Chapter 3: Praxis Doubling: Difference between revisions

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==== Praxis Doubling: Misfitting Infrastructures ====<!-- K G and B task: think of subheadings.
G suggest: misfitting infrastructures


/\ means axis intersection through a place of interest.
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== '''STRUCTURE:''' ==
====== (theory*practice)*2 ======
Praxis is the combination of practice and theory, code and conduct, docs and protocols. We posit Praxis Doubling as a term for bringing together different kinds of praxis, making room for them to permeate one another, to deviate actions, and animate relations in other ways. Praxis doubling is itself plural. The "-ing" in doubling signals a process that is ongoing – a verb and an action that is multiplied through different orientations and approaches. By doubling praxis we aim to coalesce, seduce, and mutually shape feminist network praxes with critical access praxes. We aim to see how both of these approaches bring theory into collective action and not only make room for more accessible technical praxis, but also allow their matters to become more frictious and disputed.


=== Intro: ===
To make-sense of these technical network relations, In-grid has built up a debugging practice around technical docs.Technical documentation is a resource that explains the processes and practices that make up technical infrastructures. This collective debugging praxis came about when we came into contact with ServPub's table of feminist network praxis, bringing with us our own background in collective access praxis. By disobediently making room at this collective table, we aimed to make-sense of our misffiting with the inherited figures and imaginaries of network infrastructures and their technical docs. Through embracing misfitting we disorient dialogues towards forming our own collective counter-imaginaries and figures – ones which reshape the limits and what is backgrounded within a single praxis. In this chapter, we outline how we have come to ''practise'' Praxis Doubling, and the methods we have used to facilitate this mingling of praxes.
Praxis doubling is itself a plural. The _ing on doubling is a process ongoing, a verb and an action that is taken in a number of different orientations. In this section we are looking at how In-grid has oriented its praxis in this coalition. Praxis itself being the combination of practice and theory, of code and conduct, and of docs and protocols. In this act of doubling praxis, we open up the ways of interpreting relations, and figuring their possibilities.


To feel this out these technical network relations together In-grid has built up a debugging method for technical docs. This entails making practice and their knowledges accessible, from these distributed knowledges form dialogues around how these technologies can be configured otherwise, and set intentions for other ways of practicing them. This methodology is meant to not only enable technical practice and it's knowledges to be in discourse with the imaginaries they are figured through, but to also orient these dialogues towards forming our own imaginaries and figures for them to be practiced through.
====== Methods ======
The practices we describe here are ones that have emerged through an entanglement between disciplinary conventions and our own dis-abilities to fit within them. We engage with time scarcity, technical language hegemony, and the expectations of productivity from the situatedness of our accessibility desires and political ethics. This chapter expands on the ways in which we put these desires and ethics into practice, going through the process of working as a digital arts collective and how we approached creating critical documentation for the technical infrastructure of ServPub. We stop to reflect on the points where the tools and their sedimented politics and practices misfit us and halted the imaginary of smoothness within technological relations. Through out this sense-making of misfitting moving to make friction and in ways that we worked around, through, and within these tools to make room for ourselves and each other (Rice et al., 2024). Some of these ways include approaches to time management and note-taking, deliberately unpacking or gay abandoning technical terminology, entangling anecdotal experiences rather than writing for a universal user, and critically examining the political implications of names and logos of different tools. The technical documentation and resulting Practicing Prtocols workshops that are the outcome of this nebulous process are offered here to share what doubling of praxis may be like. We also acknowledge that the duality held within the double is not capacious enough to contain the multitude of difference and misfittings that the tools and conventions we confronted and aim to access try to erase. This chapter contains the doubling(s) of theory and practice that emerged from our particular confrontation with building this infrastructure as artists, technologists and crip, neurodivergent, and queer peers. 
====== Background to In-grids Docs Praxis ======
To describe why the ServPub docs look and work the way they do, we must first (briefly) explain how In-grid works as a collective – specifically, the practices that make it possible for us to work together. The number of In-grid members hovers around thirteen to fifteen active members at any given time. Of that group, smaller clusters form around specific projects and streams of work, where approximately four to six members focus on a project at a time. When a proposed project garners the interest of enough members to make it feasible, we then confront the material conditions around everyone's time and capacity – specifically, the conditions that result from fractional and/or precarious work commitments. We work around that by allowing for some inefficiencies, such as last minute drop-outs and confirmations for joining meetings and working sessions, as well as caring for those returning after a several-month break to rejoin. We are also quite promiscuous as a collective and enjoy collaborating with a range of individuals beyond In-grid's already deviating members. For us, this does not dilute who we are but brings in a wide rage of expertise and perspectives that we feel outweighs the contribution of an experienced or expert individual. While everyone has the opportunity to contribute to our ways of collaborating, we agreed early on not to silo off our different skills into roles, determined specialisms, and isolated/ing processes, but to make room for them to be shaped by bodies inside and outside of our collective. Not only did this orient our collective towards skill and knowledge sharing in and through practice, but it also made room for projects to be more accessible to collaborators, where otherwise there might be social, technical or capacity-based barriers. We have found that even though caring for this wide range of perspectives, practices and politics takes a lot more labour, it offers room for these approaches to multiply – for them to more than double, and for us to unfold situated praxes from specific projects and relations, such as the docs and workshops we share here.


This work builds from Lucy Suchman's ''Configuration,'' where we aim to double the user/designer paradigm she critiques to form other ways of imagining and transforming our relationships to technologies.This doubling is also done through one of our key practices of moving from transparency to access, enabling our practices to be accessed and doubled into other forms and needs by others. We developed this approach informed by the concept of ''semi-plain'' language that Kelsie Acton notes in here chapter ''Plain Language for Disability Culture'' in Crip Authorship. Both in the language we try to use but also in the way we are trying to practice language and formats as plastic and maleable. In this thinking not only how we can make technical language accessible within the scope of plain language, but also what textures and curves can we leave on with the semi- that can enable change this discourse to figure out other infrastructures.
'''Abundant Notes, Better Make Some Room for Them'''   
==== Context in Servpub project: ====
In-grid began to write docs as a practical necessity. We are majority fractional or precarious workers, and this means our numbers fluctuate in relation to availability fairly frequently. We are also varied in our areas of expertise, with all of us interested in some form of critical technical practice, but with personal priorities and concerns. We have therefore, since the beginning of our work together, written everything down in order to show our working to those who not there, or those who may not have the same technical understanding of a process. We have copious notes for every meeting we have held since we began working together. We also have notes from submeetings, workshops and conversations, screenshots of collaborative softwares and saved chat logs. These docs began as another extended note-taking exercise as part of this tendency to create excessive records in case one of us might need them later.


[Contrast this excessive note-taking with the selective clarification of technical docs. More info is not always better, the process of what info is the most helpful, while also avoiding the anxious need to document diaristtcally. Formal, commercial technical docs are often selective points of access to give the reader/user some information about the "product" ]
During the ServPub project, we adopted an exhaustive note-taking process – not only to document meetings, but to create how-to guides, informal educational resources, and relatable diagrams to inform everyone as much as possible about the contextual and technical details about each step of the project. These practices stem from In-grid's copious notes taken every time we meet, since we began working together in 2020. Many of our earlier materials are misplaced, mislabelled or duplicated as we have been trying over these years to feel out a way of keeping records outside big-tech tools, and in a way that is accessible to our members, however entangled they are. These notes started on a series of pads – not all of which have been tagged sensibly or have now been lost. The pads that we managed to wrangle were consolidated into an index pad, which we named the pad-of-pads – in reference to the bag-of-bags that we all have our homes.<ref>Here, we also reference Ursula Le Guin's ''Carrier Bag Theory of Fiction'' (1986) to acknowledge the role of these containers.</ref> We then moved to a shared Git repository, which some of us have integrated with local text-editing software Obsidian to keep a record of projects and events. Our current admin setup is on a Servus-hosted suite where we have a shared calendar, notes, polls, and storage space. This, however, is a more recent administrative development that we arrived at to balance the need for logistics with the need for friction, improvisation, and pause.<ref>Stefano Harney and Fred Moten, ''The Undercommons : Fugitive Planning & Black Study'' (Minor Compositions, 2013).</ref>


