technical tasks within grassroots tech communities. Autonomous feminist servers projects often operate with hardware that has to be assembled as opposed to cloud hosting, and recreational care as opposed to paid work. Maintaining infrastructures on a donation basis results in a dynamic environment where the need for backups and migrations often arises and for many different reasons: hardware failures, memory and software upgrades, making space for other projects, moving files, moving to new servers and so on.
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We invite you to an online day, hosted by Varia and facilitated by the infrastructure of Constant, dedicated to feminist servers. This work session focuses on the migration of mailing lists between the old server, *Jean* and the new server, *Adele*, ran by feminists involved in the Systerserver project. It opens a discussion around volunteering time, skill-sharing and technical tasks within grassroots tech communities. Autonomous feminist servers projects often operate with hardware that has to be assembled as opposed to cloud hosting, and recreational care as opposed to paid work. Maintaining infrastructures on a donation basis results in a dynamic environment where the need for backups and migrations often arises and for many different reasons: hardware failures, memory and software upgrades, making space for other projects, moving files, moving to new servers and so on.
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The coming workshop is made up of two parts. The first part is a technical hands-on migration organized by Mara [https://psaroskalazines.gr/], of one or more mailing lists of eclectictechcarnival, anarchaserver and femservers communities, all hosted by the systerserver project — a necessary task that will conclude the move to the new server and allow the repurposing of the old server. Participants are invited to join in by actively documenting the process together and intervening with questions and thinking through the technical problems. See below more info on the technical steps.
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The coming workshop is made up of two parts. The first part is a technical hands-on migration organized by **Mara [https://psaroskalazines.gr/]**, of one or more mailing lists of eclectictechcarnival, anarchaserver and femservers communities, all hosted by the systerserver project — a necessary task that will conclude the move to the new server and allow the repurposing of the old server. Participants are invited to join in by actively documenting the process together and intervening with questions and thinking through the technical problems. See below more info on the technical steps.
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In the second part of the workshop, we will talk about the connections between feminist servers and the travel path of this migration. How are different responsibilities, roles, tasks communicated among members of feminist communities? What are the difficulties of such processes and how do we deal with them? We will have a collective reflection on the frictions between the required technical tasks, skills-sharing and knowledge-transfer, which are all required to share the responsibilities collectively.
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In the second part of the workshop, we will talk about the connections between feminist servers and the travel path of this migration. How are different responsibilities, roles, tasks communicated among members of feminist communities? What are the difficulties of such processes and how do we deal with them? We will have a collective reflection on the frictions between the required technical tasks, skills-sharing and knowledge-transfer, which are all required to share the responsibilities collectively.
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*The Feminist Hack Meetings, organised by Artemis Gryllaki, Angeliki Diakrousi and Luke Murphy, are a series of research meetings and workshops that explore the potentialities and imaginaries of feminist technological collectives. These gatherings aim to challenge who counts as a hacker, and what counts as hacking. The diverse activities of these gatherings will include sociopolitical discussions around technology and feminism, storytelling, prototyping and skill-sharing, as well as art experiments. We will invite people, who are interested in technology and the processes of shaping it, to discuss and work together in four thematic sections described below. Every meeting will have an informal, semi-public morning session, focusing on hands-on approach and research. The meetings will also include an evening public session with an invited guest, that will contribute with their own experience to each topic.*
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*The **Feminist Hack Meetings (FHM)**, organised by **Artemis Gryllaki, Angeliki Diakrousi** and **Luke Murphy**, are a series of research meetings and workshops that explore the potentialities and imaginaries of feminist technological collectives. These gatherings aim to challenge who counts as a hacker, and what counts as hacking. The diverse activities of these gatherings will include sociopolitical discussions around technology and feminism, storytelling, prototyping and skill-sharing, as well as art experiments. We will invite people, who are interested in technology and the processes of shaping it, to discuss and work together in four thematic sections described below. Every meeting will have an informal, semi-public morning session, focusing on hands-on approach and research. The meetings will also include an evening public session with an invited guest, that will contribute with their own experience to each topic.*
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