Juniperus

joined 2 months ago
[–] Juniperus@infosec.pub 1 points 8 hours ago

Hah, fair enough! Hopefully we can get rid of the crappy jobs without throwing people out on the street

[–] Juniperus@infosec.pub 2 points 12 hours ago* (last edited 12 hours ago) (2 children)

Hmm lets talk about the executive compensation first, since I can understand how that might be a point of contention.

First off, it's not meant to imply that the President and CEO are the only officers to get a bonus, it's just that those bonuses are key to keeping the company in balance.

There's not really any point to giving everyone at the company a bonus because they get dividends from the surplus, so they would get that same money anyhow.

Also, the Board of Directors may have an incentive bonus based on health and safety metrics. The CEO can share a portion of their bonus with the management in their organization. Same thing with the President's office (basicaly HR). It will all be configurable with payroll rules, so you can set up bonuses in your co-op however you like (or not).

The two main leadership roles, the President and the CEO, are actually likely to be extremely stressful in my opinion. The President is basically HR and the software will have a system where members can submit "Issues" and tag a person for resolution. It then becomes the President's problem to mediate the issue and find a solution.

For the CEO, the success of the entire organization hinges on their decision-making ability and their project management skills. They also have to do things like negotiate contracts with other businesses. None of those things are easy when there dozens or perhaps hundreds of people's livelihoods on the line.

The key here is that the President and the CEO are adversarial roles. The CEO will try to increase the surplus and the President will try to direct that into payroll, resulting in a back and forth power struggle of growth vs social equity.

I guess my goal in sculpting the model the way I did was to make the leadership roles into a "prize" so that there would be a significant incentive for talented people to try out for the role.

A lot of people just want to work on the assembly line, get a paycheck, and go home to their families at night. Others are ambitious and want to lead. There is room for both types of people in this setup (and everyone in between).

Anyway we are definitely in agreement that startup funding is a huge issue. I do think it is solvable with the staffing agreements, even if people have to be patient an put in the work.

 

Important to note that reddit work reform did post it.

[–] Juniperus@infosec.pub 1 points 17 hours ago* (last edited 16 hours ago) (4 children)

Hi! Thanks for your feedback.

The original idea for the shares was to only have an "Equal Ownership Share" but I had to change that to 1000 shares of common stock to fit it into the legal definition of a C-corporation. The software will still report the shares collectively as an EOS.

For buying in, I had to reconcile a few things. If you just have "membership" as your mechanism, then what happens if I join the co-op today and tomorrow the whole company gets sold off? Do I get an equal share of the cash? Because that doesn't seem very fair. Also seems kind of off that someone coming into a company would have full voting rights on day one, it just doesn't make sense to me that they could change the direction of the company so fast. So IMO you have to have a reasonable system for establishing ownership and trust with the person.

The hard limit of 1000 shares coupled with the fact that they are fixed at "book value" means that nobody can gain control of the company in a hostile takeover, and makes it a lot easier to buy in since the share price doesn't float on speculation.

New members will buy and/or be awarded their shares over a "provisional period" as part of their compensation package. The length of the provisional period is set by vote, so it's up to the members how fast they want to onboard new people. If new people aren't seeing their shares go up, it's a problem.

I haven't written the Bylaws yet but they will establish term limits for all officers, so it's not like somebody could sit on the CEO position for 30 years.

I'd be interested in hearing what cooperatives you know about, as I'm always looking for success stories.

My favorite co-op so far is Mondragon Assembly, which is led by a CEO named Peter Szepanski. They make advanced equipment for manufacturing lines (solar panels and batteries), so they are the best example I've seen of a high-tech global co-op. I don't know what the rest of their management structure is like, but I would imagine they have managers and project leads, at least.

It's important to note though, that although they make that specialized equipment, as far as I know they do not operate any of those manufacturing lines themselves. Having an entire factory is quite a complicated endeavor, especially when you end up with with many different jobs around the facility that need to interact. This type of business is what I'm targeting.