We became initially involved in this particular project through invitation from Winnie Soon, who explains this inciting incident in more detail in the chapter Platform Infrastruce (TBC). It came at a point where we as a collective were reasonably consistent, but yet to fully establish ourselves and our ways of organising. When we were invited to become involved in building the infrastructure for servpub, we were interested in supporting the development of a trans\*feminist collective community of practice within London, as much as we were from learning from others already working in these areas. It was at a stage in our careers, generally, where we were interested in learning more about the practical aspects of sysadministration and infrastructuring, but had little to no applied experience. This project therefore began as a teaching exercise, wherein more experienced practitioners from collectives Systerserver and Varia taught In-grid how we might build this platform, and walking us throught those processes using thier own documentation and experiences as guidance. Several members of In-grid were interested in attending these initial training moments, but because of other commitments weren't able to attend. Our notes at first, therefore, were a way of looping in those of us who were not able to be present.  
For the ServPub project, we had notes together on Etherpads hosted by a scattering of other collectives and organisations which we try to gesture to in the colophon of this book and wiki. These pads held our notes from sub-meetings, workshops, conversations, and saved chat logs. The notes overflowed from the working sessions we had with other Feminist server collectives such as Systerserver and Creative Crowds, where they shared with In-grid their practices and politics around setting up and maintaining these types of network infrastructures. These initial training moments were an important resource and we began this project's infinite-scroll-like pages of notes, code blocks, and annotations to try and contain it. Not many rules were put in place for this process of record-keeping, so they emerged as a chronology. The notes included references to documentation from other collaborating groups, and to "official" documentation provided by the makers of the software. Due to how fluid the process was at the time, we also recorded more affective notes and asides to each other in the same pads, reflecting the context of the information recorded. Often this context only made sense to us as collaborators and friends. However, even if not necessary to understand the technicalities of the work, these side notes allowed us to be ourselves, to centre our subjectivities and express moments of connection to and around the work being done through documentation that could otherwise be isolated and dispassionate. Slowly unfolding from this scattering of pads and notes, we started to make-sense of what these infrastructures, technical practices and their knowledges were to us and how we wanted to frictiously shape them from their misfitting.


These initial notes, and the exisiting documentation from others, and those provided by the makers of the softwares we used was initially enough, but over time it became apparent that there was too much assumed in the way we had written our notes, much of which was dispersed between several different authors, instructions without context which made it difficult to fix problems, or identify issues should they arrive.  
Over time it became apparent that our unwieldy scattering of notes and ServPub's particular setup needed it's own technical docs to make room for these technical practices to take shape from the backgrounds, relations, and politics around this infrastructure. We go on to share how, through these critical-access-informed docs, we made room to question how their inherited formats for sharing technical knowledges were sedimented within configurations to dictate bodies, practices, and matters into determinate infrastructures, roles, and relations. By doubling the technical praxis of documentation with critical access praxis, we made room to access the relations, figures, and politics inherited from their configurations, and to make sense for ourselves of how these normalising relations misfit our devious collective bodies. In making room for frictious misfitting, we validated our feelings of discomfort from the pressure and inflexibility of configurations as a way to imagine how we desired to be collectively (dis)oriented otherwise. 
====== Sedimented Norms======
Technical documentation is a form of knowledge exchange that has been fairly standardised and sedimented within institutionalised computing contexts such as computer engineering – and before that from electrical, mechanical and more specifically industrial engineering and design. In these contexts, the promise of technical documentation is to provide a legible understanding of how something was built and from there be able to maintain it within specific regimes and to develop it further within the particular imaginaries of the system it is embedded within.<ref>Legibility can be contested when we talk about language written for and by a "specialist" group.</ref> The expertise of this artefact, however, also means that the docs become a compendium of standardised, abstracted, and streamlined processes of infrastructuring. Jeniffer Gabrys might call this a "flat-pack cosmology"<ref>"Think of the flat pack that consists of an itemized inventory of parts, including atomized images of assembly, with connecting actions signaled through arrows segueing across framed sequences toward a clear outcome."(Gabrys 2019, 22)</ref> – one where technologies and their practices are configured into determined infrastructures, which hold in place specific worlds and politics. Miriyam Aouragh and Paula Chakravartty's ''Infrastructures of Empire'' (2016) offers an understanding of how the promises of technological freedoms through specific determinate infrastructures can bring with them their background – and often the dominant militaristic protocols and politics they are produced through. Technical docs, through this efficient orientation, offer selective points of access to their practices that dictate the reader/user to use the tool/product in a specific order or within a specific relation. The selection orients them to give just enough information to make the tool knowable and practised in the way it was intended to be, but also encoded so that only a specific role or category of person can access them. Aimi Hamraie's tracing of the figure of the ''Flexible User'' (2017) describes how these inflexible flat-pack configurations actually aim to shape users – and the human factor they make up – into normate and generalised figures that fit within their plans. This figure of the user is often whom such technical docs are made for, and we will revisit the user further on in the chapter when we talk about improvised roles.  


<nowiki>*</nowiki> Star - infrastructuring - get reference from G
Through their encoding, encrypting, and isolation of specific practices and their knowledges, technical docs configure the erasure of not only the affective and human presence from the systems, but also their backgrounds and politics. By prioritising "efficiency", these docs do not question the ways they demand bodies, communities, their infrastructures, and their practices to bend to their normalising configuration. For example, if we take Tinc's official technical docs,<ref>See, https://tinc-vpn.org/documentation/Introduction.html#Introduction.</ref> there is no room made to offer any of the politics of the software's makers, or for how they felt about this software – just what seems to be enthusiasm for its technical capacities. Outside of this affective and political critique there is also no effort made within these docs for them to be accessible to non-experts, both in the language they use and the way they structure and offer up their matters. By design, docs do not usually reveal anything beyond a certain level of utility of a system. While open-source platforms will make more parts accessible, they are still not annotated, documented or legible to a wide range of capacities. This orients these technical practices and infrastructures to only be accessible to anyone who already knows how to navigate technical files or code.


=== Positioning/argument (maybe better title like disobedient figuring): ===
This sedimented configuration of how technical docs share practices and knowledges not only limits the capacities of what these network infrastructures can do, but also who can manifest them. The isolated technical knowledges held in docs highlights how these practices are held apart from their theory, how their sociality and background are hidden from view, and how this beckons for us to seduce them into devious praxis.
Technical documentation are a technical form that is/was standardised within "traditional" computing context like computer engineering and before that from electrical and mechanical engineering. In those contexts, the purpose of throrough documentation was to provide a legible* means for understanding how something was built and from there be able to fix or build on top of it if needed. The professionalisation of this artifact however, also means that the docs become a compendium of standardised and streamled the process of building, which, more often than not does not always following a linear path. It also effectively erases the human presence from the work being done by prioritising efficiency and the institutional memory of the production company. Similarly, documentation for computational tools are built provide just enough information for a user** to be able to work with a product and fix it where needed without "costing" the production company in the form of time spent providing support. By design, docs do not usually reveal beyond a certain level of utility of a system. Open source platforms will make those part visible but not annottated or documented. That would usually remain inaccessible to anyone who doesn't already know how to navigate technical files.


Speaking of navigation, the servpub docs themselves exist in several forms, one on the Gitlab hosted by Systerserver, one on in-grid internal, shared Github and one on wiki4print under the :docs category section. From a practical perspective, this is a nebulous and difficult setup, making sure they are all up to date has been a challenge and indeed they are not all synced. There also exists separate docs for wiki4print (which are referenced from the wiki-to-print docs made by Varia (?) and hosted on their wikimedia page for the project.) which detail how to setup this platform where we co-authored and designed this book. This somewhat menacing setup is a reflection of how we attempted to respond to the form/conventions of technical docs. [expand on the progression of going from internal docs, to collectively hosted docs with Systerserver then to including them as a reference to this chapter].
====== ServPub Docs In-Praxis======
This section will dive deeper into the specifics of how In-grid puts in practice the ideas and theories with which we open this chapter. To mark this transition we are mobilising our "in-" prefix which, following in the footsteps of Trans-feminisms' use of "trans-" as a prefix<ref>"The dash and the space after it are intentional, indicating that each term puts pressure on, modifies, and is in critical combination with each other term. Trans- feminist and queer names formations of feminism and queerness that centre trans lives and analyses; transness that is inseparable from queer and feminist  lives  and analyses;  queerness  engaged  with  (and learning from) trans and feminist lives and analyses." (Cowan and Rault 2024, xvii)</ref>, we use "in-" to indicate that we will be mutually shaping and shaped by the word that follows. For us this is a way of making sense of the materiality and relations we work through as Queer Feminist, and a way to process all of the trouble we get or find ourselves "in-".


