4562 lines
260 KiB
XML
4562 lines
260 KiB
XML
<chapter>
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<title>Post-digital</title>
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<desc>...</desc>
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<mails>
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<mail>
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<nbr>0.0</nbr>
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<subject>[-empyre-] Post-Digital Listings</subject>
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<from>Florian Cramer</from>
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<to><empyre@lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au></to>
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<date>Sun Feb 16 04:04:42 EST 2014</date>
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<content>It might make sense to add a historical dimension. Cascone introduced
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"post-digital" in the early 2000s to refer to glitch music and low-tech
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digital aesthetics while today it has different connotations. I'd still
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maintain that the term sucks, but the great resonance that it has (even
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here on this list where we're supposedly discussing something else,
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although publishing is perhaps the strongest example of ambiguous states
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between analog and digital) proves its relevance.
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Just a sketch, highly simplified and polemical:
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# digital 1995-2004 | post-digital 1995-2004
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interactive installation art (Jeffrey Shaw) | net.art (jodi)
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virtual reality | mailing lists
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MAX/MSP | glitch
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techno | 8-bit
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multimedia | codework
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true color | ASCII
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Generation Flash | shell scripts
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MIT, ZKM | self-organized spaces
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gaming | modding
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Wired | Neural
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Edge.org | Nettime
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# digital 2005-2014 | post-digital 2005-2014
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blogs | zines
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4chan | Dexter Sinister
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Ubuweb | artist-run bookstores
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Vimeo | handmade film labs
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mp3 | vinyl, cassettes
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mobile device | offline
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Computer Music Journal | The Wire
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Singularity Movement | Object-Oriented Ontology
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Pirate Parties | Occupy movement
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Bitcoin | timebanks
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My own preferred view on post-digitality would be something that bridges a
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couple of the 2005-2014 opposites. That could be a plan for 2015-2024.
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-F
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(Note that this posting doesn't take itself too seriously.)</content>
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</mail>
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<mail>
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<nbr>0.1</nbr>
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<subject>[-empyre-] Post-Digital Listings</subject>
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<from>mez breeze</from>
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<to><empyre@lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au></to>
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<date>Sun Feb 16 08:09:40 EST 2014</date>
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<content>A quick aside...
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Funny how no-one identifies my 1996 term "post-modemism" here, though I can
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see why (given it was a net.art element + avatar label & not a theoretical
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posture): http://www.artelectronicmedia.com/artwork/cutting-spaces +
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http://xchange.re-lab.net/xchange4/xchange4.html. Maybe it's not relevant
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here?
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Chunks,
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Mez</content>
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</mail>
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<mail>
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<nbr>0.2</nbr>
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<subject>[-empyre-] Post-Digital Listings</subject>
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<from>David Berry</from>
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<to><empyre@lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au></to>
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<date>Wed Feb 19 12:26:19 EST 2014</date>
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<content>Hi Michael (and others),
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I think the key with thinking through the cognitive map I presented is not to look for a final reconciliation or overall unity, as I don’t necessarily think that that is even possible within a moment of variable modulations in our current social formations as computational societies – i.e. they are not necessary meant to be “models” as such. Rather the table I offered is meant to provide constellations of moments within a “digital” as opposed to a “post-digital” ecology, as it were, and, of course, a provocation to thought. But they can be thought of as ideal types, if you like, that can provide some conceptual stability for thinking, in an environment of accelerating technical change and dramatic and unpredictable social tensions in response to this. The question then becomes to what extent can the post-digital counter-act the tendencies towards domination of specific modes of thought in relation to instrumentality, particularly manifested in computational devices and systems? For example, the contrast between the moments represented by Web 2.0 / Stacks provides an opportunity for thinking about how new platforms have been built on the older Web 2.0 systems, in some cases replacing them, and in others opening up new possibilities which Tiziana Terranova has pointed to in her intriguing notion of “Red Stacks”, for example (and in contrast to Bruce Sterlings notion of “The Stacks”, e.g. Google, Facebook, etc.). Here I have been thinking of the notion of the digital as representing a form of “weak computation/computationality”, versus the post-digital as “strong computation/computationality”, and what would the consequences be for a society that increasingly finds that the weak computational forms (CDs, DVDs, laptops, desktops, Blogs, RSS, Android Open Source Platform [AOSP], open platforms and systems, etc.) are replaced by stronger, encrypted and/or locked-in versions (FairPlay DRM, Advanced Access Content System [AACS], iPads, Twitter, Push-notification, Google Mobile Services [GMS], Trackers, Sensors, ANTICRISIS GIRL, etc.)?
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These are not just meant to be thought of in a technical register, rather the notion of “weak computation” points towards a “weak computational sociality” and “strong computation” points towards a “strong computation sociality”, highlighting the deeper penetration of computational forms into everyday life within social media and push-notification, for example. Even as the post-digital opens up new possibilities for contestation, e.g. megaleaks, data journalism, hacks, cryptography, dark nets, torrents, the Alexandria Project, etc. and new opportunities for creating, sharing and reading knowledges, the “strong computation” of the post-digital always already suggests the shadow of computation reflected in heightened tracking, surveillance and monitoring of a control society. The post-digital points towards a reconfiguration of publishing away from the (barely) digital techniques of the older book publishing industry, and towards the post-digital singularity of Amazonized publishing with its accelerated instrumentalised forms of softwarized logistics whilst also simultaneously supporting new forms of post-digital craft production of books and journals, and providing globalised distribution. How then can we think about these contradictions in the unfolding of the post-digital and its tendencies towards what I am calling here “strong computation”, and in what way, even counter-intuitively, does the digital (weak computation) offer alternatives, even as marginal critical practice, and the post-digital (strong computation) create new critical practices (e.g. critical engineering), against the increasing interconnection, intermediation and seamless functioning and operation of the post-digital as pure instrumentality, horizon, and/or imaginary.
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See for example:
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http://stunlaw.blogspot.co.uk/2013/10/digital-breadcrumbs.html
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http://www.euronomade.info/?p=1708
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Best
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David</content>
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</mail>
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<mail>
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<nbr>1.0</nbr>
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<subject>[-empyre-] empyre Digest, Vol 111, Issue 5</subject>
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<from>Michael Dieter</from>
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<to><empyre@lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au></to>
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<date>Mon Feb 10 05:44:17 EST 2014</date>
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<content>Something else I want to ask about.
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This is the definition that the Post-Digital Research group settled on
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for their publication:
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"Post-digital, once understood as a critical reflection of "digital"
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aesthetic immaterialism, now describes the messy and paradoxical
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condition of art and media after digital technology revolutions.