As far as the hierarchical management, I included them based on some research that was done into a wind farm installation firm. The short take is that the hierarchy allows structured information sharing and delegation of authority to "subject matter experts" in a way that is far more effective than a flat structure or a council. I will also point out that my model includes a Board of Directors who are the elected council and a union President, so it's not just a top-down model.

You might be considering smaller co-ops, small co-ops and non-profits wouldn't necessarily benefit from a hierarchy as much so I do concede that point, the hierarchy is not for all use cases.

I wanted to limit the length of the post for readability but the details really are in the attached documents. I would suggest spending time with the philosophy document if you want to get into more details. I promise I wrote it myself and not with AI.

Anyway, it's a collaborative effort so feel free to add your ideas or take my ideas as an influence to make something new, make your councils happen! Now is the time to try new ways to cooperate with each other, and the repository has an MIT license so go nuts.

Thanks for chiming in!

[–] Juniperus@infosec.pub 1 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

Haha all good I have fun with it.

You do make a great point, we proletariat are clearly chattel to these people, and where my thoughts go is the incredible things we could accomplish as a society if we weren't so busy building nonsense vanity projects and yachts for the ultra-weathly.

[–] Juniperus@infosec.pub 1 points 1 day ago (2 children)

Whew what a mysterious comment! Well done riddle man!

Are you saying people who have too many kids don't know which way the wind blows? Because I would agree with that, but I would point out that education is extremely effective at helping kids grow up to be sensible people, so the problem is solvable.

[–] Juniperus@infosec.pub 3 points 1 day ago

Thanks David, I appreciate the feedback. It's quite a rabbit hole so it's encouraging that you took some time with it. I'll be sure to check back often in case you or anyone else has questions.

[–] Juniperus@infosec.pub 1 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Hmm fair enough, how would you word it? You have to get the plan funded somehow.

[–] Juniperus@infosec.pub 2 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Sorry about that, it's the "INCORPORATION" document linked above, the Articles of Incorporation template which defines the legal structure of the company, much like its constitution.

Here you go: https://codeberg.org/Brachylophus/Apoidea/src/branch/main/INCORPORATION.md

[–] Juniperus@infosec.pub 4 points 1 day ago

I just created a community on infosec for those interested.

https://infosec.pub/c/strategic_unions

[–] Juniperus@infosec.pub 2 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (1 children)

The choice is between totalitarianism or democratic socialism. But we can't wait any longer because power is being consolidated extremely rapidly. We need to reform our economic systems right the fuck now or we will become nothing but slaves to someone else's machine.

EDIT: It's called the "quick exit" or "off ramp" meme if you haven't seen it before. I took the banner down based on your feedback though, I suppose it is confusing without the bottom half. Thanks

 

cross-posted from: https://infosec.pub/post/49253806

1.4 Mission Statement The mission of the company is the well-being of all people. To accomplish this goal we will operate business ventures designed to generate income through which we can secure our own well-being and consequently become empowered to help others.


Today we are witnessing the spectacular failure of Capitalism to provide for the needs of this planet and the people on it. In previous eras of class instability, the focus was often on the bifurcation between those who wish to dominate, and those who wish for a world without domination. While the ideals of a world free of domination are admirable, its proponents face the cold reality that those who specialize in domination are able to accumulate more power than those who do not seek it.

This need to dominate is typically associated with hierarchical organizations, and for good reason as they are the mechanism that allows individuals to accumulate unconstrained executive power. However, rather than trying to dismantle hierarchical systems, our collective recognizes them as an essential tool for problem-solving and productivity. We intend to capture and incorporate hierarchical management into large, democratically owned and managed cooperatives called “Strategic Unions”. This will enable organizations with similar power compared to today’s capitalist corporations, but with social equity and Article 1.4 as their most fundamental goals.

The plan is to deploy open-source Enterprise Resource Planning software to coordinate the efforts and voting that will take place in the co-op. You then recruit like-minded workers from your area to join your server and begin organizing and holding elections. At this point, workers in your cooperative will put forward business plans and become candidates for CEO. The members vote based on the candidate and the business plan, and the person who wins is not a dictator. They are a mandated agent of the co-op, and they are removable by vote. Their job is to coordinate the business project according to their plan in order to generate revenue.