Expand: Articulate our response to that. How can we offer a response, why? What is the percieved gap we are trying to fill with these proposed docs?
Here, we explore how we navigated working with the conventions of technical docs within a practice that applies the theories of critical access, and the friction between them in the context of technical legibility – bringing the docs in-praxis. This is where we make room for these sedimented technical tables, figures, discourse and knowledges to be accessed, debugged, and troubled through our multiples contexts of praxis. This disorienting trans*praxis – crossing between critical access and feminist networks – describes how these approaches have shaped our network infrastructures in action. In this section, we highlight how this crossing of bounds, merging of methods, and breaking down of technicalities can open up the plurality of contingent possibilities for how infrastructures can be manifested by collectives, and improvised through their situated politics and practices.


The documents created for Servpub began as a record of our process for the purpose of sharing knowledge and also inciting other member of the group to join the project.  
To help discuss a few of these multiplications we are including snippets and transclusions from the Servpub docs to share how these disciplines of theory and practice have shaped one another. We have made these in-trans-clusions clear with dotted bounds that both shows the separation but room for them to touch. The excerpt below is a key example of our trans-praxis, where within the front page of the docs we make room for critical access praxis to multiply our technical praxis. In this section, we offer up how we have worked with Kelsie Acton's notion of semi-plain language (2023) to try to challenge these inaccessible and sedimented norms of technical docs. This approach makes room for the documentation of technical practices to be more accessible to different backgrounds, but also for their knowledges and expertise to be disputable and shaped by those taking it into praxis.


But the process of creating something as seemingly neutral as techincal documentation, became more politically implicated as work, efficiency, transparent methods, etc became entangled in the choices we made.  
<div id="trans">
''<big>Access (〜 ̄▽ ̄)〜</big>''<ref>See, https://wiki4print.servpub.net/index.php?title=Docs:00_Contents.</ref>


Bring in disobedient technologies
{{#lst:Docs:00 Contents |plain}}
</div>


<nowiki>*</nowiki> legibility can be contested when we talk about language written for and by a "specialist" group.  
As we collectively manifested ServPub through semi-public and public workshops, closed working sessions and independent working, this practice of copious – if atomised – note taking moved towards a pastiche of devious technical docs. In this process of coalescing ServPub's technical documentation in-trans-praxis, the docs became politically implicated and entangled in the backgrounds we brought with us. The docs that we eventually arrived at are somewhere between internal notes and personal asides, technical docs and DIY instructions: a simply-written, narrative-moderate set of instructions on building an ambulant self-hosted server with a VPN. These deviating docs make room not only for them to be accessible in form, but also for the social and political relations which hold our collective infrastructure together to also be accessible, known and figured out.


<nowiki>**</nowiki> this is a very non-human, commercialised role that is used to refer to an asbtract consumer of a tool as a product. It does not take into the account the reality, nuance, needs or real people with a desire or need to use / make-use-of-soemthing.
<div id="trans">
'''Why Tinc?'''<ref>https://wiki4print.servpub.net/index.php?title=Docs:03_VPN_with_Tinc</ref>


- Who can we reference as guides for this offering. Mentions of action research by other people
{{#lst:Docs:03 VPN with Tinc |whyTinc}}
</div>
In the background of ServPub there are also pre-existing separate docs for the Tinc setup by [https://pzwiki.wdka.nl/mediadesign/Tinc XPUB], [https://things.bleu255.com/runyourown/Main_Page Run Your Own], and the many versions and docs of [[Wiki4print]] hosted on their MediaWiki instances. This diversity of docs is impressive, as we feel the background and priorities of these different groups come through. What do they care about? How are they practising and approaching these technologies and infrastructures together? And how do they contextually share and shape the abstract social relations that make up these technical practices? However, this same abundance and specificity can make these knowledges inaccessible to different groups and communities. This can of course be done intentionally, so that there has to be a certain level of intimacy given to the infrastructure, its politics, practices, and technologies to manifest them. This is highlighted in Simms and Marangoni's ''En-crip-ing Time'' (2025) where the work is purposefully obfuscated and en-cripped so it is only known through radical practices of intimacy and care. Here though, In-grid –In-praxis with technical docs – wanted to form a practice of knowledge sharing that could both orient towards being accessible and disputable, but also towards holding the collective backgrounds that ServPub has unfolded from.


       - ref. 'filing a bug report on bug reporting', writing technical docs that reflect on techincal docs
====== Activating the Docs======
Throughout our practice of technical docs we have been questioning how we can make room for them to not only be accessible from a plurality of capacities and backgrounds, but also open up the technical practices they document to be disputable and improvisable by those manifesting them. In this section, we reflect more deeply on how we have explored this later step, and how we approached making the docs and the practices they offer to be re-interpretable and disoriented from a plurality of embodied and situated expertise. To do this, we formed a set of workshops from these docs that we called ''Practicing Protocols''. The name, ''Practicing Protocols,'' itself emerges from both its feminist STS roots, but also through a crip understanding of protocols as a place to dispute expert knowledge of systems through counter-protocols.<ref>“The feminist STS concept of “protocol” (Murphy 2012) describes methodological practices that become both standardized and reiterated in pursuit of particular political goals. Crip making adopts protocol, alongside expert knowledge, as a site of inquiry into design methodologies more generally". (Hamraie, 2023, 311)</ref> Through this framing, these workshops aimed to make room for people to accessibly be in touch with technical practices, and along the way, make sense of the misfitting we as a group felt from the normalised and sedimented figures and relations these network configurations hold in place. We developed this workshop as a way to not only make accessible the often obfuscated and encrypted practices of digital infrastructure, but to also bring them into dialogue with the operational concepts and metaphors they operate through. In doing this, our workshop aimed to create a space where people can bring the knowledges they have gained in practice together with the embodied knowledges and expertise they brought with them from their backgrounds. To dispute, improvise, and disorient these protocols in action we also turned to the methods of TITiPI's Disobedient Action Research (Pritchard et al. 2021), to inform us of how to collectively dispute what these systems are, how we make-sense of them, and how we would want to imagine, shape, and practice them otherwise.[[File:Tinclogo.png|alt=The Logo for Tinc. It has a black and white image of an Apache attack helicopter with the work "Tinc" written across it.|The Logo for Tinc. It has a black and white image of an Apache attack helicopter with the work "Tinc" written across it.|frame]]During the ServPub project – where there was an abundance of feminist network praxis – there was also ample room to question the figures, relations, and norms of these infrastructures as we actioned them. Throughout our collaborations with other collectives involved with ServPub, there had been times where In-grid members were questioned by others about our sedimented metaphors and relations. This prompted us to reconsider whether our collaborations were oriented through the "driver–navigator" programming hierarchies we inherited from institutions of computing, or whether we wanted to reorient these relations into "conductor–finger dancer" or similar. When taking this critique away from our sedimented norms of practice, we also found depth in questioning the other misfittings and frictions we felt within the protocols, figures, and inherited relations of the infrastructures we were manifesting. This is where we started to find and make friction around things such as Tinc's logo (pictured above), which for us seemed to be one of the few political gestures of the VPN. The logo pictures an Apache attack helicopter as a signifier of security and privacy, and which for us seems to situate this software as embedded within security politics. These politics are ones where safety and privacy of networks are conflated with security and militarism. This sense-making of misfitting made room for us to collectively orient and improvise how we wanted to imagine and enact these relations of safety and privacy from our own backgrounds and politics. Here, by making both the theory and practice accessible and disputable, we offer up how this praxis has more than doubled.


=== Directing attention to technical choices (do we even need this?): ===
So far we have run the ''Practicing Protocols'' workshops in two iterations: one as part of a combined panel hosted by In-grid members at 4S/EASST in Amsterdam,<ref>See, https://nomadit.co.uk/conference/easst-4s2024/panel/14253.</ref> and the other internally with In-grid members. The workshop at 4S/EASST, an international Science and Technology Studies (STS) conference, was run as part of a combined panel, where we presented work alongside TITiPI, NEoN Digital, researcher Júlia Nueno, as well as members of SHAPE. The panel presented a spectrum of community-organised infrastructure, and this iteration of ''Practicing Protocols'' aimed to offer up space for people to make-sense of these collective network infrastructures together. The second workshop was run internally for In-grid members who were not specifically involved in ServPub and may have missed out on learning these skills or understanding these practices and their knowledges. This second workshop within In-grid also importantly moved from being an accessible representational process, like we did at 4S/EASST, to part of a working session were we set up a Virtual Private Server (VPS) and foundational digital infrastructure for In-grid itself. Setting up this foundational infrastructure through our misfit debugging practices, allowed us to more intimately establish the structure through our own collective intentions and desires <3.
- short overview and use this refernce the colophon!