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"Post-digital" neither recognizes the distinction between "old" and
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"new" media, nor ideological affirmation of the one or the other. It
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merges "old" and "new", often applying network cultural
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experimentation to analog technologies which it re-investigates and
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re-uses. It tends to focus on the experiential rather than the
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conceptual. It looks for DIY agency outside totalitarian innovation
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ideology, and for networking off big data capitalism. At the same
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time, it already has become commercialized."
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I'm curious about the emphasis here on the experiential, rather than
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the conceptual. Why emphasize one over the other in this way? What
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works or practices did the group have in mind? In a weird way, this
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description actually reminds me of something like relational
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aesthetics.
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--
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Michael Dieter
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Lecturer
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Media Studies
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The University of Amsterdam
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Turfdraagsterpad 9
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1012 XT Amsterdam
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http://home.medewerker.uva.nl/m.j.dieter/</content>
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</mail>
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<mail>
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<nbr>1.1</nbr>
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<subject>[-empyre-] empyre Digest, Vol 111, Issue 5</subject>
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<from>Renate Ferro</from>
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<to><empyre@lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au></to>
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<date>Mon Feb 10 07:55:01 EST 2014</date>
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<content>Michael just a quick question. Do you have a quick link to the
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Post-Digital Research Group?
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and their publications?
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Perhaps you did that it your into and I missed it?</content>
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</mail>
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<mail>
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<nbr>1.2</nbr>
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<subject>[-empyre-] empyre Digest, Vol 111, Issue 5</subject>
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<from>micha cárdenas</from>
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<to><empyre@lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au></to>
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<date>Mon Feb 10 08:21:27 EST 2014</date>
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<content>I was wondering that too, it's here:
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http://post-digital.projects.cavi.dk/</content>
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</mail>
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<mail>
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<nbr>1.3</nbr>
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<subject>[-empyre-] empyre Digest, Vol 111, Issue 5</subject>
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<from>Michael Dieter</from>
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<to><empyre@lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au></to>
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<date>Mon Feb 10 09:16:27 EST 2014</date>
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<content>Renate Ferro <rtf9 at cornell.edu> wrote:
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> ----------empyre- soft-skinned space----------------------
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> Michael just a quick question. Do you have a quick link to the Post-Digital Research Group?
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> and their publications?
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Probably should have linked to it again (it was in a couple of earlier
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posts). Definition is from here: http://www.aprja.net/?page_id=1291 It
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was collectively articulated at the workshop in Aarhus, I believe.
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--
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Michael Dieter
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Lecturer
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Media Studies
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The University of Amsterdam
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Turfdraagsterpad 9
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1012 XT Amsterdam
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http://home.medewerker.uva.nl/m.j.dieter/</content>
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</mail>
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<mail>
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<nbr>1.2</nbr>
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<subject>[-empyre-] empyre Digest, Vol 111, Issue 5</subject>
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<from>micha cárdenas</from>
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<to><empyre@lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au></to>
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<date>Mon Feb 10 08:03:06 EST 2014</date>
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<content>Thanks for an interesting discussion topic this month!
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I agree with your assessment that this limited configuration of the
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post-digital is already divorced from any real politics of difference or
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antagonism and so yes it is similar to relational aesthetics. In contrast,
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my own formulation of the post digital, which I presented at the
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Transmediale phd symposium in 2012 is centered in queer and trans women of
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color's political and aesthetic practices. The horizon for the post-digital
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isn't hipsters, reddit and google, as in Florian Cramer's essay "What is
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post-digital?", it is a reconsideration of thought and communication
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outside of the bounds of western conceptions of knowledge and rationality.
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You can read an essay version of what I presented at the #BWPWAP
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transmediale symposium here, where I list a few examples of aesthetic works
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that may be understood as post-digital:
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http://median.newmediacaucus.org/caa-conference-edition-2013/local-autonomy-networks-post-digital-networks-post-corporate-communications/
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(a short version is in the 2013 edition of APRJA:
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http://www.aprja.net/?page_id=46)
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and a video of me giving this as a keynote at the Dark Side of the Digital
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conference is here:
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http://transreal.org/talks-and-interviews/
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The writers for the post-digital research issue of APRJA articulate
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conceptions of politics that completely fail to address the importance of
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moving on from western systems of knowledge that are embodied in the
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digital, which is unsurprising considering their own apparent subject
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positions. For example, in The Archive and the Repertoire, Diana Taylor has
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written extensively on the ways that colonial regimes insisted on writing
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as the only legitimate form of knowledge as a way to disempower colonized
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subjects, and digital systems of storage reproduce that hierarchy by
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eschewing embodied and emotional knowledge that is not reproducible through
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digital media.
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thank you,
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micha</content>
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</mail>
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<mail>
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<nbr>1.3</nbr>
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<subject>[-empyre-] empyre Digest, Vol 111, Issue 5</subject>
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<from>Florian Cramer</from>
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<to><empyre@lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au></to>
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<date>Mon Feb 10 08:49:29 EST 2014</date>
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<content>Micha,
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I'm taking great issue with this summary of my text. It is greatly
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distorted. If you had read it carefully, you would have seen that it
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actually refers to postcolonialism.
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Btw., your categorical split between "digital" and "embodied" knowledge is
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as Cartesian and Western as I can get. What's even worse, by attributing
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the latter to non-Western culture, it's producing a highly stereotypical
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image of Non-Western cultures and systems of knowledge. I recommend to read
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up, among others, on Ron Eglash's ethnomathematics (or any history of
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mathematics, for that matter).
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Florian</content>
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</mail>
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<mail>
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<nbr>1.4</nbr>
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<subject>[-empyre-] empyre Digest, Vol 111, Issue 5</subject>
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<from>micha cárdenas</from>
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<to><empyre@lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au></to>
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<date>Mon Feb 10 10:35:10 EST 2014</date>
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<content>Hi Florian, thanks for your reply.
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In your essay "What is Post-Digital", I did see your discussion of the
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postcolonial, which seems to be a very short part of your essay which
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doesn't discuss any of the gendered, racialized violences of colonialism.
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Your discussion of the postcolonial is:
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"Postcolonialism does not mean the end of colonialism akin to Hegel's and
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Fukuyama's "end of history", but quite on the contrary its transformation
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into less clearly visible power structures that are still in place, have
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left their mark on languages and cultures, and most importantly still
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govern geopolitics and global production chains. In this sense, the
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post-digital condition is the post-apocalyptic condition after the
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computerization and global digital networking of communication, technical
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infrastructures, markets and geopolitics."
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and you conclude the essay with:
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"If post-digital cultures are made up of, metaphorically speaking,
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postcolonial practices in a communications world taken over by the
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military-industrial complex of only a handful of global players, then it
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can most simply be described as mental opposition to phenomena like Ray
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Kurzweil's and Google's Singularity University, the Quantified Self
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movement, sensor-controlled "Smart Cities" and similar dystopian techno
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utopias.
