We propose a mixed-methods approach to understanding the human infrastructure underlying StreetNet (SNET), a distributed, community-run intranet that serves as the primary 'Internet' in Havana, Cuba. We bridge ethnographic studies and the study of social networks and organizations to understand the way that power is embedded in the structure of Havana's SNET. By quantitatively and qualitatively unpacking the human infrastructure of SNET, this work reveals how distributed infrastructure necessarily embeds the structural aspects of inequality distributed within that infrastructure. While traditional technical measurements of networks reflect the social, organizational, spatial, and technical constraints that shape the resulting network, ethnographies can help uncover the texture and role of these hidden supporting relationships. By merging these perspectives, this work contributes to our understanding of network roles in growing and maintaining distributed infrastructures, revealing new approaches to understanding larger, more complex Internet-human infrastructures---including the Internet and the WWW.
翻译:我们建议采用混合方法来理解StreetNet(SNET)背后的人类基础设施,这是一个分布式、社区经营的内联网,在古巴哈瓦那成为主要的“互联网”,我们进行人文研究,并研究社交网络和组织,以了解哈瓦那SNET结构中的权力嵌入方式,通过定量和定性地拆解SNET的人类基础设施,这项工作揭示了分布式基础设施如何必然包含该基础设施内部分布的不平等的结构性方面。虽然对网络的传统技术测量反映了影响由此形成的网络的社会、组织、空间和技术制约因素,但人种学可以帮助发现这些隐藏的支持关系的结构和作用。通过将这些观点结合起来,这项工作有助于我们了解网络在扩大和维持分布式基础设施中的作用,揭示了解更大、更复杂的互联网-人类基础设施-包括互联网和WWWW的新方法。