- might have or refere to the diagrams of relations
Bellow we highlight two points of praxis where we emphasise the sense-making of misfitting within configurations that unfolded from the ''Practicing Protocols'' workshops. The excerpts aim to provide a snapshot of how these different groups, contexts, and expertise felt and made friction that aimed to improvise and deviate these network norms towards the collective body-minds we are in dialogue with. 


- mention readical referencing and point to colophon
'''Misfitting Contracts...'''  [[File:Workshop slides.png|alt=An projection showing the workshop slides from Practicing protocols alongside the collective working pad we used for debugging at 4S/EASST.|left|thumb|Projection showing workshop slides from ''Practicing Protocols'' alongside the collective working pad we used for debugging at 4S/EASST.]]
During the first iteration of these workshops at 4S/EASST, we had a group of five-six people –  from academia and a variety of backgrounds – with both disciplinarian and lived experience. This workshop was at 8:30 am the day after the main conference celebration, and so everyone there was a bit hazy, and gently waking up. The workshop was designed to be quite accessible technically, to make it as barrier-free as possible. This being the case, we were fine with people just taking part in the dialogue and not actively practising the techniques described, but did encourage them where possible, with one In-grid member even lending a participant their laptop so they could join. The set of protocols we frictiously went through together aimed at logging onto the servers via SSH and editing a text together that was being served online from there.  [[File:Ssh Diagram.jpg|alt=A diagram made by In-grid to represent how SSH communicates to the server from a device. It has soft colours and funky text to make it not you typical technical diagram.|thumb|A diagram made by In-grid to represent how SSH communicates to the server from a device.]]
In this section, we raise one of the key misfittings that was made sense of during this workshop to offer up how this process made room for us to question and disorient the sedimented configurations of network infrastructures. To do this we bring focus to Secure Shell (SSH), and how – when making-sense of this protocol with this group –we started to unravel not only how it is abelistly figured, but also how the relations it configures and holds in place are shaped by a specific kind of body and social relation. It was through the metaphor of the "handshake" through which SSH mobilises that this misfitting was brought into question – particularly how the "handshake" between bodies is meant to represent an act which forms safe and secure communication between devices within sedimented network configurations. 


- should mention the technical choices of the docs (not hardware) as that wont be in the colophon
The following in-trans-clusion from our docs illustrates how this metaphor can be used.   


ref:
'''Security via SSH Keys'''<ref>See, https://wiki4print.servpub.net/index.php?title=Docs:01.3_SSH.</ref> 


   - "Software does not come withour its world" - Maria Bellacasa quoted in geohackers text
<div id="trans">{{#lst: Docs:01.3 SSH  |SSH}}
</div>


=== Activating the docs ===
When accessing the servers through SSH together, we reflected on how our devices were interfacing through these sedimented metaphors and figures. As a group here we started to question what a handshake represented within this configuration. The person shaking the hand is firstly assumed able-bodied, or assimilating to that norm, but also – when we take in the backgrounds and histories of these network infrastructures – they are also predominantly male and white. Therefore, this figuration of the handshake is a place where many of us felt we misfit, where we did not want to be "pulled in by the hand" and into determined and limiting forms of contract-making as trust, and the frictions we felt around this. The following notes emerged from the workshops and our collective reflection and writing on SSH.  
Throughout this practice of technical docs we have been questioning how we can enable them to not only work across abilities and knowledges but also open up the technical practices they document to be interpretable and localised. In this section, In-grid reflects deeper on how we have inquired into this later step, enabling the docs and the practices they describe to be re-interpretable and re(con)figure-able by non-experts. To do this, we formed a set of workshops from these docs that brought people together to do some basic sysadmin together, but along the way make space to highlight and take time to question the normalised and pedimented figures and relations of these infrastructures. We developed this workshop method as a way to not only make accessible the often obfuscated and encrypted practices of digital infrastructure, but to also bring them into dialogue with the operational concepts and metaphors they operate through. In doing this, we aimed to make a space where people can bring their embodied knowledges people have gained from doing these things, with the situated knowledges they brought with them. For us this was a space for us to think how we can bring in the methods of Amoore's (ref) cloud ethics as well as TITiPI's disobedient action research to open up and collectively dispute what these systems are, how they feel, and what we would want to imagine and metaphor them as.


We ran these workshops in two sessions, one at a combined panel at 4S/EASST in Amsterdamn, and the other internally starting to set up In-grid's own digital infrastructures. The workshop at 4S/Easst was run alongside a panel we ran exploring collective infrastructures, where we presented alongside TITiPI, NEoN digital, Júlia Nueno, as well as members of SHAPE on this project. The panel presented a spectrum of community organised infrastructure, and this workshop alongside meant to make accessible to the public In-grid's practices of collective re(con)figuring. The second workshop was run internally for In-grid members who were not specifically involved within Servpub and may have missed out on learning these skills or understanding these practices and their knowledges. This second workshop within In-grid also importantly moved from being an accessible representational process like we did at 4S/EASST to instead set up a VPS and foundational digital infrastructure for In-grid. In setting up this foundational infrastructure through this re(con)figuring practice, we aimed to have set it up with our own collective intentions.
<blockquote>'''2. SSH'''<ref>See, https://servpub.net/ci_protocols.html.</ref>
* authenticity of host can't be established. - trust issue
* hospitality; being a respectful guest & welcoming host (simultaneously)
* server playing hard to get but finally got a seat at the table
* the terminal visually looks the same whether its your local machine terminal or a different shared machine, so it feels like the same. Because you are bringing somewhere else to you instead of you going.  
* there is an obscurity to the virtual
* How could an SSH feel more material, closer
* Anonymity
* temperature feels very material - what else could be included i.e. location to the server
* physically caring for it's wellbeing (plugged in)
* is the handshake appropriate? i.e. banking, trumpy handshakes, getting pulled in by the hand, whats the origin of the expression?
* is it about a manifestation of trust - and so what else could signify this
* server hugs</blockquote>


=== Annotating the Chapter with snippets from the docs ===
In dialogue around this configurational misfitting the group started to orient towards what we would rather be connecting and building trust through – how we, as a group, wanted to imagine and practise these networks through intimacy and care. From this sense-making of how these infrastructures have been normalised to specific bodies, we started to question how we wanted to shape and improvise them to our relations and desires. There was more to the conversation but the collective notes of the workshop quoted above shared the "server hugs" that we desired together – the soft, comforting embrace of networks we wanted to shape and be held by.  
ref: <nowiki>https://time.cozy-cloud.net/</nowiki>


=== Graceful ending ===
'''Improvised Roles...'''[[File:Serving In-grid workshop day.jpg|alt=A group of 5 people sit on sofas and chairs in a kitchen living room. They have they laptops out and are ready to start the workshop.|thumb|An image from the workshop day and in one of the members' kitchens ready to get coding.]]The second iteration of the ''Practicing Protocols'' workshops was held internally by a group of seven In-grid members. It aimed not only to share the practices and knowledges we had built up from being a part of ServPub, but also to set up our first In-grid server together. This workshop was intended to leave room alongside the practicalities of implementing the server, for making sense of these configurations, and how we might want to orient and improvise them otherwise and together through collective praxis. This workshop was held just after a nice lunch we cooked for each other, and as we sat there, quite full and very comfy, we started to manifest our collective infrastructure together. The technical steps we took to do this were: logging in to the server, setting up user accounts for our members, and hosting a website of our workshop notes there.[[File:Usersdiagram.jpg|alt=A diagram showing how a device can connect to an individual user on a machine, and that that user can have different rights within that server.|left|thumb|A diagram describing how users are configured within network infrastructures.]]
In this section we highlight one of the main misfittings felt by In-grid members during this workshop. The misfitting that was unavoidable here was that of the determined user of these servers. The user is the individualised account and role that permits specific limiting relations within the determinate hierarchies of the system. An example of this is the demarcation of a user to a user within the SUDO group. SUDO group users are members of a user group called "Superusers", who have more access to perform sensitive commands. It is often figured as a way of elevating users' privileges, which in turn allows them to do things like update or install packages, restart or disable tasks. The term SUDO is a truncation of the phrase "Superuser do."


=== Side note: dealing with deprecated tools! ===
We read the figure of the user here as one who is isolated within a closed system, not only through technical protocols but also through the non-existent capacity for and resulting invalidation of any social backgrounds. By finding friction with the configuration of the user within network infrastructures, we question who these technical relations are imagined for, but also what the limits of their relations and capacities for intimacy are.