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Nevertheless, Silicon Valley utopias and post-digital subcultures (whether
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in Detroit, Rotterdam or elsewhere) have more in common than it might seem.
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Both are driven by fictions of
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agency.8<http://post-digital.projects.cavi.dk/?p=599#fn8>
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There's a fiction of agency over one's body in the 'digital' Quantified
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Self movement, a fiction of the self-made in the 'post-digital' DIY and
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Maker movements, a fiction of a more intimate working with media in
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'analog' handmade film labs and mimeograph cooperatives. They stand for two
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options of agency, over-identification with systems or skepticism towards
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them. Each of them is, in their own way, symptomatic of system crisis. It
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is not a crisis of one or the other system but a crisis of the very
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paradigm of "system" and its legacy from cybernetics. It's a legacy which
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(starting with their mere names) neither "digital", nor "post-digital"
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succeed to leave behind."
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I still hold that your configuration does not address the gendered and
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racialized forms of difference that underlie the logic of colonialism and
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which find their expression in western conceptions such as individuality
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and objectivity that lead to boolean logic and digital computing. Your
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essay seems to eschew any political possibility for the post-digital in
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your concluding sentence. If I'm misreading it, I would appreciate your
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clarification.
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I'm not generalizing about non-western cultures, my apologies if my post
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sounded like that. I mentioned Diana Taylor's book the Archive and the
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Repertoire as one example, where she specifically discusses the Spanish
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conquest of the Aztecs, Mayas and Incas. Let me cite her more thoroughly to
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elaborate more on what I meant and not imply any simple separation that
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might be described as cartesian:
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"Although the Aztecs, Mayas and Incas practiced writing before the
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Conquest- either in pictogram form, heiroglyphs, or knotting systems- it
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never replaced the performed utterance... What changed with the Conquest
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was not that writing displaced embodied practice (we need only remember
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that the friars brought their own embodied practices) but the degree of
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legitimization of writing over other epistemic and mnemonic systems.
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Writing now assured that Power, with a capital P, as Rama puts it, could be
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developed and enforced without the input of the great majority of the
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population, the indigenous and marginal populations of the colonial period
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without access to systematic writing."
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I haven't read Eglash's work, thanks for recommending it, I'll check it
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out.
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cheers,
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micha</content>
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</mail>
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<mail>
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<nbr>1.5</nbr>
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<subject>[-empyre-] empyre Digest, Vol 111, Issue 5</subject>
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<from>micha cárdenas</from>
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<to><empyre@lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au></to>
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<date>Mon Feb 10 10:41:17 EST 2014</date>
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<content>I also want to add that, yes, of course my reply was cartesian, using a
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digital system, addressing you as an individual and using the word I to
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refer to myself. I see decolonization as a long project and its possible
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implications for our thinking as a far away horizon, yet one still worth
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working towards.
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thanks all,
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micha</content>
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</mail>
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<mail>
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<nbr>1.6</nbr>
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<subject>[-empyre-] empyre Digest, Vol 111, Issue 5</subject>
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<from>Florian Cramer</from>
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<to><empyre@lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au></to>
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<date>Tue Feb 11 03:54:11 EST 2014</date>
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<content>Hello Micha, hello list,
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> I still hold that your configuration does not address the gendered and
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racialized forms of difference that underlie the logic of colonialism and
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which find their expression in western conceptions such as individuality
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and objectivity that lead to boolean logic and digital computing.
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In my view, it's not that simple. Boolean logic - which one can equally
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find in the reasoning of Chinese 4th century BC philosopher like Hui Shi
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(Hui Tzu) - and digital computation (literally=computing with your fingers)
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are by far not only Western conceptions. I agree with you that Western
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culture and science have pursued them to their extreme. But as you point
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out yourself, dualisms of, on the one hand
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Western/individualist/objectivist/boolean/digital vs.
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Non-Western/non-individualist/subjectivist/non-boolean/non-digital are in
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themselves romantic (and colonialist) Western stereotypes. On top of that,
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they're historically wrong. For example, the modern concept of the number
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zero, without which there would be no binary computing, was invented in 9th
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century AD India, with precursors in Egypt and Mesopotamia but not in
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Europe. Identifying digitality with Western colonization would
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unintentionally foster a Eurocentric view of cultural, scientific and
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technological history.
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> Your essay seems to eschew any political possibility for the post-digital
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in your concluding sentence. If I'm misreading it, I would appreciate your
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clarification.
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You mean the sentence 'It is not a crisis of one or the other system but a
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crisis of the very paradigm of "system" and its legacy from cybernetics.
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It's a legacy which (starting with their mere names) neither "digital", nor
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"post-digital" succeed to leave behind.'?
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I don't quite get how you read this as 'eschewing any political
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possibility'. All I am trying to say is that neither "digital" nor
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"post-digital" are the right concepts for criticizing and leaving behind
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cybernetic systems thinking, or in your words, boolean logic and digital
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computing. After all, if you call something "post-digital", you don't leave
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the digital paradigm behind but still keep it (dialectically) in place.
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> "Although the Aztecs, Mayas and Incas practiced writing before the
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Conquest- either in pictogram form, heiroglyphs, or knotting systems- it
|
|
never replaced the performed utterance... What changed with the Conquest
|
|
was not that writing displaced embodied practice (we need only remember
|
|
that the friars brought their own embodied practices) but the degree of
|
|
legitimization of writing over other epistemic and mnemonic systems.
|
|
Writing now assured that Power, with a capital P, as Rama puts it, could be
|
|
developed and enforced without the input of the great majority of the
|
|
population, the indigenous and marginal populations of the colonial period
|
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without access to systematic writing."
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What is being described here is a pre-colonial and pre-digital vs. a
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colonial political system organized through alphanumeric (and hence
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digital) writing. The next question would be: Which post-colonial practices
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are also post-digital?
