[[!meta title="About Blee: enveloping our own autonomy directed digital ecosystem"]] [[!meta copyright="Copyright © 2024 Mohsen BANAN"]] [[!inline pages="internal(2024/info/blee-nav)" raw="yes"]] # About Blee: enveloping our own autonomy directed digital ecosystem Mohsen BANAN (he/him) - Pronunciation: MO-HH-SS-EN [[!inline pages="internal(2024/info/blee-before)" raw="yes"]] Emacs has long been recognized as the ultimate integration platform, enabling the creation of an unparalleled user environment. In 2010, Tomohiro Matsuyama, captured this concept crisply: "The reason why Emacs platform is good is that it cooperates with OS, not because it is good by itself." Building on this idea, Blee (ByStar Libre-Halaal Emacs Environment) can be seen as yet another Emacs re-distribution, akin to Doom Emacs or Spacemacs. However, Blee is distinct. While Doom Emacs is multi-platform oriented, Blee is paired exclusively with Debian — and on mobile, with Termux-Android. While Doom Emacs is Emacs-centric, Blee is digital ecosystem-centric. To further elucidate Blee, let’s break down the subtitle of this presentation: "Enveloping Our Own Autonomy Directed Digital Ecosystem With Emacs." - **"Enveloping":** Blee is designed to fully integrate and encapsulate usage of an entire digital ecosystem. - **"Our Own Autonomy-Directed Digital Ecosystem":** In contrast to the proprietary American ecosystems of Google, Microsoft, Meta, Apple, and Amazon, Blee is part of *the Libre-Halaal ByStar Digital Ecosystem*. ByStar is ours. By\* challenges the existing proprietary American digital ecosystem while operating concurrently alongside it. ByStar's primary offerings are tangible autonomy and genuine privacy on a very large scale. ByStar represents a moral inversion of the proprietary American internet services model. By\* is about redecentralization of internet application services. Some might dismiss ByStar as an ambitious, utopian vision. In response, I’ve authored a book titled: ------------------------------------------------------------------------

Nature of Polyexistentials:

Basis for Abolishment of the Western Intellectual Property Rights Regime

And Introduction of the Libre-Halaal ByStar Digital Ecosystem

On Line:   PLPC-120033 at Github -- DOI --- PDF: 8.5x11 -- A4
US Edition Book Prints At Amazon:   US -- France -- UK -- Japan   (424 pages --- 6 x 0.96 x 9 inches)
International Edition Book Prints:   Iran (Jangal Publishers)   (406 pages --- 23.5 x 16.5 cm)

