Metadata
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Status | discussion |
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Summary
There has been upheaval and change in yunity this summer, but we are bigger and better than ever!
Now we focus on FSINT, glocal community building, coding, housing and documentation.
foodsharing and sharecy are dear projects to us and we want to collaborate.
Warning!
This is not finished and in the process of being discussed! It should not be understood as the opinion of the whole yunity movement, but only as the perspective of the author and contributors mentioned above!
The short story so far
(For the longer version click here.)
Even though the fight against food waste started way sooner of course, our story starts with foodsharing. The idea to save surplus food from businesses before they throw it away and to share it unconditionally with fellow humans. An online tool was developed to enable volunteers to save and share food. With the foodsharing community growing the idea of general unconditional sharing got clearer.
Then there was yunity. Focusing not only on saving and sharing food, but on every resource imaginable, the plan was to develop a platform to enable people to make the dream reality. A group of diverse people assembled to form an idealistic project, that wanted to operate in a non-hierarchical, self-organized and moneyless way. Most of the next 6-7 months was trying to get more clarity on the specifications of the product, as well as team building.
In summer 2016 Raphael Fellmer and Martin Schott found, that the progress of the software development was too little and decided to try a different approach.
After the above-mentioned wo were starting a crowd-funding campaign for a multi-sharing tool, they met Alexander Piutti, who convinced them to concentrate on the core-element of their business: saving food on a bigger scale, which is including B2B-services. Sharecy wants to use funds from crowdfunding campaigns, government grants and donations, to finance up the development process. Currently it is in the state of getting the approval for a Non-Profit-Organization. Raphael explained how he saw the need for a diversified approach, that consists of a 'yunity movement' seperate from a professional 'yunity organization' in a long post.
What is yunity now?
The many remaining yuniteers pursue building up a real-life network of communities and individuals interested in sharing. The yunity movement is like a tribe of people, who share a love for sustainability, trust and self-determination. Some more consequent or extreme than others, they all consume consciously and carefully and save resources wherever possible. Despite the diversity of people and ideas, the atmosphere in yunity is inclusive and appreciative. We have developed a culture of listening and comprehension when it comes to dialogues between opinions and when humans share physical contact, especially during lamâsch.
A group of us has been traveling from one alternative gathering to another this summer, others went to music festivals with foodsharing, but all spread the word, lived the culture and connected to a lot of people. The WuppBreak in Neuried in September, which was intended to be a little meet-up of some core contributors to celebrate the end of summer, turned out to be the most visited yunity event ever. The Berlin Hackathon attracted new developers and boosted developer motivation for both, foodsharing.de and the FSINT-tool. Different groups with different focus areas emerge in yunity, find room for collaboration and synergize. We are far from broken or aimless, in fact, we have a lot to do:
- The FSINT and yunity tours will mobilize and connect lots of different people interested in unconditional sharing all over Europe and beyond.
- The spirit of self-organization and awesome active autonomy will be spread through real-life contact.
- The reopened work on the code of foodsharing.de and the following communication, especially via the new foodsharing devblog, will improve our contact to this community.
- A lean tool to manage store pick-ups and lots of documentation will support the emerging foodsaving communities.
- A book about group decision making and systemic consensus will inspire other communities.
- A house will be acquired for the yunity family to move in and become a template for other places of communal living.
- Secrets and difficulties of the lamâsching culture will continue to be unveiled.
What is foodsharing to yunity?
A lot of yuniteers are part of the foodsharing.de community themselves and all share the same motivation to combat food waste and waste in general. foodsharing.de is the origin of the yunity project and a great thing to build on: In Summer 2015 Raphael Fellmer made a video with a call for action to make foodsharing international and open source. Around 30 people followed the invitation and gathered in Italy at the WuppDays #1 to built a new foodsharing website that allows to extent the scope of sharing towards whatever people love to share in their lives - books, items, resources, skills...
Especially the developers in yunity have a big affiliation to foodsharing, since they are also the ones taking care of the foodsharing.de code. Due to realizing that the envisioned yunity platform will probably not be able to fully replace foodsharing.de anytime soon, the developers decided to dive into the code of the old software once again and document it on the foodsharing dev blog.
In the future we'd like to intensify the contact to and collaboration with the existing community of foodsharing.de, as we think that we all dream the same dream and work towards the same goals.
What is sharecy to yunity?
As the founder of both, foodsharing and yunity, Raphael Fellmer, of course, is a key person to the project and the movement and his decision to leave shook things up quite a bit. Still, if he is convinced, that he needed to change his approach to achieve better results, it is good that he did it. We support sharecy and would be very happy to see a professional, ready-to-use multisaving and -sharing platform in May 2017!