After elections, you incorporate as a Strategic Union, which means filing Articles of Incorporation as a C-corporation in your state. You will then have bargaining power in your area based on the size and specialization of your workforce. You can use the Master Staffing Agreement template to negotiate labor contracts with local businesses. Your co-op members are hired out full time, so the member-worker gets a paycheck in a similar arrangement to a staffing or temp agency. The co-op gets paid by the hour and the amount left over after paying the worker (the margin) funds the CEO’s business plan. This allows for funded without capitalist investors. It’s a “bootstrapping” process, meaning the first business plan is self-starting. Once the staffing contracts are no longer needed, they are dropped.

Following this plan, you don’t have to work at the same business to organize a union. You set up your server and organize with whomever you like.

We are asking you to take on Article 1.4 as your personal mission and join our efforts. Or, we could ride the crapitalism train to wherever it may be headed. Your choice my friends.

Apoidea Group

https://codeberg.org/Brachylophus/Apoidea

https://codeberg.org/Brachylophus/Apoidea/src/branch/main/PHILOSOPHY.md (Manifesto)

https://codeberg.org/Brachylophus/Apoidea/src/branch/main/INCORPORATION.md (Articles of Incorporation, including 1.4)

https://codeberg.org/Brachylophus/Apoidea/src/branch/main/STAFFING.md (Master Staffing Agreement)

https://matrix.to/#%2F%21dVwyUzAwiuIflwnpEF%3Amatrix.org%3Fvia=matrix.org (Chat rooms)

[–] Juniperus@infosec.pub 2 points 1 day ago (3 children)

I just created a community on infosec for those interested.

https://infosec.pub/c/strategic_unions

[–] Juniperus@infosec.pub 2 points 1 day ago

if people organize into cooperatives all at the same time we can have a general strike. How the bougie bastards respond is up to them

 

1.4 Mission Statement The mission of the company is the well-being of all people. To accomplish this goal we will operate business ventures designed to generate income through which we can secure our own well-being and consequently become empowered to help others.


Today we are witnessing the spectacular failure of Capitalism to provide for the needs of this planet and the people on it. In previous eras of class instability, the focus was often on the bifurcation between those who wish to dominate, and those who wish for a world without domination. While the ideals of a world free of domination are admirable, its proponents face the cold reality that those who specialize in domination are able to accumulate more power than those who do not seek it.

This need to dominate is typically associated with hierarchical organizations, and for good reason as they are the mechanism that allows individuals to accumulate unconstrained executive power. However, rather than trying to dismantle hierarchical systems, our collective recognizes them as an essential tool for problem-solving and productivity. We intend to capture and incorporate hierarchical management into large, democratically owned and managed cooperatives called “Strategic Unions”. This will enable organizations with similar power compared to today’s capitalist corporations, but with social equity and Article 1.4 as their most fundamental goals.

The plan is to deploy open-source Enterprise Resource Planning software to coordinate the efforts and voting that will take place in the co-op. You then recruit like-minded workers from your area to join your server and begin organizing and holding elections. At this point, workers in your cooperative will put forward business plans and become candidates for CEO. The members vote based on the candidate and the business plan, and the person who wins is not a dictator. They are a mandated agent of the co-op, and they are removable by vote. Their job is to coordinate the business project according to their plan in order to generate revenue.

After elections, you incorporate as a Strategic Union, which means filing Articles of Incorporation as a C-corporation in your state. You will then have bargaining power in your area based on the size and specialization of your workforce. You can use the Master Staffing Agreement template to negotiate labor contracts with local businesses. Your co-op members are hired out full time, so the member-worker gets a paycheck in a similar arrangement to a staffing or temp agency. The co-op gets paid by the hour and the amount left over after paying the worker (the margin) funds the CEO’s business plan. This allows for capitalization without capitalist investors. It’s a “bootstrapping” process, meaning the first business plan is self-starting. Once the staffing contracts are no longer needed, they are dropped.

Following this plan, you don’t have to work at the same business to organize a union. You set up your server and organize with whomever you like.