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Apart from that, one should not brush over the complex ambivalence even of
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formal systems, being tools of both control and of freedom to quote Wendy
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Chun. There are similar ideas in postcolonial theories like that of Homi
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|
Bhabha (for whom colonialism/postcolonialism ends up as a two-way process).
|
|
Regarding the gendered form of difference, to use your words, inscribed
|
|
into digitality and computing, I think that it might be historically
|
|
interesting to reread Sadie Plant's "Zeros and Ones"; a work whose
|
|
cyberfeminist optimism regarding digital networking has become perfectly
|
|
counter-intuitive in the age of Google, Facebook and the NSA, but at least
|
|
documents a different reading of the very technology that we now prefix
|
|
with "post-".
|
|
|
|
> I haven't read Eglash's work, thanks for recommending it, I'll check it
|
|
out.
|
|
|
|
One of his books has just been made available on Monoskop:
|
|
http://monoskop.org/log/?p=10597
|
|
|
|
By the way, it's rather unfortunate that the papers of the "research group"
|
|
are linked and cited here as if they were anything canonical. As a matter
|
|
of fact, these are preliminary, unedited papers/drafts written by a highly
|
|
diverse workshop gathering of artists, media studies people and arts/media
|
|
Ph.D. candidates at Aarhus Kunsthal. The definition of "post-digital" that
|
|
Michael cited is partly tongue-in-cheek - it was based on a voluntary data
|
|
mining of our drafts where we determined the most commonly used words and
|
|
built a definition from them. We ultimately rewrote the drafts for
|
|
transmediale.14's newspaper based on the same principles, with a high score
|
|
for those texts that managed to squeeze in as much of that vocabulary as
|
|
possible. That playful context becomes a bit clearer in the newspaper. It's
|
|
unfortunate that these texts are online without referencing the context.
|
|
Which ultimately says a lot about embodied and disembodied writing, no
|
|
matter whether it's digital or not.
|
|
|
|
-F</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>1.7</nbr>
|
|
<subject>[-empyre-] empyre Digest, Vol 111, Issue 5</subject>
|
|
<from>Robert Jackson</from>
|
|
<to><empyre@lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au></to>
|
|
<date>Tue Feb 11 05:10:13 EST 2014</date>
|
|
<content>Micha, everyone...
|
|
|
|
As someone who worked as part of the Aarhus post-digital writing group, I'd
|
|
like to also address your remarks.
|
|
|
|
Point 1:
|
|
|
|
<The writers for the post-digital research issue of APRJA articulate
|
|
conceptions of politics that completely fail to address the importance of
|
|
moving on from western systems of knowledge that are embodied in the
|
|
digital, which is unsurprising considering their own apparent subject
|
|
positions.>
|
|
|
|
This is profoundly untrue and thunderously misguided. Had you attended the
|
|
workshop in October, you would have found that we addressed western
|
|
conceptions of rationality and knowledge at some length and with great
|
|
care. Echoing Florian's comments, it's not as if we all thought the terms
|
|
'post-digital' or even 'the digital' were anything but messy and
|
|
politically ambiguous: the context of that process appears to have been
|
|
reinterpreted as some sort of pro-Western manifesto, rather than a
|
|
researcher workshop or a tongue-in-cheek operationalisation of digital
|
|
principles/defintions.
|
|
|
|
In any case, our contributions - both online and for transmediale - remain
|
|
unpublished, so if you want to aim your critique, aim it at the finished
|
|
APRJA journal when it arrives: not at a moving target.
|
|
Point 2:
|
|
|
|
As per your rejoinder to Florian's point: <I still hold that your
|
|
configuration does not address the gendered and racialized forms of
|
|
difference that underlie the logic of colonialism and which find their
|
|
expression in western conceptions such as individuality and objectivity
|
|
that lead to boolean logic and digital computing. Your essay seems to
|
|
eschew any political possibility for the post-digital in your concluding
|
|
sentence.>
|
|
|
|
Really? In addition to Florian's comments on cyberfeminist alternatives and
|
|
western/non-western conceptions of number, I'd love to know how western
|
|
conceptions solely lead to boolean logic and digital computing?
|
|
Computational reason / computationality and solutionism most certainly, but
|
|
the actual infrastructure of formal systems? If you're going down that
|
|
route, I'd argue that your own position starts to eschew political
|
|
alternatives on a different level, mainly as it blurs the ontological
|
|
affordance of computation (which is wholly different from digital
|
|
transmission btw) with epistemological principles.
|
|
|
|
Seems rather anthropocentric to suggest that material infrastructures are
|
|
correlated to reproduce similar Western principles, because they are just
|
|
an "expression" of them. Computational infrastructures are far messier than
|
|
that sort of simple divide. How are we to provide alternatives within such
|
|
infrastructures if they are *just* an expression of western concepts? Seems
|
|
bizarre to me. Last time I checked, both NSA and NIST's mathematical
|
|
standards of pesudo-random number elliptical curve encryption didn't
|
|
facilitate mass surveillance because we collectively failed to "think
|
|
differently." It is impossible to address systemic problems with subjective
|
|
solutions (which, actually, isn't a bad method of critiquing post-digital
|
|
reflection).
|
|
|
|
Also on your account, the output from trans-gender gaming communities, such
|
|
as Anna Anthropy's Dys4ia, Merritt Kopa's Lim or the research of Samantha
|
|
Allen (amongst many others), which rely on such processes, would contradict
|
|
such an assertion: as would other examples such as the extensive
|
|
infrastructure of mobile banking in parts of Africa: hardly what I'd call
|
|
westernised.
|
|
|
|
Cheers
|
|
Rob</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>1.8</nbr>
|
|
<subject>[-empyre-] empyre Digest, Vol 111, Issue 5</subject>
|
|
<from>Alan Sondheim</from>
|
|
<to><empyre@lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au></to>
|
|
<date>Tue Feb 11 05:15:35 EST 2014</date>
|
|
<content>Florian Cramer wrote:
|
|
|
|
In my view, it's not that simple. Boolean logic - which one can equally
|
|
find in the reasoning of Chinese 4th century BC philosopher like Hui Shi
|
|
(Hui Tzu) - and digital computation (literally=computing with your
|
|
fingers) are by far not only Western conceptions.
|
|
--- I've studied him a lot and I don't see his work as Boolean at all; if
|
|
anything, it's closer to something like quantum logic. The I Ching on the
|
|
other hand is Boolean.
|
|
|
|
--- I agree with you re: post-digital; I'd say embedded digital, if
|
|
anything, and that applies to a fairly small enclaved ecology of users/
|
|
participants.
|
|
|
|
- Alan</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>1.9</nbr>
|
|
<subject>[-empyre-] empyre Digest, Vol 111, Issue 5</subject>
|
|
<from>micha cárdenas</from>
|
|
<to><empyre@lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au></to>
|
|
<date>Tue Feb 11 10:10:37 EST 2014</date>
|
|
<content>thanks for your detailed reply florian, so much to consider there!