=== References ===
<div id="trans">
'''Adding Users'''<ref>See, https://wiki4print.servpub.net/index.php?title=Docs:01.2_Creating_Users.</ref>


{{#lst:Docs:01.2 Creating Users |user}}
</div>


Pad up to date: https://pad.riseup.net/p/PraxisDoublingChapterNotes-keep
When setting up our user accounts together on the server one by one, we questioned how these roles misfit our collective relations. The user role as stated above only holds the capacity for a determinate relation – one where a person interfacing with the server has to flex to specific relations and norms. When we brought this in touch with how we make room for our members to "perform" in our networks, the role of the user had very defined and hard limits – ones that could not hold the diversity of bodyminds, capacities, and perspectives we desired and embrace as a collective. In this space of misfitting we amplified this friction by starting to imagine what roles and relations we wanted to manifest within our network infrastructures.
 
<blockquote>'''User Protocols'''<ref>See, https://femfester.in-grid.io/.</ref>
 
Not users but:
 
* maintainers?
* carers?
* members?
* players?
* collaborators and caretakers
* it is nice to be individuals in a collective
* characters
* conversationalists
* persona
* infra as another collaborator not users/using
* fistulas</blockquote>When making this room to disorient the sedimented role of the user within network infrastructures, we began to question how we wanted to be together on this server. From this point of collective deviation we started to shape and perform the user through our own metaphors and figures. These ranged from maintainers and carers, but also to characters and personas. These figures brought a blend of In-grid's background of performances, parties, and arts with those of infrastructural practices and labours. From this point of misfitting and friction-making – alongside many others in the workshop – In-grid started to shape and practise the social and technical networks we desired to be in together.
 
====== Praxis*∞ ======
In-grid – and more broadly the group involved with ServPub as a whole – is made up of many individuals with still more multiple practices/praxes. For us, this shares how this publishing infrastructure is shaped by many approaches and politics towards collective and collaborative practice. As we have worked to build an infrastructure which tries to reflect the desires and concerns of those who have built and will use it, we have also created a way of recording that work which is also shaped by of our bodyminds and backgrounds. Traditional documentation intentionally omits affective details. On a practical level this is a useful way of keeping work succinct, searchable, and quick to parse and implement (ideally, anyway). What this can do however, is exclude non-experts by glossing over information about why you might take a particular action instead of another, making steps appear arbitrary or opaque. 
 
Through learning and making this infrastructure, we recognised that not being able to understand the reasoning behind why a step has been taken in a set of documentation makes it difficult to deviate from a prescribed path or a set tool-kit. One of our aims for creating critical-access-informed docs is to create enough room around these technical processes to allow others to make these decisions – for example, whether they want to follow a certain setup or not – and to build the capacity to make more creative choices and cobble together their own improvised methods of infrastructuring collectively.
 
Reflecting back on the plurality of praxis we have shared in this chapter – from the ServPub infrastructure, to our resulting access-informed docs, and the ''Practicing Protocols'' workshops we made with them – these entangled and overflowing layers of praxis demonstrate how we have brought together disciplines and their methods in in-trans-practice to unfold the predetermined configurations of network infrastructures into and through other performances, matters and relations. Here we highlight how the critical access praxis that In-grid is engaging has mutually shaped and transformed the background and history of feminist network praxis from which this project builds. Through this mutual shaping we show one way in which critical access can make room for prescribed configurations, infrastructures, and their politics to be made more accessible to a range of capacities and contexts in a way that they are disputable and validate the diverse forms of expertise and knowing that artists, non-experts/technocrats and Feminist hackers form when in touch with them.<br /> <references />




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Latest revision as of 11:10, 6 March 2026

Praxis Doubling: Misfitting Infrastructures

(theory*practice)*2

Praxis is the combination of practice and theory, code and conduct, docs and protocols. We posit Praxis Doubling as a term for bringing together different kinds of praxis, making room for them to permeate one another, to deviate actions, and animate relations in other ways. Praxis doubling is itself plural. The "-ing" in doubling signals a process that is ongoing – a verb and an action that is multiplied through different orientations and approaches. By doubling praxis we aim to coalesce, seduce, and mutually shape feminist network praxes with critical access praxes. We aim to see how both of these approaches bring theory into collective action and not only make room for more accessible technical praxis, but also allow their matters to become more frictious and disputed.

To make-sense of these technical network relations, In-grid has built up a debugging practice around technical docs.Technical documentation is a resource that explains the processes and practices that make up technical infrastructures. This collective debugging praxis came about when we came into contact with ServPub's table of feminist network praxis, bringing with us our own background in collective access praxis. By disobediently making room at this collective table, we aimed to make-sense of our misffiting with the inherited figures and imaginaries of network infrastructures and their technical docs. Through embracing misfitting we disorient dialogues towards forming our own collective counter-imaginaries and figures – ones which reshape the limits and what is backgrounded within a single praxis. In this chapter, we outline how we have come to practise Praxis Doubling, and the methods we have used to facilitate this mingling of praxes.

Methods

The practices we describe here are ones that have emerged through an entanglement between disciplinary conventions and our own dis-abilities to fit within them. We engage with time scarcity, technical language hegemony, and the expectations of productivity from the situatedness of our accessibility desires and political ethics. This chapter expands on the ways in which we put these desires and ethics into practice, going through the process of working as a digital arts collective and how we approached creating critical documentation for the technical infrastructure of ServPub. We stop to reflect on the points where the tools and their sedimented politics and practices misfit us and halted the imaginary of smoothness within technological relations. Through out this sense-making of misfitting moving to make friction and in ways that we worked around, through, and within these tools to make room for ourselves and each other (Rice et al., 2024). Some of these ways include approaches to time management and note-taking, deliberately unpacking or gay abandoning technical terminology, entangling anecdotal experiences rather than writing for a universal user, and critically examining the political implications of names and logos of different tools. The technical documentation and resulting Practicing Prtocols workshops that are the outcome of this nebulous process are offered here to share what doubling of praxis may be like. We also acknowledge that the duality held within the double is not capacious enough to contain the multitude of difference and misfittings that the tools and conventions we confronted and aim to access try to erase. This chapter contains the doubling(s) of theory and practice that emerged from our particular confrontation with building this infrastructure as artists, technologists and crip, neurodivergent, and queer peers.

Background to In-grids Docs Praxis

To describe why the ServPub docs look and work the way they do, we must first (briefly) explain how In-grid works as a collective – specifically, the practices that make it possible for us to work together. The number of In-grid members hovers around thirteen to fifteen active members at any given time. Of that group, smaller clusters form around specific projects and streams of work, where approximately four to six members focus on a project at a time. When a proposed project garners the interest of enough members to make it feasible, we then confront the material conditions around everyone's time and capacity – specifically, the conditions that result from fractional and/or precarious work commitments. We work around that by allowing for some inefficiencies, such as last minute drop-outs and confirmations for joining meetings and working sessions, as well as caring for those returning after a several-month break to rejoin. We are also quite promiscuous as a collective and enjoy collaborating with a range of individuals beyond In-grid's already deviating members. For us, this does not dilute who we are but brings in a wide rage of expertise and perspectives that we feel outweighs the contribution of an experienced or expert individual. While everyone has the opportunity to contribute to our ways of collaborating, we agreed early on not to silo off our different skills into roles, determined specialisms, and isolated/ing processes, but to make room for them to be shaped by bodies inside and outside of our collective. Not only did this orient our collective towards skill and knowledge sharing in and through practice, but it also made room for projects to be more accessible to collaborators, where otherwise there might be social, technical or capacity-based barriers. We have found that even though caring for this wide range of perspectives, practices and politics takes a lot more labour, it offers room for these approaches to multiply – for them to more than double, and for us to unfold situated praxes from specific projects and relations, such as the docs and workshops we share here.