We are asking you to take on Article 1.4 as your personal mission and join our efforts. Or, we could ride the crapitalism train to wherever it may be headed. Your choice my friends.

Apoidea Group

https://codeberg.org/Brachylophus/Apoidea

https://codeberg.org/Brachylophus/Apoidea/src/branch/main/PHILOSOPHY.md (Manifesto)

https://codeberg.org/Brachylophus/Apoidea/src/branch/main/INCORPORATION.md (Articles of Incorporation, including 1.4)

https://codeberg.org/Brachylophus/Apoidea/src/branch/main/STAFFING.md (Master Staffing Agreement Template)

https://matrix.to/#%2F%21dVwyUzAwiuIflwnpEF%3Amatrix.org%3Fvia=matrix.org (Chat rooms)

 

These are MKUltra-style techniques. The basic idea is to track the persons habits and movements then put suggestive messages or even meme-type information in their path in order to fuck with the person.

They aren't designed to "inject thoughts" into someone's head or anything silly like that. The goal is to confuse the person to the point of panic, so that they become paranoid and irrational over time.

https://www.justice.gov/epstein/files/DataSet%2011/EFTA02352235.pdf

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Jejune_Institute

 

Hello folks,

I posted about a month ago introducing the idea of a “Strategic Union”, a cooperative management model that separates administrative oversight from operational management, hopefully leading to healthier and more productive workplaces for everyone involved. To implement this, I’ve started developing Enterprise Resource Planning software specifically for this type of company, and a small team is forming, but we need more contributors.

The model and software are intended to enable the growth of these cooperatives into large, problem-solving organizations interested in complex, integrated projects such as major bridges, sustainable residential skyscrapers, or high-volume manufacturing lines, to name a few. It should also work for a variety of other applications such as large retail chains and restaurants.

The idea is anchored in the philosophy of Hierarchy by Consent, which examines the role of hierarchies in society and whether we really want to get rid of them or instead bring them under democratic control to the benefit of all.

  • Hierarchy by Consent argues that hierarchies are necessary for complex projects involving large teams, but they must be constrained by a democratically elected body which prevents the hierarchy from reinforcing its own control structures (anacyclosis).
  • The paper explains the Strategic Union management model and how it maintains stability and social equity without sacrificing productivity.
  • The paper concludes by calling for the creation of an alliance of these companies to build counterpower.

We’ve all had a bad boss, I get it. But I’ve also had good bosses, who take the stress of the job in stride to help the team coordinate their efforts. In this model, the entire team participates in mutual performance reviews designed to provide constructive peer-feedback and, if desired, can be used to adjust hourly rates within an agreed upon pay band. Mediation will also be available, with escalation to an anonymous vote if needed.

Read Hierarchy by Consent.

Apoidea Cooperative Management Suite: I started a repository on Codeberg for Enterprise Resource Planning software to manage these organizations, and we’re looking for contributors. So far I have had a small contribution from a part-timer, and I’m hoping some of you might take interest as well. I’m particularly hopeful to find someone else to realize their own vision on the front-end. Of course, the more folks looking at this, the better.

  • Tech stack: Docker (soon Podman), postgres, nginx, SQLAlchemy, gunicorn, jinja2, Flask, Alembic, and Redis. Frappe Gantt will be necesarry for the project planning system on the front-end.

  • The eventual goal is to host it on a server and run a test case with “points” instead of money.

Apoidea on Codeberg

Programmer or not, we still need your help! Our Community on Matrix is small but growing, and we’d love to have you. Send me a PM if you’re new to Matrix.

I’ll be around to answer your questions and consider your critiques, as that is what is really needed to get this project off the ground. I’m going to include some of my own questions and FAQs as comments, so please forgive the clutter.

Thank you.

 

cross-posted from: https://infosec.pub/post/48245849

Hello everyone, you may remember I dropped by a while back concerning my cooperative management project.

The idea has evolved to building an open-source Enterprise Resource Planning application specifically for worker's cooperatives. While most ERP software focuses on driving top-down directives, the goal of this project is to enable the cooperatives to work, make decisions, and resolve disputes more efficiently than basically any other type of company.