|
|
|
|
also, yes, i am familiar with the environment in the transmediale seminar
|
|
since i was there, which is, like you said, informal and exploratory. but
|
|
good to share that with everyone else...</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>1.10</nbr>
|
|
<subject>[-empyre-] empyre Digest, Vol 111, Issue 5</subject>
|
|
<from>Michael Dieter</from>
|
|
<to><empyre@lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au></to>
|
|
<date>Wed Feb 12 00:19:44 EST 2014</date>
|
|
<content>>
|
|
> By the way, it's rather unfortunate that the papers of the "research group" are linked and cited here as if they were anything canonical. As a matter of fact, these are preliminary, unedited papers/drafts written by a highly diverse workshop gathering of artists, media studies people and arts/media Ph.D. candidates at Aarhus Kunsthal. The definition of "post-digital" that Michael cited is partly tongue-in-cheek - it was based on a voluntary data mining of our drafts where we determined the most commonly used words and built a definition from them. We ultimately rewrote the drafts for transmediale.14's newspaper based on the same principles, with a high score for those texts that managed to squeeze in as much of that vocabulary as possible. That playful context becomes a bit clearer in the newspaper. It's unfortunate that these texts are online without referencing the context. Which ultimately says a lot about embodied and disembodied writing, no matter whether it's digital or not.
|
|
>
|
|
> -F
|
|
|
|
Sure, it was noted in my link that the papers were drafts, but surely
|
|
they're worth reading anyway for people who don't have the final
|
|
version? Again I hope that the PDF is up soon, I managed to get hold
|
|
of the newspaper version and it's really a great publication. But
|
|
thanks for adding some much needed context, the tongue-in-cheek aspect
|
|
is certainly worth noting, especially since you also appear to have
|
|
'won' the publication by clocking in the highest score Florian!
|
|
|
|
And indeed, despite this ironic approach, why think in terms of
|
|
canonicity? Post-digital seems to be more like a topic. That was
|
|
immediately apparent from the diversity of perspectives at TM; it was
|
|
unfortunate people didn't have more time on that panel in that
|
|
respect. Nevertheless, as something that relates to how Alessandro's
|
|
research into publishing has developed, but that precisely allows for
|
|
diverse points of engagement, I thought it might be worth drawing some
|
|
attention to, if only to allow for further discussion and points of
|
|
view. Ultimately, I think one obvious strength of the term is that it
|
|
appears strongly led by an exploratory/experimental sensibility,
|
|
rather than ideal concepts or theories of best practice.
|
|
|
|
--
|
|
Michael Dieter
|
|
Lecturer
|
|
Media Studies
|
|
The University of Amsterdam
|
|
Turfdraagsterpad 9
|
|
1012 XT Amsterdam
|
|
http://home.medewerker.uva.nl/m.j.dieter/</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>1.11</nbr>
|
|
<subject>[-empyre-] empyre Digest, Vol 111, Issue 5</subject>
|
|
<from>Alessandro Ludovico</from>
|
|
<to><empyre@lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au></to>
|
|
<date>Tue Feb 11 07:17:10 EST 2014</date>
|
|
<content>Dear all,
|
|
|
|
It's also probably timely to report that Kim Cascone posted a few hours ago on his Facebook account that he's finished with a new essay on "Transcendigitalism" (he wrote that it'll be officially announced once the journal will officially be published).
|
|
|
|
a.</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>2.0</nbr>
|
|
<subject>[-empyre-] February Introduction - HYBRID BOOKWORK: Experimental eBooks, Post-Digital Publishing</subject>
|
|
<from>Michael Dieter</from>
|
|
<to><empyre@lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au></to>
|
|
<date>Tue Feb 4 06:25:31 EST 2014</date>
|
|
<content>Hi all -empyreans-
|
|
|
|
I'd like to introduce the theme of Hybrid Bookwork for this month, but
|
|
first, I need to thank the -empyre- team - Renate Ferro, Tim Murray, Simon
|
|
Biggs and Patrick Lichty - for supporting me in putting this together. It's
|
|
really a great opportunity to develop some ideas on a topic I've become
|
|
quite interested in and excited about, and I hope that it's also a useful
|
|
and thought-provoking discussion for all subscribers.
|
|
|
|
Second, and crucially, thanks to all our guests who signed up for February,
|
|
and have volunteered their time and expertise! It often seems as if there's
|
|
nothing but increased demands on our time and attention these days, so this
|
|
sort of generosity and commitment is I think really commendable.
|
|
|
|
So with that said, here's the description of this month's theme and a list
|
|
of all involved...
|
|
|
|
HYBRID BOOKWORK
|
|
Experimental eBooks, Post-Digital Publishing
|
|
|
|
False starts and speculative projects have typically characterized attempts
|
|
to disrupt and innovate the printed book through new media; however, the
|
|
recent popularization of tablets and e-readers, emergence of commercial
|
|
platforms for production, distribution and sharing of e-books, and ongoing
|
|
digitalization of printed archives suggests an important threshold of
|
|
sorts. Here, a distinct computationality has taken hold following the
|
|
aggregative and indexical aspects of file formats, data-mining supported by
|
|
addressability and mark-up, tethered feedback of devices, and the flexible
|
|
affordances of reflowable layouts. While digital technology has been
|
|
integrated into print publishing processes for several decades, such
|
|
developments suggest a profound material reformation of how books are
|
|
produced, distributed, experienced and mobilized as resources. It should be
|
|
no surprise that issues and controversies around intellectual property,
|
|
privacy, creativity, sustainability, reading (distraction/attention),
|
|
authorship and the fundamental status of the book as an epistemological
|
|
object regularly erupt and unfold within these settings.
|
|
|
|
In relation to the significant uncertainties of publishing, artists,
|
|
authors and designers have begun exploring new possibilities and
|
|
re-configurations of contemporary bookwork. Critical and exploratory
|
|
projects have addressed questions of access, the quantification of content,
|
|
creativity and epistemological questions at the intersections of language
|
|
and machine processing, at times drawing from histories of avant-garde
|
|
practice, artist's books, concrete poetry, spam, web detritus and
|
|
subcultural production. Likewise, engagements with print have become
|
|
increasingly experimental by reflexively harnessing the materialities of
|
|
paper, while translating and twisting software-based techniques into
|
|
challenging neo-analog compositions. Described as 'post-digital' or the
|
|
'aesthetic of bookishness', such dynamics intersect and crossover between
|
|
media, and speak to the complex hybridity of the book today.
|
|
|
|
Over the month of February, the -empyre- list will discuss economic,
|
|
epistemological and aesthetic stakes that characterize this moment,
|
|
inviting several guests to reflect on and respond to the topic of hybrid
|
|
bookwork and the potential new directions of contemporary publishing.
|
|
|
|
Featuring: David M. Berry, Mercedes Bunz, Florian Cramer, Angela Genusa,
|
|
Lukas Jost Gross, Alessandro Ludovico, Silvio Lorusso, Søren Pold, Domenico
|
|
Quaranta, Rita Raley and Benjamin Shaykin.
|
|
|
|
Moderated by Michael Dieter.