Abundant Notes, Better Make Some Room for Them

During the ServPub project, we adopted an exhaustive note-taking process – not only to document meetings, but to create how-to guides, informal educational resources, and relatable diagrams to inform everyone as much as possible about the contextual and technical details about each step of the project. These practices stem from In-grid's copious notes taken every time we meet, since we began working together in 2020. Many of our earlier materials are misplaced, mislabelled or duplicated as we have been trying over these years to feel out a way of keeping records outside big-tech tools, and in a way that is accessible to our members, however entangled they are. These notes started on a series of pads – not all of which have been tagged sensibly or have now been lost. The pads that we managed to wrangle were consolidated into an index pad, which we named the pad-of-pads – in reference to the bag-of-bags that we all have our homes.[1] We then moved to a shared Git repository, which some of us have integrated with local text-editing software Obsidian to keep a record of projects and events. Our current admin setup is on a Servus-hosted suite where we have a shared calendar, notes, polls, and storage space. This, however, is a more recent administrative development that we arrived at to balance the need for logistics with the need for friction, improvisation, and pause.[2]

For the ServPub project, we had notes together on Etherpads hosted by a scattering of other collectives and organisations which we try to gesture to in the colophon of this book and wiki. These pads held our notes from sub-meetings, workshops, conversations, and saved chat logs. The notes overflowed from the working sessions we had with other Feminist server collectives such as Systerserver and Creative Crowds, where they shared with In-grid their practices and politics around setting up and maintaining these types of network infrastructures. These initial training moments were an important resource and we began this project's infinite-scroll-like pages of notes, code blocks, and annotations to try and contain it. Not many rules were put in place for this process of record-keeping, so they emerged as a chronology. The notes included references to documentation from other collaborating groups, and to "official" documentation provided by the makers of the software. Due to how fluid the process was at the time, we also recorded more affective notes and asides to each other in the same pads, reflecting the context of the information recorded. Often this context only made sense to us as collaborators and friends. However, even if not necessary to understand the technicalities of the work, these side notes allowed us to be ourselves, to centre our subjectivities and express moments of connection to and around the work being done through documentation that could otherwise be isolated and dispassionate. Slowly unfolding from this scattering of pads and notes, we started to make-sense of what these infrastructures, technical practices and their knowledges were to us and how we wanted to frictiously shape them from their misfitting.

Over time it became apparent that our unwieldy scattering of notes and ServPub's particular setup needed it's own technical docs to make room for these technical practices to take shape from the backgrounds, relations, and politics around this infrastructure. We go on to share how, through these critical-access-informed docs, we made room to question how their inherited formats for sharing technical knowledges were sedimented within configurations to dictate bodies, practices, and matters into determinate infrastructures, roles, and relations. By doubling the technical praxis of documentation with critical access praxis, we made room to access the relations, figures, and politics inherited from their configurations, and to make sense for ourselves of how these normalising relations misfit our devious collective bodies. In making room for frictious misfitting, we validated our feelings of discomfort from the pressure and inflexibility of configurations as a way to imagine how we desired to be collectively (dis)oriented otherwise.

Sedimented Norms

Technical documentation is a form of knowledge exchange that has been fairly standardised and sedimented within institutionalised computing contexts such as computer engineering – and before that from electrical, mechanical and more specifically industrial engineering and design. In these contexts, the promise of technical documentation is to provide a legible understanding of how something was built and from there be able to maintain it within specific regimes and to develop it further within the particular imaginaries of the system it is embedded within.[3] The expertise of this artefact, however, also means that the docs become a compendium of standardised, abstracted, and streamlined processes of infrastructuring. Jeniffer Gabrys might call this a "flat-pack cosmology"[4] – one where technologies and their practices are configured into determined infrastructures, which hold in place specific worlds and politics. Miriyam Aouragh and Paula Chakravartty's Infrastructures of Empire (2016) offers an understanding of how the promises of technological freedoms through specific determinate infrastructures can bring with them their background – and often the dominant militaristic protocols and politics they are produced through. Technical docs, through this efficient orientation, offer selective points of access to their practices that dictate the reader/user to use the tool/product in a specific order or within a specific relation. The selection orients them to give just enough information to make the tool knowable and practised in the way it was intended to be, but also encoded so that only a specific role or category of person can access them. Aimi Hamraie's tracing of the figure of the Flexible User (2017) describes how these inflexible flat-pack configurations actually aim to shape users – and the human factor they make up – into normate and generalised figures that fit within their plans. This figure of the user is often whom such technical docs are made for, and we will revisit the user further on in the chapter when we talk about improvised roles.

Through their encoding, encrypting, and isolation of specific practices and their knowledges, technical docs configure the erasure of not only the affective and human presence from the systems, but also their backgrounds and politics. By prioritising "efficiency", these docs do not question the ways they demand bodies, communities, their infrastructures, and their practices to bend to their normalising configuration. For example, if we take Tinc's official technical docs,[5] there is no room made to offer any of the politics of the software's makers, or for how they felt about this software – just what seems to be enthusiasm for its technical capacities. Outside of this affective and political critique there is also no effort made within these docs for them to be accessible to non-experts, both in the language they use and the way they structure and offer up their matters. By design, docs do not usually reveal anything beyond a certain level of utility of a system. While open-source platforms will make more parts accessible, they are still not annotated, documented or legible to a wide range of capacities. This orients these technical practices and infrastructures to only be accessible to anyone who already knows how to navigate technical files or code.

This sedimented configuration of how technical docs share practices and knowledges not only limits the capacities of what these network infrastructures can do, but also who can manifest them. The isolated technical knowledges held in docs highlights how these practices are held apart from their theory, how their sociality and background are hidden from view, and how this beckons for us to seduce them into devious praxis.

ServPub Docs In-Praxis

This section will dive deeper into the specifics of how In-grid puts in practice the ideas and theories with which we open this chapter. To mark this transition we are mobilising our "in-" prefix which, following in the footsteps of Trans-feminisms' use of "trans-" as a prefix[6], we use "in-" to indicate that we will be mutually shaping and shaped by the word that follows. For us this is a way of making sense of the materiality and relations we work through as Queer Feminist, and a way to process all of the trouble we get or find ourselves "in-".

Here, we explore how we navigated working with the conventions of technical docs within a practice that applies the theories of critical access, and the friction between them in the context of technical legibility – bringing the docs in-praxis. This is where we make room for these sedimented technical tables, figures, discourse and knowledges to be accessed, debugged, and troubled through our multiples contexts of praxis. This disorienting trans*praxis – crossing between critical access and feminist networks – describes how these approaches have shaped our network infrastructures in action. In this section, we highlight how this crossing of bounds, merging of methods, and breaking down of technicalities can open up the plurality of contingent possibilities for how infrastructures can be manifested by collectives, and improvised through their situated politics and practices.

To help discuss a few of these multiplications we are including snippets and transclusions from the Servpub docs to share how these disciplines of theory and practice have shaped one another. We have made these in-trans-clusions clear with dotted bounds that both shows the separation but room for them to touch. The excerpt below is a key example of our trans-praxis, where within the front page of the docs we make room for critical access praxis to multiply our technical praxis. In this section, we offer up how we have worked with Kelsie Acton's notion of semi-plain language (2023) to try to challenge these inaccessible and sedimented norms of technical docs. This approach makes room for the documentation of technical practices to be more accessible to different backgrounds, but also for their knowledges and expertise to be disputable and shaped by those taking it into praxis.

Access (〜 ̄▽ ̄)〜[7]


Acton states this as:

Note on writing: This chapter is written in what I call a semi- plain language style. This means I do the following:

  • Use an active voice
  • Mostly use the 6000 most common words in the English language
  • Use short sentences
  • Use 14 point font
  • Use “I” and “you”

Following Acton In-grid understands this as not trying to assimilate dialogues into dominant technical talking points. Instead, In-grid approaches this practice through critical access as to distribute where the expertise of systems are located, making them disputable from many experiences, backgrounds and knowledges.


As we collectively manifested ServPub through semi-public and public workshops, closed working sessions and independent working, this practice of copious – if atomised – note taking moved towards a pastiche of devious technical docs. In this process of coalescing ServPub's technical documentation in-trans-praxis, the docs became politically implicated and entangled in the backgrounds we brought with us. The docs that we eventually arrived at are somewhere between internal notes and personal asides, technical docs and DIY instructions: a simply-written, narrative-moderate set of instructions on building an ambulant self-hosted server with a VPN. These deviating docs make room not only for them to be accessible in form, but also for the social and political relations which hold our collective infrastructure together to also be accessible, known and figured out.

Why Tinc?[8]


We are using Tinc because it is inherited from the history of projects that we are working with. This setup pulls from the original work of XPub and their HUB project, which used it to form experimental server space for their students which could get passed institutional firewalls securely and let devices roam. This led to the development into other projects like Rosa and the ATNOFS project, as well as Constant's Circulations. Similarly, we used the setup to form an experimental network of servers to form this Servpub collective publishing infrastructure.

You can read more on this history at the bottom of Constant's Circulations about page under the heading Radical Referencing.