Current tech stack: Docker, postgres, nginx, SQLAlchemy, gunicorn, jinja2, Flask, Alembic, and Redis.

Please check out the repository documentation if this sounds like something you may be interested in. The docs include the foundational philosophy document called "Hierarchy by Consent" and there is also a template for an Articles of Incorporation that I intend to include as the first default document template in the software.

I'm still pretty early in the process but most of the tables are set up and I've made notes in the the classes explaining the requirements and workflows.

I've also got some issues started on Codeberg, mostly related to the front-end, which is where I need the most help at the moment. I will certainly be glad for help elsewhere as well.

It's an open-source project so there is no immediate financial incentive. Part time contributors are certainly welcome.

There's a discussion room on Matrix and here is the Repository.

Thanks folks

 

Hello everyone, you may remember I dropped by a while back concerning my cooperative management project.

The idea has evolved to building an open-source Enterprise Resource Planning application specifically for worker's cooperatives. While most ERP software focuses on driving top-down directives, the goal of this project is to enable the cooperatives to work, make decisions, and resolve disputes more efficiently than basically any other type of company.

Current tech stack: Docker, postgres, nginx, SQLAlchemy, gunicorn, jinja2, Flask, Alembic, and Redis.

Please check out the repository documentation if this sounds like something you may be interested in. The docs include the foundational philosophy document called "Hierarchy by Consent" and there is also a template for an Articles of Incorporation that I intend to include as the first default document template in the software.

I'm still pretty early in the process but most of the tables are set up and I've made notes in the the classes explaining the requirements and workflows.

I've also got some issues started on Codeberg, mostly related to the front-end, which is where I need the most help at the moment. I will certainly be glad for help elsewhere as well.

It's an open-source project so there is no immediate financial incentive. Part time contributors are certainly welcome.

There's a discussion room on Matrix and here is the Repository.

Thanks folks

 

cross-posted from: https://infosec.pub/post/46797718

Hello everyone, it’s important that we realize just how oppressive the Epstein class has become, and nothing shows this more strikingly than EFTA01830200.

Apparently back in 2010 Epstein paid Seckel tens of thousands of dollars to clean up his image online. They used bots and hacking campaigns to drive the sex trafficking news stories out of search results and instead pushed Epstein’s supposed "philanthropic work" funding scientists. They also fucked with his Wikipedia page big time. You want proof we’re living in 1984 and the Mandela effect isn't just your imagination? This is it right here.

That was 16 years ago, now imagine the unseen shit they’re doing with the tools of today, like targeting individuals. It’s only going to get worse.

 

cross-posted from: https://infosec.pub/post/46797718

Hello everyone, it’s important that we realize just how oppressive the Epstein class has become, and nothing shows this more strikingly than EFTA01830200.

Apparently back in 2010 Epstein paid Seckel tens of thousands of dollars to clean up his image online. They used bots and hacking campaigns to drive the sex trafficking news stories out of search results and instead pushed Epstein’s supposed "philanthropic work" funding scientists. They also fucked with his Wikipedia page big time. You want proof we’re living in 1984 and the Mandela effect isn't just your imagination? This is it right here.

That was 16 years ago, now imagine the unseen shit they’re doing with the tools of today, like targeting individuals. It’s only going to get worse.

 

Hello everyone, it’s important that we realize just how oppressive the Epstein class has become, and nothing shows this more strikingly than EFTA01830200.

Apparently back in 2010 Epstein paid Seckel tens of thousands of dollars to clean up his image online. They used bots and hacking campaigns to drive the sex trafficking news stories out of search results and instead pushed Epstein’s supposed "philanthropic work" funding scientists. They also fucked with his Wikipedia page big time. You want proof we’re living in 1984 and the Mandela effect isn't just your imagination? This is it right here.

That was 16 years ago, now imagine the unseen shit they’re doing with the tools of today, like targeting individuals. It’s only going to get worse.

 

cross-posted from: https://infosec.pub/post/46032427

(Crossposting from my Beehaw Post.)

