Diego González: Difference between revisions
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For some time, he has been researching the relationship between ''[[Complex Adaptive Systems]]'' and ''[[P2P Social Dynamics]]'' following an evolutionary approach. He has published several [https://www.linkedin.com/in/xmunch research papers] about different topics. | For some time, he has been researching the relationship between ''[[Complex Adaptive Systems]]'' and ''[[P2P Social Dynamics]]'' following an evolutionary approach. He has published several [https://www.linkedin.com/in/xmunch research papers] about different topics. | ||
His PhD thesis explores how social systems evolve from ''centralized networks'' with ''homogeneous'' agents to ''[[distributed networks]]'' with high levels of ''heterogeneity''. Following ''adaptation'' and ''selection'' processes, through an | His PhD thesis explores how social systems evolve from ''centralized networks'' with ''homogeneous'' agents to ''[[distributed networks]]'' with high levels of ''heterogeneity''. Following ''adaptation'' and ''selection'' processes, through an increase of ''differentiation'' and ''connectivity'', groups of human agents evolve and define more complex and resilient societies. The equilibrium state that will emerge from current perturbations is what he has named [[P2P_Society_as_an_Autopoietic_System|“The P2P Society”]]. | ||
He published with Vasilis Kostakis the article "[http://p2plab.gr/en/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/Telematics-Informatics-3.pdf Information literacy and peer-to-peer infrastructures: An autopoietic perspective]". This article argues that an autopoietic perspective of human communities would allow to understand societies as self-organized systems and thus promote information literacy as a facilitator of social development. Peer-to-peer (P2P) social dynamics generate public information available worldwide in digital repositories, websites and bibliographic resources. However, processing such amount of data is not achievable by a single central-controlled system. They claimed that distributed and heterogeneous networks of coordinated mechanisms, composed by both specialized human and artificial agents, are needed to improve information retrieval, knowledge inference and decision-making, but also to produce social value, goods and services. Handling these issues implies the collective construction of global semantic networks but also the active labor of knowledge producers and consumers. The article concludes that information literacy is as much important as any technical implementation and, therefore, may lead to networks of Commons-oriented communities which would utilize P2P infrastructures. | He published with Vasilis Kostakis the article "[http://p2plab.gr/en/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/Telematics-Informatics-3.pdf Information literacy and peer-to-peer infrastructures: An autopoietic perspective]". This article argues that an autopoietic perspective of human communities would allow to understand societies as self-organized systems and thus promote information literacy as a facilitator of social development. Peer-to-peer (P2P) social dynamics generate public information available worldwide in digital repositories, websites and bibliographic resources. However, processing such amount of data is not achievable by a single central-controlled system. They claimed that distributed and heterogeneous networks of coordinated mechanisms, composed by both specialized human and artificial agents, are needed to improve information retrieval, knowledge inference and decision-making, but also to produce social value, goods and services. Handling these issues implies the collective construction of global semantic networks but also the active labor of knowledge producers and consumers. The article concludes that information literacy is as much important as any technical implementation and, therefore, may lead to networks of Commons-oriented communities which would utilize P2P infrastructures. |
Revision as of 19:53, 25 October 2015

Bio
Diego González Rodríguez is Software Engineer, Master in Artificial Intelligence, Graduate in International Cooperation for Development and PhD Candidate in Information Systems. He joined the P2P Foundation in 2013.
His current research focuses in Complex Adaptive Systems, collective intelligence and P2P Social Dynamics. He has worked in several Research & Development projects in different fields (DNA and Bacterial Computing, Data Mining, SaaS,… ). He is also open source developer and has been involved in the development of Kurento and other FOSS initiatives.
For some time, he has been researching the relationship between Complex Adaptive Systems and P2P Social Dynamics following an evolutionary approach. He has published several research papers about different topics.
His PhD thesis explores how social systems evolve from centralized networks with homogeneous agents to distributed networks with high levels of heterogeneity. Following adaptation and selection processes, through an increase of differentiation and connectivity, groups of human agents evolve and define more complex and resilient societies. The equilibrium state that will emerge from current perturbations is what he has named “The P2P Society”.
He published with Vasilis Kostakis the article "Information literacy and peer-to-peer infrastructures: An autopoietic perspective". This article argues that an autopoietic perspective of human communities would allow to understand societies as self-organized systems and thus promote information literacy as a facilitator of social development. Peer-to-peer (P2P) social dynamics generate public information available worldwide in digital repositories, websites and bibliographic resources. However, processing such amount of data is not achievable by a single central-controlled system. They claimed that distributed and heterogeneous networks of coordinated mechanisms, composed by both specialized human and artificial agents, are needed to improve information retrieval, knowledge inference and decision-making, but also to produce social value, goods and services. Handling these issues implies the collective construction of global semantic networks but also the active labor of knowledge producers and consumers. The article concludes that information literacy is as much important as any technical implementation and, therefore, may lead to networks of Commons-oriented communities which would utilize P2P infrastructures.
The bitmind.co project
Diego González is the founder of bitmind.co, a decentralized Research & Development organization whose goal is the exploration of the potential of Open Value Networks (OVN). Bitmind's goal is to help Open Enterprises, Cooperatives and Communities to distribute value amongst their members and bootstrap their collective intelligence.
To do that, the Bitmind team focus their efforts in applied research & open source development around the OVN/DCO context, exploring how new models for self-organization can enforce the value production capacities within the P2P paradigm.
In order to unify concepts, share common metodologies and explore this vaste field, Diego Gonzalez have also developed ovn.space, a shared hub for the evolving and growing ecosystem of OVNs.
bitmind.co was one of the initiatives which were funded during the Faircoop donations campaign in 2015. Some of the initial goals of Bitmind are:
- Coordinating P2P teams to produce knowledge and value.
- Prototyping Open Value Networks.
- Help Open Enterprises, Cooperatives and Communities to distribute value between their members.
- Exploring collective production of knowledge.
- Mapping decentralized and heterogeneous communities.
- Creating new narratives.
- Contributing to the production of commons for an Open Society.
Info
Name: Diego González Rodríguez
Nick: "xmunch" Twitter: @dgrmunch More: [1]
Contact
You can contact to Diego González through xmunch ( at ) xmunch.com