Below is a list of other resources and docs on how to set up tinc that we have worked from/with:


In the background of ServPub there are also pre-existing separate docs for the Tinc setup by XPUB, Run Your Own, and the many versions and docs of Wiki4print hosted on their MediaWiki instances. This diversity of docs is impressive, as we feel the background and priorities of these different groups come through. What do they care about? How are they practising and approaching these technologies and infrastructures together? And how do they contextually share and shape the abstract social relations that make up these technical practices? However, this same abundance and specificity can make these knowledges inaccessible to different groups and communities. This can of course be done intentionally, so that there has to be a certain level of intimacy given to the infrastructure, its politics, practices, and technologies to manifest them. This is highlighted in Simms and Marangoni's En-crip-ing Time (2025) where the work is purposefully obfuscated and en-cripped so it is only known through radical practices of intimacy and care. Here though, In-grid –In-praxis with technical docs – wanted to form a practice of knowledge sharing that could both orient towards being accessible and disputable, but also towards holding the collective backgrounds that ServPub has unfolded from.

Activating the Docs

Throughout our practice of technical docs we have been questioning how we can make room for them to not only be accessible from a plurality of capacities and backgrounds, but also open up the technical practices they document to be disputable and improvisable by those manifesting them. In this section, we reflect more deeply on how we have explored this later step, and how we approached making the docs and the practices they offer to be re-interpretable and disoriented from a plurality of embodied and situated expertise. To do this, we formed a set of workshops from these docs that we called Practicing Protocols. The name, Practicing Protocols, itself emerges from both its feminist STS roots, but also through a crip understanding of protocols as a place to dispute expert knowledge of systems through counter-protocols.[9] Through this framing, these workshops aimed to make room for people to accessibly be in touch with technical practices, and along the way, make sense of the misfitting we as a group felt from the normalised and sedimented figures and relations these network configurations hold in place. We developed this workshop as a way to not only make accessible the often obfuscated and encrypted practices of digital infrastructure, but to also bring them into dialogue with the operational concepts and metaphors they operate through. In doing this, our workshop aimed to create a space where people can bring the knowledges they have gained in practice together with the embodied knowledges and expertise they brought with them from their backgrounds. To dispute, improvise, and disorient these protocols in action we also turned to the methods of TITiPI's Disobedient Action Research (Pritchard et al. 2021), to inform us of how to collectively dispute what these systems are, how we make-sense of them, and how we would want to imagine, shape, and practice them otherwise.

The Logo for Tinc. It has a black and white image of an Apache attack helicopter with the work "Tinc" written across it.
The Logo for Tinc. It has a black and white image of an Apache attack helicopter with the work "Tinc" written across it.

During the ServPub project – where there was an abundance of feminist network praxis – there was also ample room to question the figures, relations, and norms of these infrastructures as we actioned them. Throughout our collaborations with other collectives involved with ServPub, there had been times where In-grid members were questioned by others about our sedimented metaphors and relations. This prompted us to reconsider whether our collaborations were oriented through the "driver–navigator" programming hierarchies we inherited from institutions of computing, or whether we wanted to reorient these relations into "conductor–finger dancer" or similar. When taking this critique away from our sedimented norms of practice, we also found depth in questioning the other misfittings and frictions we felt within the protocols, figures, and inherited relations of the infrastructures we were manifesting. This is where we started to find and make friction around things such as Tinc's logo (pictured above), which for us seemed to be one of the few political gestures of the VPN. The logo pictures an Apache attack helicopter as a signifier of security and privacy, and which for us seems to situate this software as embedded within security politics. These politics are ones where safety and privacy of networks are conflated with security and militarism. This sense-making of misfitting made room for us to collectively orient and improvise how we wanted to imagine and enact these relations of safety and privacy from our own backgrounds and politics. Here, by making both the theory and practice accessible and disputable, we offer up how this praxis has more than doubled.

So far we have run the Practicing Protocols workshops in two iterations: one as part of a combined panel hosted by In-grid members at 4S/EASST in Amsterdam,[10] and the other internally with In-grid members. The workshop at 4S/EASST, an international Science and Technology Studies (STS) conference, was run as part of a combined panel, where we presented work alongside TITiPI, NEoN Digital, researcher Júlia Nueno, as well as members of SHAPE. The panel presented a spectrum of community-organised infrastructure, and this iteration of Practicing Protocols aimed to offer up space for people to make-sense of these collective network infrastructures together. The second workshop was run internally for In-grid members who were not specifically involved in ServPub and may have missed out on learning these skills or understanding these practices and their knowledges. This second workshop within In-grid also importantly moved from being an accessible representational process, like we did at 4S/EASST, to part of a working session were we set up a Virtual Private Server (VPS) and foundational digital infrastructure for In-grid itself. Setting up this foundational infrastructure through our misfit debugging practices, allowed us to more intimately establish the structure through our own collective intentions and desires <3.

Bellow we highlight two points of praxis where we emphasise the sense-making of misfitting within configurations that unfolded from the Practicing Protocols workshops. The excerpts aim to provide a snapshot of how these different groups, contexts, and expertise felt and made friction that aimed to improvise and deviate these network norms towards the collective body-minds we are in dialogue with.

Misfitting Contracts...

An projection showing the workshop slides from Practicing protocols alongside the collective working pad we used for debugging at 4S/EASST.
Projection showing workshop slides from Practicing Protocols alongside the collective working pad we used for debugging at 4S/EASST.

During the first iteration of these workshops at 4S/EASST, we had a group of five-six people – from academia and a variety of backgrounds – with both disciplinarian and lived experience. This workshop was at 8:30 am the day after the main conference celebration, and so everyone there was a bit hazy, and gently waking up. The workshop was designed to be quite accessible technically, to make it as barrier-free as possible. This being the case, we were fine with people just taking part in the dialogue and not actively practising the techniques described, but did encourage them where possible, with one In-grid member even lending a participant their laptop so they could join. The set of protocols we frictiously went through together aimed at logging onto the servers via SSH and editing a text together that was being served online from there.

A diagram made by In-grid to represent how SSH communicates to the server from a device. It has soft colours and funky text to make it not you typical technical diagram.
A diagram made by In-grid to represent how SSH communicates to the server from a device.

In this section, we raise one of the key misfittings that was made sense of during this workshop to offer up how this process made room for us to question and disorient the sedimented configurations of network infrastructures. To do this we bring focus to Secure Shell (SSH), and how – when making-sense of this protocol with this group –we started to unravel not only how it is abelistly figured, but also how the relations it configures and holds in place are shaped by a specific kind of body and social relation. It was through the metaphor of the "handshake" through which SSH mobilises that this misfitting was brought into question – particularly how the "handshake" between bodies is meant to represent an act which forms safe and secure communication between devices within sedimented network configurations.

The following in-trans-clusion from our docs illustrates how this metaphor can be used.

Security via SSH Keys[11]

SSH Keys are user specific and are used in addition to a shared login password to make it more secure than traditional usernames and passwords. To make this method of access truly secure we will need to eventually disable password-only login.

SSH is often metaphored as a handshake between devices, but you can also think of the shared public file as the key, and the private file as the lock. Locks are non-transferrable and have to be generated per user.

To generate a key each user must execute this command on their laptop:

ssh-keygen -t rsa

This will generate a pair of public and private keys. You will then need to fill in the information requested (most of it is optional so you can leave it blank) and set a password (Also optional).

You’ll receive something like this:

$ ssh-keygen
Generating public/private rsa key pair.
Enter file in which to save the key (/home/me/.ssh/id_rsa):`
Enter passphrase (empty for no passphrase):
Enter same passphrase again:
Your identification has been saved in /home/me/.ssh/id_rsa.
Your public key has been saved in /home/dave/.ssh/id_rsa.pub.
The key fingerprint is:
ef:69:3b:9e:3b:2d:99:0d:ac:57:4e:b2:92:82:bd:9f me@hostname
The key's randomart image is:
+--[ RSA 2048]----+
|                 |
|                 |
|                 |
|                 |
|        S.       |
|         .+ o    |
|     o   o.%     |
|    . o +oXo+    |
|      .+E=B*     
+-----------------+` 

The shared key is the:

id_rsa.pub

The private Key is the:

id_rsa


When accessing the servers through SSH together, we reflected on how our devices were interfacing through these sedimented metaphors and figures. As a group here we started to question what a handshake represented within this configuration. The person shaking the hand is firstly assumed able-bodied, or assimilating to that norm, but also – when we take in the backgrounds and histories of these network infrastructures – they are also predominantly male and white. Therefore, this figuration of the handshake is a place where many of us felt we misfit, where we did not want to be "pulled in by the hand" and into determined and limiting forms of contract-making as trust, and the frictions we felt around this. The following notes emerged from the workshops and our collective reflection and writing on SSH.