Let’s talk brass tacks. A lot of people I interact with online seem to see top-down reform as the only option for real societal change, and often despair when they see the rampant corruption in our government and private companies as being unsolvable problems.

Similarly, Union organizing efforts have largely stalled despite significant effort from activists. This is simply due to the enormous power wielded by capitalist corporations, who will always protect their own interests above those of their employees. Again, we reach a point where many people despair at an apparently unsolvable problem. Indeed, unionization has faced a steady decline in the US for over 40 years, and is now likely below 10%.

The problem here is that people keep trying to organize against their employer, when in fact there is another option: they could organize without their employer. Put another way, the workers of a company could pool their resources and found a worker’s cooperative which they all operate together through elections and democratic voting. Then they simply quit their old jobs as work in the cooperative becomes available.

However, the problem with worker’s cooperatives is that there are very few successful examples, and I am not aware of their internal documentation being available for review. The best information I could find was this diagram of the Mondragon Corporation, which has similar elements to my organizational diagram, but isn’t descriptive enough to give insight into the inner working of their management.

There simply doesn’t appear to be a standard template on which to construct such an organization, at least not one that I would expect to be successful. This post is the beginning of an attempt to address that shortfall.

Hierarchy by Consent: The concept that a strategic executive at the top of an operational hierarchy should be legitimized in their position through a popular election enfranchising all stakeholders.

Many worker’s cooperatives built in the 19th and early 20th centuries failed because they weren’t as productive as other companies at the time. Researchers have indicated that this is likely due to the lack of hierarchical management in the organizations, which resulted in a “flat” management structure.

I would agree with this analysis, and point out that hierarchical decision making is what gives an organization strategic direction. Without such structured teamwork, productive efforts are less coordinated and as a result suffer from reduced overall productivity. In biology I was taught that a cell is greater than the sum of its constituent parts, but if those parts can’t coordinate properly then I would expect the effect is diminished.

The problem with traditional capitalistic companies, in my opinion, isn’t the hierarchy itself, it’s that the hierarchical management structure results from conditions over which a worker has no control and there is therefore no incentive for the hierarchy to act in accordance with the worker’s best interest.

A person is forced to find work for their own survival, but because there are almost no democratic companies to work for, they’re forced into a traditional company, where the top of the hierarchy could be determined by any number of inappropriate factors including generational wealth, nepotism, favoritism, or other corrupt circumstances. Those decision makers then have no incentive to act in the best interest of the workers who fall under them in the hierarchy. I would call this arrangement Hierarchy without Consent.

By integrating elections into the empowerment of key decision makers, an organization can maintain a healthy, productive work environment while letting the workers have self-determination in their work environment and goals. I believe this will lead to much healthier and more productive workplaces.

Call to Action: Help me Write a Template

Some time ago I started writing a template for an Articles of Association for such an organization, which you can read as an odt or as a pdf. The image on this post is the organizational diagram.

The organization I envisioned is governed by General Conferences, which are meetings to include all of the Owners. The GC first elects a President, who acts as head of the labor union and is the primary facilitator of company business. The GC then elects a CEO who becomes the executive at the top of the operational hierarchy for productive work. The CEO is elected based on their business plan, which is voted on by all owners. Elected leaders serve for a term after which they come up for reelection.

I’m here to ask for input and debate on this template. It has not had a legal review so if you’re a lawyer or co-op expert expect to notice lot of missing legal clauses and the like.

Incentive Structures

To make this work, there should be some sort of incentive for Owners to step up and take on the burden of leadership. To keep things balanced, however, the incentives should provide different objectives to different positions.

In my template, the President receives a percentage of the total payroll as a bonus, while the CEO receives a percentage of the business income (aka “surplus”) that their project generates. In this way, the President seeks to maximize payroll while the CEO seeks to maximize surplus, and in that back and forth the organization will theoretically achieve long-term stability while maximizing the financial return for the Owners. The effect would be similar to the political pendulum metaphor.

Similarly, if the cooperative is big enough to require a Board of Directors, those people would also be eligible for an incentive bonus based on company performance, perhaps including factors such as workplace safety and legal compliance.

