WHAT IS A COMMUNITY COMPUTER NETWORK The general consensus
was that FreeNet is a tool to provide access to everyone --
for example, "store-front" access to the "underadvantaged";
to the non-computer elite, etc.... FreeNet is a type of
community outreach programme that could bring those normally
out of the loop in - a way of broadening participation. It is
important to show potential users what a community-based
network can do for them. There needs to be content or service
of interest to people to lure them in and keep them in.
People saw FreeNets as an education tool to help educate
others about networks, computers, etc... A key issue brought
up was "orientation to the FreeNet". Many felt that there
should be a better orientation to the FreeNet community -
Where to go for certain type of information, how to send
e-mail, etc... instead of having to search endlessly through
the menus for what you are looking for. ie., one participant
stated, "It took me two months to find the Survival Guide" It
was agreed that networks provide complementary information to
the type of information we already received. HOW DOES FreeNet
DIFFER FROM LOCAL BULLETIN BOARD SYSTEMS (BBS)? This question
raised a lot of discussion, however there did not seem to be
a consensus on what FreeNet is or what it should be. An
analog was given that a FreeNet is to a BBS like a
supermarket is to a corner grocery store. What's the reaction
of local bulletin board systems to FreeNets? In the
Osahawa/Toronto area, most had a hostile reaction. They
barred any discussion of a FreeNet from their BBS's. In
Ottawa, the reaction has been the opposite: BBS operators
welcomed the advent of FreeNet. There has been a recognition
that FreeNets and BBS's aren't in competition; they can be
(and are) complementary. Presumably, the relationship can be
symbiotic. Further discussion include the fact that a BBS is
intended to be used more as a form of entertainment for
individuals to retrieve files and to talk to people with
similar interest, whereas the FreeNet gives this plus access
to important information about and from the local community.
Also, the information on a FreeNet is not controlled by a
single individual, but by the community as a whole. One
individual summarized these thoughts by saying that FreeNet
is a platform on which everyone can dance There was a caution
that a FreeNet should not look at its users or service
providers as distinct and separate, but that it should
consider the exchange of information as a two-way street.
FreeNets should also accept the responsibility of being part
of the community and refer to themselves as the community and
not that they are serving a geographic community. WHAT IS THE
RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN FreeNet AND THE LOCAL BBS? Members of
the NCF indicated that at first they felt that many BBS
operators were quite bitter towards FreeNet and how it might
affect their pay per use facilities. It now appears that the
relationship has been mended because due to an increase of
more than 800% in modem sales, there are more users out there
who want access to electronic information even if it is not
free. FreeNets may be valuable to other BBS as a
market-builder. COALITION POLITICS: SOURCES Robert Thompson
noted that a FreeNet is really a coalition group, and that
coalition groups have particular characteristics which have
been studied extensively. He knows of a report on how to
organize and run a coalition group, and he will try to make
that available electronically over the FreeNet, perhaps in
this "Conference" menu.