|
|
|
|
----------------------
|
|
|
|
Many thanks again, I'll post an introduction to our first contributors
|
|
tomorrow with some background information about them, along with some
|
|
starting points for the first week.
|
|
|
|
Until then,
|
|
--
|
|
M.</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>3.0</nbr>
|
|
<subject>[-empyre-] Week One - Between Print and Pixels: Computationality, Post-Digital, Hybrid</subject>
|
|
<from>Michael Dieter</from>
|
|
<to><empyre@lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au></to>
|
|
<date>Wed Feb 5 01:01:49 EST 2014</date>
|
|
<content>Hi all,
|
|
|
|
I would like to introduce the first three guests for the February topic of
|
|
Hybrid Bookwork: Alessandro Ludovico, David Berry and Mercedes Bunz. I'll
|
|
called the theme for this session, 'Between Paper and Pixels: The Book
|
|
After New Media', to outline some of the broad transformations associated
|
|
with publishing today.
|
|
|
|
There are a number of themes that are perhaps taking some note of in order
|
|
to provide some context for the current dynamic and shifting contexts for
|
|
the innovative practices that we see emerging around publishing (and other
|
|
context in cultural production).
|
|
|
|
Bios are as follows:
|
|
|
|
Alessandro Ludovico is an artist, media critic, and chief editor of Neural
|
|
magazine since 1993 (http://neural.it). He has published and edited several
|
|
books, including his latest 'Post-Digital Print: The Mutation of Publishing
|
|
Since 1894' (Onomatopee 2012). He is one of the founders of Mag.Net
|
|
(Electronic Cultural Publishers organisation), for which co-edited three
|
|
Mag.net Readers, and also served as an advisor for the Documenta 12′s
|
|
Magazine Project. He's currently curating the virtual exhibition "Erreur
|
|
d'Impression" in the virtual space of Jeu de Paume in Paris. He is one of
|
|
the authors of the Hacking Monopolism trilogy of artworks (Google Will Eat
|
|
Itself, Amazon Noir, Face to Facebook). He's Adjunct Professor at OCAD
|
|
University in Toronto, and teaches at the Academy of Art in Carrara and
|
|
NABA in Milan, and is currently completing a PhD at Anglia Ruskin
|
|
University in Cambridge (UK).
|
|
|
|
David M. Berry is a reader in digital media in the school of media, film
|
|
and music at the University of Sussex. His research interests focus on
|
|
media/medium theory, software studies, digital humanities, and technology.
|
|
He is particularly interested in the methodological and theoretical
|
|
challenges of digital media and has strong research interests in the
|
|
philosophy of software and critical theory. His latest book is 'Critical
|
|
Theory and the Digital' (Bloomsbury 2014), and he blogs over at
|
|
http://stunlaw.blogspot.nl/
|
|
|
|
Mercedes Bunz is a lecturer in Media Studies at Leuphana University,
|
|
Germany, where she is also Director of the Hybrid Publishing Lab, exploring
|
|
academic publishing in the digital age. She writes on digital media,
|
|
journalism and the philosophy of technology, and she has been the
|
|
technology reporter of The Guardian. Her latest publication is The Silent
|
|
Revolution: How Digitalization Transforms Knowledge, Work, Journalism and
|
|
Politics Without Making Too Much Noise (Palgrave Pivot 2013). She blogs
|
|
regularly at http://www.mercedes-bunz.de/ and http://hybridpublishing.org/
|
|
I've been lucky enough to work with each one of them at certain points, and
|
|
I'm thrilled to have them contributing this week! Some background of why
|
|
I've asked them to contribute...
|
|
|
|
I want to invite Alessandro to start off the discussion. Many of you are no
|
|
doubt familiar with his work, but if not, I want to draw attention to his
|
|
recent book, 'Post-Digital Print: The Mutation of Publishing Since 1894'
|
|
(Onomatopee 2012):
|
|
http://monoskop.org/images/a/a6/Ludovico,_Alessandro_-_Post-Digital_Print._The_Mutation_of_Publishing_Since_1894.pdf(The
|
|
fact that text is legit available through the Monoskop Log is perhaps
|
|
noteworthy itself).
|
|
|
|
I would describe his book as a history of experimental aesthetic practices
|
|
articulated through new publishing technologies, and one that speaks in
|
|
particular to the concept of the post-digital. More generally, it's a
|
|
tremendous document of a vast array of projects, artworks, print objects,
|
|
books, pamphlets and magazines that is characteristic of print culture in
|
|
late modernity and beyond.
|
|
|
|
The post-digital, in particular, is a term that I'm inviting Alessandro to
|
|
discuss, along with related ideas that have emerged through his research.
|
|
And it's particularly relevant off the back of Transmediale Festival last
|
|
week given the Post-Digital Research panel and newspaper publication. The
|
|
latter is a series of short texts that have been collaboratively
|
|
peer-reviewed through a workshop on the topic held at Aarhus University
|
|
last year: https://tm-resource.projects.cavi.au.dk/?page_id=1291Unfortunately,
|
|
a PDF is not available yet, but Alessandro I'm sure will
|
|
give an impression of the contents of this publication.
|
|
|
|
David, meanwhile, has written on a wide range of topics and subjects from
|
|
f/oss, the philosophy of software, digital humanities, new aesthetic and,
|
|
quite recently, the post-digital. I've invited him to respond and present
|
|
his current research, and extend the discussion into some reflections on
|
|
epistemological implications and political economy concerns. David and I
|
|
have also been involved with booksprint events with Adam Hyde, which I
|
|
haven't mentioned in the outline for this discussion, but certainly seem
|
|
relevant to the discussion!
|
|
|
|
Finally, I've asked Mercedes to contribute with her extensive experience as
|
|
a journalist and academic covering a range of topics in digital culture,
|
|
including a recent in depth study of algorithms and knowledge production.
|
|
She leads the Hybrid Publishing team of which (full disclosure) I am also
|
|
member at Leuphana University Lüneburg. I was hoping that she might broaden
|
|
the discussion with some reflections on Alessandro and David's posts, and
|
|
perhaps provide some further consideration based on the work currently
|
|
being done in Leuphana.
|
|
|
|
And of course, I invite all subscribers to chime in, respond and post to
|
|
the list over the coming days!
|
|
--
|
|
Michael Dieter
|
|
Lecturer
|
|
Media Studies
|
|
The University of Amsterdam
|
|
Turfdraagsterpad 9
|
|
1012 XT Amsterdam
|
|
http://home.medewerker.uva.nl/m.j.dieter/</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>3.1</nbr>
|
|
<subject>[-empyre-] Week One - Between Print and Pixels: Computationality, Post-Digital, Hybrid</subject>
|
|
<from>Alessandro Ludovico</from>
|
|
<to><empyre@lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au></to>
|
|
<date>Thu Feb 6 20:42:13 EST 2014</date>
|
|
<content>Thanks Michael for the nice introduction.