Worker payroll could be handled a number of ways, but my current thinking is that it would be an hourly pay scale similar to union payscales, with progression for years of service, but also with performance ranges so that production management can offer performance incentives to all workers.

The bonus rates, the payroll chart with ranges, and performance metrics would all be voted on by the GC.

Equity Control

Another key pitfall of traditional capitalist companies is ownership rules. Most workers own very little or no stock in the company for which they work. They have no opportunity for financial growth except what the hierarchy decides to give them each year, while the investor class, which does no work, makes off with the surplus.

I’m proposing a system of equity control where owners are forbidden from owning more than a single share in the Company’s stock, called an Equal Ownership Share (EOS). Once an Owner has a full share they have full voting rights, but they are not permitted to purchase any more stock.

New and Partial Owners can have a partial EOS during their Provisional Period, during which they will have a corresponding partial vote. The length of the Provisional Period is set by vote, and Equity is awarded to the new Owner incrementally during that time.

Because the Owners have stock in the Company, they are the recipients of all the Company’s declared dividends. This way they are paid twofold, once from their hourly compensation and again from their dividends.

Incorporation

An open question I have is how to legally incorporate such an organization. One strategy might be to incorporate as an S-Corporation, which is a “pass-through” organization, meaning all business income is distributed and reported on the tax returns of the Owners. This may run into trouble due to regulations concerning voting rights, since my template has custom voting.

Another alternative may be to incorporate as a not-for-profit of some type.

I’m not sure about the answer to this one, but I certainly welcome input, especially from any legal or co-op experts.

Team Management Software

I’m in the early stages of developing open-source team management software for this specific type of cooperative. The software will ideally include things like Accounting and Payroll, Secure Voting, Document Control, Chat Functions, Video Calls, and other team management solutions. This is key to making sure these cooperatives can function efficiently right from the get-go.

The software should include multiple users with multiple roles and permissions, and should work over LAN, with the option to run it without being connected to the internet (as it should be resilient).

I have experience with local programming including database and GUI design but I’ve never done anything over a network, so I have some learning to do if I’m taking this all on myself.

I plan to host the files on Codeberg.

EDIT: Further Discussion:

Block Diagram Discussion on Programming.dev

If you or someone you know might be interested in contributing to this software, please let me know.

The Big Picture

The key take away here is that most people seem to be waiting for someone like a politician to come along and make a change for them. Instead, we should be working on reform from the bottom up in the places where we spend the most of our time: our workplaces.

I believe that if we are able to incrementally build up an alliance of these organizations we could begin to fix some of the bigger problems currently facing our society.

If you or someone you know would like to contribute time and effort to this project, please direct them here. Also, feel free to make your own version if you like.

TLDR: Workplace hierarchies traditionally increase productivity at the expense of worker enfranchisement. I’m proposing a new type of worker’s cooperative to include what I call “Hierarchy by Consent” and asking for help realizing it.

Thank you,

Juniperus

 

cross-posted from: https://infosec.pub/post/46083169

Hello,

I’m here to ask for guidance on an ongoing project. A number of years ago I wrote an Articles of Association for a worker’s cooperative as I think it should run. The main difference between a conventional co-op and mine is that a conventional co-op tends to have no hierarchy while in mine there is a CEO who gets elected periodically based on their business plan. The theory is that this brings democratic ideals into the workplace without sacrificing the productivity gains that result from hierarchical teamwork. You can read more detailed information on my Beehaw Post.

To put it into practice I need to create an open-source enterprise application server with applications specifically designed for the management of these companies. I created a block diagram to show you what I envision (attached to the post), and this represents my ideal “wish list” for what it should include.

The controls listed at the bottom will determine the permissions everyone has on the network and will be used to design GUI screens. I was going to draw connectors to each of the services but it would have turned into spaghetti.

I’m pretty decent with local programming including database and GUI design, but I lack experience with network programming.

So far I think I need to use XMPP for the messaging client and SSH for the rest. Since I’m most comfortable in Python I was going to look into Paramiko.

So my question is, where should I go in my research? Is there a particular component in the diagram you think I should try to build first?

Thanks in advance for any help, Juniperus

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