2. SSH[12]

  • authenticity of host can't be established. - trust issue
  • hospitality; being a respectful guest & welcoming host (simultaneously)
  • server playing hard to get but finally got a seat at the table
  • the terminal visually looks the same whether its your local machine terminal or a different shared machine, so it feels like the same. Because you are bringing somewhere else to you instead of you going.
  • there is an obscurity to the virtual
  • How could an SSH feel more material, closer
  • Anonymity
  • temperature feels very material - what else could be included i.e. location to the server
  • physically caring for it's wellbeing (plugged in)
  • is the handshake appropriate? i.e. banking, trumpy handshakes, getting pulled in by the hand, whats the origin of the expression?
  • is it about a manifestation of trust - and so what else could signify this
  • server hugs

In dialogue around this configurational misfitting the group started to orient towards what we would rather be connecting and building trust through – how we, as a group, wanted to imagine and practise these networks through intimacy and care. From this sense-making of how these infrastructures have been normalised to specific bodies, we started to question how we wanted to shape and improvise them to our relations and desires. There was more to the conversation but the collective notes of the workshop quoted above shared the "server hugs" that we desired together – the soft, comforting embrace of networks we wanted to shape and be held by.

Improvised Roles...

A group of 5 people sit on sofas and chairs in a kitchen living room. They have they laptops out and are ready to start the workshop.
An image from the workshop day and in one of the members' kitchens ready to get coding.

The second iteration of the Practicing Protocols workshops was held internally by a group of seven In-grid members. It aimed not only to share the practices and knowledges we had built up from being a part of ServPub, but also to set up our first In-grid server together. This workshop was intended to leave room alongside the practicalities of implementing the server, for making sense of these configurations, and how we might want to orient and improvise them otherwise and together through collective praxis. This workshop was held just after a nice lunch we cooked for each other, and as we sat there, quite full and very comfy, we started to manifest our collective infrastructure together. The technical steps we took to do this were: logging in to the server, setting up user accounts for our members, and hosting a website of our workshop notes there.

A diagram showing how a device can connect to an individual user on a machine, and that that user can have different rights within that server.
A diagram describing how users are configured within network infrastructures.

In this section we highlight one of the main misfittings felt by In-grid members during this workshop. The misfitting that was unavoidable here was that of the determined user of these servers. The user is the individualised account and role that permits specific limiting relations within the determinate hierarchies of the system. An example of this is the demarcation of a user to a user within the SUDO group. SUDO group users are members of a user group called "Superusers", who have more access to perform sensitive commands. It is often figured as a way of elevating users' privileges, which in turn allows them to do things like update or install packages, restart or disable tasks. The term SUDO is a truncation of the phrase "Superuser do."

We read the figure of the user here as one who is isolated within a closed system, not only through technical protocols but also through the non-existent capacity for and resulting invalidation of any social backgrounds. By finding friction with the configuration of the user within network infrastructures, we question who these technical relations are imagined for, but also what the limits of their relations and capacities for intimacy are.

Adding Users[13]


To make a new user, use the command below.

adduser <nameofuser>

[!note] You will be prompted to input a password and it is always better to give different users different passwords for security.`

If you want to give this user sudo access, then they have to be added to the “sudo” group. You don’t need to create this group, it exists by default and you can just add or remove users from it. The sudo group is stored in this directory: /etc/sudoers.d/

To add a user to the sudo group run the following command:

usermod -aG sudo <nameofuser>


When setting up our user accounts together on the server one by one, we questioned how these roles misfit our collective relations. The user role as stated above only holds the capacity for a determinate relation – one where a person interfacing with the server has to flex to specific relations and norms. When we brought this in touch with how we make room for our members to "perform" in our networks, the role of the user had very defined and hard limits – ones that could not hold the diversity of bodyminds, capacities, and perspectives we desired and embrace as a collective. In this space of misfitting we amplified this friction by starting to imagine what roles and relations we wanted to manifest within our network infrastructures.

User Protocols[14]

Not users but:

  • maintainers?
  • carers?
  • members?
  • players?
  • collaborators and caretakers
  • it is nice to be individuals in a collective
  • characters
  • conversationalists
  • persona
  • infra as another collaborator not users/using
  • fistulas

When making this room to disorient the sedimented role of the user within network infrastructures, we began to question how we wanted to be together on this server. From this point of collective deviation we started to shape and perform the user through our own metaphors and figures. These ranged from maintainers and carers, but also to characters and personas. These figures brought a blend of In-grid's background of performances, parties, and arts with those of infrastructural practices and labours. From this point of misfitting and friction-making – alongside many others in the workshop – In-grid started to shape and practise the social and technical networks we desired to be in together.

Praxis*∞

In-grid – and more broadly the group involved with ServPub as a whole – is made up of many individuals with still more multiple practices/praxes. For us, this shares how this publishing infrastructure is shaped by many approaches and politics towards collective and collaborative practice. As we have worked to build an infrastructure which tries to reflect the desires and concerns of those who have built and will use it, we have also created a way of recording that work which is also shaped by of our bodyminds and backgrounds. Traditional documentation intentionally omits affective details. On a practical level this is a useful way of keeping work succinct, searchable, and quick to parse and implement (ideally, anyway). What this can do however, is exclude non-experts by glossing over information about why you might take a particular action instead of another, making steps appear arbitrary or opaque.

Through learning and making this infrastructure, we recognised that not being able to understand the reasoning behind why a step has been taken in a set of documentation makes it difficult to deviate from a prescribed path or a set tool-kit. One of our aims for creating critical-access-informed docs is to create enough room around these technical processes to allow others to make these decisions – for example, whether they want to follow a certain setup or not – and to build the capacity to make more creative choices and cobble together their own improvised methods of infrastructuring collectively.

Reflecting back on the plurality of praxis we have shared in this chapter – from the ServPub infrastructure, to our resulting access-informed docs, and the Practicing Protocols workshops we made with them – these entangled and overflowing layers of praxis demonstrate how we have brought together disciplines and their methods in in-trans-practice to unfold the predetermined configurations of network infrastructures into and through other performances, matters and relations. Here we highlight how the critical access praxis that In-grid is engaging has mutually shaped and transformed the background and history of feminist network praxis from which this project builds. Through this mutual shaping we show one way in which critical access can make room for prescribed configurations, infrastructures, and their politics to be made more accessible to a range of capacities and contexts in a way that they are disputable and validate the diverse forms of expertise and knowing that artists, non-experts/technocrats and Feminist hackers form when in touch with them.

  1. Here, we also reference Ursula Le Guin's Carrier Bag Theory of Fiction (1986) to acknowledge the role of these containers.
  2. Stefano Harney and Fred Moten, The Undercommons : Fugitive Planning & Black Study (Minor Compositions, 2013).
  3. Legibility can be contested when we talk about language written for and by a "specialist" group.
  4. "Think of the flat pack that consists of an itemized inventory of parts, including atomized images of assembly, with connecting actions signaled through arrows segueing across framed sequences toward a clear outcome."(Gabrys 2019, 22)
  5. See, https://tinc-vpn.org/documentation/Introduction.html#Introduction.
  6. "The dash and the space after it are intentional, indicating that each term puts pressure on, modifies, and is in critical combination with each other term. Trans- feminist and queer names formations of feminism and queerness that centre trans lives and analyses; transness that is inseparable from queer and feminist lives and analyses; queerness engaged with (and learning from) trans and feminist lives and analyses." (Cowan and Rault 2024, xvii)
  7. See, https://wiki4print.servpub.net/index.php?title=Docs:00_Contents.
  8. https://wiki4print.servpub.net/index.php?title=Docs:03_VPN_with_Tinc
  9. “The feminist STS concept of “protocol” (Murphy 2012) describes methodological practices that become both standardized and reiterated in pursuit of particular political goals. Crip making adopts protocol, alongside expert knowledge, as a site of inquiry into design methodologies more generally". (Hamraie, 2023, 311)
  10. See, https://nomadit.co.uk/conference/easst-4s2024/panel/14253.
  11. See, https://wiki4print.servpub.net/index.php?title=Docs:01.3_SSH.
  12. See, https://servpub.net/ci_protocols.html.
  13. See, https://wiki4print.servpub.net/index.php?title=Docs:01.2_Creating_Users.
  14. See, https://femfester.in-grid.io/.