|
|
|
|
It seems that Post-Digital aspires to become a 'buzzword' lately, but its meaning seems to be not completely acknowledged.
|
|
Many refer to the definition of Kim Cascone in his famous article "The Aesthetics of Failure: "Post-digital" Tendencies in Contemporary Computer Music", and Wikipedia collects also a fair good amount of other (close) definitions. But many of them are dated a few years ago and still attached to the concept of the digital disappearing in everyday practice, being in a way 'metabolised'.
|
|
|
|
My personal definition (given within the Post-digital Research conference and PhD Workshop in Aarhus, in October 2013) is that "Post-digital is the space left by the (only apparent) absence of digital."
|
|
The "space" here is meant as a negotiable abstract space, previously filled by the digital in its evident forms and interfaces, and now perceptually disappeared, although still there, present, active and eventually engaging us in a new relationship also with non-digital reality.
|
|
In its application to the complex and ever mutating relationship between traditional and digital (or offline and online, if you want) publishing, the concept of the 'hybrid' publications seems to be crucial then.
|
|
I tried to define 'hybrid' as a a publication where it's almost impossible to separate or discern the physical from the digital processes behind, as it'd be the inextricable result of computed processes in a recognisable publishing form (eventually upgradeable or simply changing over time).
|
|
There are quite a few example of early steps towards the hybrid: Martin Fuchs and Peter Bichsel’s book “Written Images", "American Psycho" by Mimi Cabell & Jason Huff, Les Liens Invisibles' "Unhappening, not here not now", or the recent "The Death of the Authors, 1941 edition" by Constant (An Mertens, Femke Snelting).
|
|
Still it seems that we're not there yet, as we'd need more elaborated software instruments transcending the generative paradigm, or a simple inclusion/exclusion logic.
|
|
|
|
In this sense the Post-Digital Research newspaper publication represents another attempt, conjugating the reflection around various post-digital approaches with its final printed from, in quite a few textual and graphical interesting processes (used in experimental literature or just borrowed from online free tools) involving the writing form, the expression of the different concepts, and the final visual rendering of all of that.
|
|
|
|
But the hybrid would epitomises the metabolisation of digital in a way that it doesn't simply 'disappear' (or better, we are not noticing it anymore), finally becoming one of our daily natural nutrients, with an active role that breaks all the boundaries (being relegated in a device, or to a specific cultural environment that we associate with it).
|
|
|
|
This is the starting point of an hypothesis I formulated in the last Transmediale panel, which can maybe sound a bit blatant:
|
|
what if digital has been mistaken for a medium but actually is an agent that has transformed existing media? I've started to investigate other traditional media (audio and video, for example) and how their core form is formally still coherent with their analogue one, but substantially transformed by its current digital nature.
|
|
|
|
The hybrid in publishing, in this sense, is actually embodying this passage very well, as it points us back to traditional media and their possible active and engaging relationship with the digital.
|
|
To add more resources to the list:
|
|
|
|
there has been a special issue of Neural called "Neural #44, Post-Digital Print (Postscript)" (a friend nicknamed it the "shameless issue") which was meant as an addendum to the book with more content related to the topic.
|
|
http://neural.it/issues/neural-44-post-digital-print-postscript/
|
|
|
|
The Post-Digital Print blog is still in beta, but it'll host within this week also the pdf of all the three Mag.net Readers, free to download:
|
|
http://postdigitalprint.org
|
|
It's meant to be a complement to the terrific resource that Silvio Lorusso is making with its Post-Digital Publishing Archive:
|
|
http://p-dpa.net
|
|
|
|
I'm also curating (for another month and half, with a final special event in Paris on March 11th) "Erreur d'Impression, Publier à l’Ère du Numérique" a virtual exhibition at Jeu de Paume: http://espacevirtuel.jeudepaume.org/erreur-dimpression-1674/
|
|
|
|
Indeed, Post-Digital Print, the book, has also a physical form (although we successfully experimented with its digital form just before that):
|
|
http://www.onomatopee.net/project.php?progID=c3149ad5e7c0b4bb6e80e4c770ee528c
|
|
|
|
Although all more or less connected to my personal work, I hope that they can help the discussion.
|
|
> I want to invite Alessandro to start off the discussion. Many of you are no doubt familiar with his work, but if not, I want to draw attention to his recent book, 'Post-Digital Print: The Mutation of Publishing Since 1894' (Onomatopee 2012): http://monoskop.org/images/a/a6/Ludovico,_Alessandro_-_Post-Digital_Print._The_Mutation_of_Publishing_Since_1894.pdf (The fact that text is legit available through the Monoskop Log is perhaps noteworthy itself).
|
|
>
|
|
> I would describe his book as a history of experimental aesthetic practices articulated through new publishing technologies, and one that speaks in particular to the concept of the post-digital. More generally, it's a tremendous document of a vast array of projects, artworks, print objects, books, pamphlets and magazines that is characteristic of print culture in late modernity and beyond.
|
|
>
|
|
> The post-digital, in particular, is a term that I'm inviting Alessandro to discuss, along with related ideas that have emerged through his research. And it's particularly relevant off the back of Transmediale Festival last week given the Post-Digital Research panel and newspaper publication. The latter is a series of short texts that have been collaboratively peer-reviewed through a workshop on the topic held at Aarhus University last year: https://tm-resource.projects.cavi.au.dk/?page_id=1291 Unfortunately, a PDF is not available yet, but Alessandro I'm sure will give an impression of the contents of this publication.</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>3.2</nbr>
|
|
<subject>[-empyre-] Week One - Between Print and Pixels: Computationality, Post-Digital, Hybrid</subject>
|
|
<from>adamhyde</from>
|
|
<to><empyre@lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au></to>
|
|
<date>Sun Feb 9 07:03:42 EST 2014</date>
|
|
<content>hi
|
|
|
|
I was hoping the conversation would evolve but it seems a little quiet
|
|
so many apologies if I am stepping in and breaking protocol a little but
|
|
I enjoyed Alessandros opening points very much and wanted to ask for his
|
|
further comment on one point.
|
|
|
|
"what if digital has been mistaken for a medium but actually is an agent
|
|
that has transformed existing media? I've started to investigate other
|
|
traditional media (audio and video, for example) and how their core form
|
|
is formally still coherent with their analogue one, but substantially
|
|
transformed by its current digital nature."
