How does linking digital gardens facilitate a richer commons?
*This shift from the standard wiki to a form of writing based on “one person, one wiki, in a federated environment,” may sound like a step backward from the Wikipedia style of open collaboration. But in fact the effect is quite the opposite: giving online platforms to individual voices while bringing them together into a shared neighborhood of wikis results in a richer, more robust commons.
Why?
I guess first of all, what is the commons that is being produced?
A commons is a combination of social, political (governance) and economic (provisioning) factors. A collection of digital gardens are a knowledge commons.
But what is it's value? There is an assumption that the content of the gardens together produces something of value. I don't think this can just be assumed. If you've just a bunch of individual gardens linked together with no purpose, there's not necessarily a benefit.
I guess the assumption is that there's some intention behind the conjoined wikis - i.e. they are all working together on some topic. So yeah one benefit comes from if it's a group of gardens with a shared purpose, I think.
But in the absence of purpose I think another benefit is that it faciliates going on a dérive drift and learning about unexpected new things.
1. Elsewhere
1.1. In my garden
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