Comments, Feedback:   plpc-120033@mohsen.1.banan.byname.net

------------------------------------------------------------------------ Blee and Emacs are integral parts of ByStar. Analysis of digital ecosystems is inherently interdisciplinary, and so is my book. But, in this presenation, I won't be delving much into the philosophical, ethical, moral, societal, and social dimensions of the book. This presentation, focuses on the technical aspects of ByStar and Blee, specifically through the lens of Emacs users and developers. Blee’s approach to integration differs from traditional Emacs culture in three key ways: 1. Avoiding the "Curse of Lisp": While Emacs culture emphasizes doing everything in Lisp, Blee consciously avoids this pitfall. 2. Cultivation of Best-of-Breeds: Emacs folklore tends to follow a laissez faire approach, but Blee is disciplined around cultivation of selected best of breeds. 3. Digital Ecosystem Orientation: Unlike traditional Emacs, which is component-focused, Blee is designed in the context of the entirety of our own digital ecosystem. In ByStar, much of the integration occurs outside of Emacs, through a framework called BISOS (By\* Internet Services OS). BISOS builds on Debian to provide a unified platform for developing both internet services and software-service continuums. BISOS and Blee are intertwined. Now, in 2024, I am advancing Matsuyama concept with specificity: "The reason why Emacs platform is good is that it facilitates creation of integrated usage environments like Blee, which cooperate with Debian, BISOS and ByStar." An early version of BISOS and Blee is available for public use and experimentation. To get started with BISOS, Blee, and ByStar, visit . From a virgin Debian 12 installation ("Fresh-Debian"), you can bootstrap BISOS and Blee in one step by running the raw-bisos.sh script. It produces "Raw-BISOS" which includes "Raw-Blee". You can then customize Raw-Blee to create different parts and aspects of your own ByStar DE. I welcome your thoughts and feedback, especially if you experiment with Blee, BISOS, ByStar, and the model and the concept of Libre-Halaal Polyexistentials. About the speaker: Mohsen Banan is a software and internet engineer. He was one of the principal architects of the Cellular Digital Packet Data (CDPD) network specifications. He is the primary author of two Internet RFCs. He is the principal architect of the ByStar Digital Ecosystem and BISOS and Blee. The software and internet services that he publicly offers all conform to the definition of Libre-Halaal Software and Libre-Halaal Internet Services. All of his public writings are web published and unrestricted. He has never applied for a patent. As an expert witness he has assisted in legal efforts involving invalidation of a number of patents. He has been using Emacs since 1986. Previous Talks: and # Discussion ## Questions and answers - Q: You mentioned that there's two editions: one aimed at westerners, and one for worldwide readers. I'm from Brazil, which edition would you recommend? It's a western country, but you didn't make the distinction exclusive for the second edition, so I thought it would be better to ask. - A: For everybody listening to this conference, the **international** edition is the right choice. - It features more aggressive stance against intellectual property (being linked specifically to the American culture) - There are pieces in the book where the typical American audience might be offended - ...But if your skin is thick enough to deal with reasonable criticism, the international edition for you. - Q:Thank you for this talk! How does your perspective interface with works such as Yanis Varoufakis' Technofeudalism? - A: Not familiar with the book. - There is a lot of global growth and collective understanding towards the notion that the direction we're headed in (i.e. American digital ecosystems) is dangerous. - We should revisit the entirety of the strategy. - \[For the questioner\] Can you clarify? (I'll write to you :) ) - Q:To what extent do you agree that the introduction of proprietary systems in education creates an environment for exploitation while at the same time diluting the learning value of the curriculum? My computing education at school amounted to learning how to use the MS Office suite - ie, the opposite of lasting, open knowledge. - A: The idea is that teaching and learning should be unrestricted, such as the Muslim/Iranian saying: "Passing along the learning is the tax on having learnt". - "Being used as part of education" - Q:As a specific example of how "ownership is not clean", look at the Star Trek Picard series: they continuously asked Patrick Stewart to come do another Star Trek series but he wouldn't because Star Trek changed from what it used to be, at least until it they came up with a series that honored what Star Trek used to be. Does this intersect? - A: Not sure if I fully get the point. - On my criticism of the FOSS movement: - The idea is that we have jumped on the FOSS movement and recognized it as an alternative, but we haven't looked deeply enough to see if our own philosophy and movement have problems. - The problems that I note is that the FOSS movement does not recognize clearly and explictly that the entirity of the intellectual property system is flawed. - It's only now that we are seeing the FOSS movement is broader than the Western world. - The labels of Free Software and Open Source are not necessarily correct. - We are not paying enough attention to establishing relationship with society. - There's a whole chapter in the book dedicated to this topic. - \[To the questioner\] Clarification please - The point of the question was even though a media company owned Star Trek they couldn't do what they wanted with the series if you involve other people. The question was also open ended so you did answer it by taking it where you wanted it to go. - Q:How can we promote a culture of more active thought with regard to the societal impacts of ethical and philosphical choices made in the wider FOSS community? - A: - Q: I am involved in Politics in my country, my party is very sympathetic to FOSS ideals and I've been pushing for better policy with regards to public procurement. Do you have any recommended reading materials designed for such an audience? - A: ## Notes - Am I too young to understand? Maybe I need to read the book - Aah I get it!! IPR forces single ownership of what are polyexistentials - Takiyah Assaf: ​​gnome is not halal - Takiyah Assaf: ​​gnome is western - \ Did he elaborate on how GNOME is haram by his definition? Oh, sorry, nevermind, the quote on GNOME isn't from the speaker. - \ interesting. and - obviously - radical thoughts. not sure about if Americanism critique is the core, but moreover a general critique of (extreme) capitalism mechanism. but that's certainly not merely a "Western" issue. imo - \ Okay, I have to admit, I love this political/philosophical dissection of software's impact on society.   Very interesting. - \ It's like an extension of the GNU (free software) thought. I think I need more literature on that topic\... - \<\_bladez\_\> Essentially a free, open-source and privacy-respecting ecosystem akin to those provided by the big tech companies (Google, Microsoft, Apple). - Paul Eduard​​: Great talk on Polyexistentials. Awesome to see EmacsConf including international voices . - \ He hit the nail on the head:  This point has been on my mind: Capitalism creates artificial scarcity and then manufactures junk to fill it.  How can that be overcome?  So that we get software that is actually needed \... - \ lounge-511: I don't know if this is a problem with Capitalism which can be many things to different people to the point the term might not mean much. I have a problem with people competing through corrosion rather than compition. For example google is restricting access to google drive api making everybodys app but googles worse. Capitilism "not fake Capitalism" predospes a free market which would limit this - The blee panel actually is cool! - Blaine Mooers: Very thought-provoking talk! - Dovetailing nicely / with other talks from EmacsConf 2024 - Working **on** Emacs vs working **for** Emacs - Peter mentioned "too much choice" - Mixing org-mode with programming languages - org-babel has successfully integrated org-mode with all kinds of languages - Has happened within the context of literature programming - cf. Literate Programming for the 21st Century (EmacsConf 2024) - Traditional programming mixed with org-mode - polymode is key to that - Several concepts which were introduced like "dynamic blocks everywhere" and "COMEEGA" would probably require other talks - \ Probably my favourite talk of the event - \ Wonderful talk! - \ This presentation gets better and better. - \ lounge-511: I don't know if this is a problem with Capitalism which can be many things to different people to the point the term might not mean much. I have a problem with people competing through corrosion rather than compition. For example google is restricting access to google drive api making everybodys app but googles worse. Capitilism "not fake Capitilism" predospes a free market which would limit this - \ going to go checkout the book later as half way thorugh the talk i got term overload - \ Great talk, great software. - \ Thank you for the presentation Mosen. - \ while this heavy topic is certainly a major critique of capitalism as such, i certainly would not mix in here any sort of religion-related things. hence leveraging "Halaal" for this is quite disturbing. [[!inline pages="internal(2024/info/blee-after)" raw="yes"]] [[!inline pages="internal(2024/info/blee-nav)" raw="yes"]]