Ask HN: Computers and counterculture
I'm interested in learning more about the links between computing and the 'counterculture', both in terms of the social history and in terms of radical thinking about computing's role in society/culture. By 'counterculture' I'm primarily thinking of the late 60s/early 70s hippy movement and maybe the 90s free party scene (seems quite linked to technology, especially in Germany?), but I'm keen to learn about other links.
Some books/thinkers I've come across already are: - Stewart Brand and the Whole Earth Catalog - Computer Lib/Dream Machines by Ted Nelson - Erik Davis' 'Technopagans' essay in Wired - Jaron Lanier's 'Who Owns the Future'
As well as books I'd be super interested in any links to good mailing list archives, or even first hand accounts, that anyone can share.
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[ 5.0 ms ] story [ 17.9 ms ] threadhttps://blog.ycombinator.com/experiments-in-art-and-technolo...
And then there's Mondo 2000. Defining periodical of "cyberculture". Remains deeply influential even today
https://archive.org/details/mondohistory
I'd also recommend the documentary "We Live In Public" as a cautionary tale regarding networked utopias ;)
textfiles.com might give you some of the later era source messages
Mondo 2000 Magazine also did a lot of 90s cyber-hedonism stuff