|
|
|
|
I think this is an interesting issue and I was curious if this has been
|
|
the behaviour of media from the beginning? A cone transformed the voice,
|
|
radio transformed the cone, the codex transformed the scroll etc. I
|
|
bring this up because the 'core form' you refer to is perhaps already a
|
|
multi-hybridised outcome of decades/centuries of transformation. Perhaps
|
|
one of the core roles of any new medium, analog or digital, is to
|
|
transform the old. Any thoughts to that? If it were true then 'digital'
|
|
could be *both* a medium and a transformative agent.
|
|
|
|
adam</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>3.3</nbr>
|
|
<subject>[-empyre-] Week One - Between Print and Pixels: Computationality, Post-Digital, Hybrid</subject>
|
|
<from>Michael Dieter</from>
|
|
<to><empyre@lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au></to>
|
|
<date>Mon Feb 10 03:01:34 EST 2014</date>
|
|
<content>Hi all,
|
|
|
|
Apologies to subscribers for the slow start to this discussion.
|
|
Unfortunately, David Berry has taken ill the past couple of days, so
|
|
will not able to post to the list until later in the month. I will
|
|
keep you informed, but I am glad in the meantime that Adam Hyde jumped
|
|
in and raised some questions for Alessandro:
|
|
|
|
"> I think this is an interesting issue and I was curious if this has
|
|
been the behaviour of media from the beginning? A cone transformed the
|
|
voice, radio transformed the cone, the codex transformed the scroll
|
|
etc. I bring this up because the 'core form' you refer to is perhaps
|
|
already a multi-hybridised outcome of decades/centuries of
|
|
transformation. Perhaps one of the core roles of any new medium,
|
|
analog or digital, is to transform the old. Any thoughts to that? If
|
|
it were true then 'digital' could be *both* a medium and a
|
|
transformative agent."
|
|
|
|
I'd like to take this a bit further as well, and ask Alessandro and
|
|
Mercedes for some response to the term 'digital' and hybrid in the
|
|
first place. If it might be taken as a medium and transformative
|
|
agent, then what do different definitions mean for the prefix "post"?
|
|
And how then does this actually relate to contemporary artistic and
|
|
experimental practices aligned with the post-digital, or medial
|
|
hybridity?
|
|
|
|
The invisibility or absence of the digital itself for these practices
|
|
is, of course, part of the problem. And as Alessandro notes, this is a
|
|
broader question, since at our present juncture, many aesthetic
|
|
characteristics and principles of 'old media' have seemingly been
|
|
maintained, while a range of compound techniques supported by
|
|
massively distributed and standardized software also appear ascendant;
|
|
yet this is not always explicitly identified or discussed in terms of
|
|
a recognizable and coherent new cultural vernacular.
|
|
|
|
In his writing on the topic of the post-digital, Florian Cramer goes
|
|
to great lengths to argue for some precision in defining the digital
|
|
itself as a term, highlighting the fact that it is often aligned with
|
|
a kind of high-tech kitsch, rather than described as the basic act of
|
|
making discrete. This is a position he already developed in
|
|
'Exe.cut[up]able Statements' and 'Words Made Flesh', where counting,
|
|
separating and sampling comes to define the digital as an act of
|
|
quantification. In this case, the digital is not simply electronic,
|
|
but potentially refers to a wide array of cultural techniques that
|
|
involve making things discrete. In other words, the magnetic
|
|
orientations, electrical impulses or optical arrays of contemporary
|
|
computational technologies is merely one subset of the digital broadly
|
|
understood. Hopefully, Florian can clarify the significance of these
|
|
arguments later on in the month (I hope the summary is alright for
|
|
now).
|
|
|
|
In the meantime, there's another dynamic that is part of our
|
|
contemporary experience of the digital that I want to highlight for
|
|
the sake of discussion, and this involves the implementation of
|
|
discrete measurements for the purpose of expanding surplus value or
|
|
profit. In other words, these are the economic lineages that inform
|
|
the contemporary digital. They exist, for example, in Charles
|
|
Babbage's inspiration from Adam Smith's economic divisions of labor,
|
|
but applied to the mechanization of mathematical tables in the
|
|
development of the Difference Engine and (proposed) Analytic Engine.
|
|
Especially pertinent would be his study of 19th century factories (a
|
|
point of engagement for Marx), 'On the Economy of Machinery and
|
|
Manufacture', and the argument for the digital as the 'division of
|
|
mental labours' whereby certain tedious or monotonous tasks are
|
|
delegated away to labor and machinery at lowered rates of pay, expense
|
|
and care. This approach is echoed in the articulation of corporate
|
|
systems analysis in the late 20th century with the kinds of procedural
|
|
initiatives that Philip Agre insightfully referred to as the capture
|
|
model. Similarly, as Bernard Stiegler might put it, there is a process
|
|
involving the grammatization of labour here, but one in which a
|
|
fixation on increased profit drives the systematic implementation and
|
|
configuration of these digital infrastructures as a disassociated
|
|
milieu.
|
|
|
|
Perhaps these are familiar arguments, but I'm interested then in how
|
|
the digital, understood in this way, can be read in terms of media
|
|
theory and the idea of there being 'post'? Certainly, these procedures
|
|
are present as a primary mode of producing knowledge in the
|
|
development of analogue systems and what Friedrich Kittler called
|
|
technical media. Maybe the situation today involves something like the
|
|
simultaneous expansion and diversification of these rationalization
|
|
techniques in specific ways? That would seem to be argument that Lev
|
|
Manovich makes in 'Software Takes Command.' If 'Language of New Media'
|
|
was based on outlining a formalist account of contemporary
|
|
grammatization expressed through numerical representation, modularity,
|
|
automation, variability and transcoding, then his new work looks to
|
|
how such a language leads itself to far-reaching hybridization through
|
|
the permanent extendibility of software uses and possibilities.
|
|
Software can do this since it functions as an implementation of
|
|
digital as meta-medium; in Alessandro's account, it infects, but does
|
|
not entirely remediate. These ideas are, of course, central to
|
|
theories of computation proposed by the Church-Turing hypothesis or by
|
|
Van Neumann, but Manovich argues Alan Kay should also be taken
|
|
seriously for inaugurating a 'democratization' of this digital
|
|
approach to cultural software development. This sets off a continual
|
|
upheaval in the cultural mode of development associated with cultural
|
|
software today, so that older media formats remain recognizable, yet
|
|
also become mixed together into a new expressiveness. The challenge
|
|
for Manovich's highly modernist project is to locate cultural
|
|
techniques of the present and future within this massively moving
|
|
revolutionary infrastructure.
|
|
|
|
There's also this other interesting aspect of Manovich's argument
|
|
found in the idea of performance; it's an idea that's been kicking
|
|
around for a while in his work - for instance, in the 'delightful
|
|
narrative' of Mario falling down a hill (when this actually happens in
|
|
a Nintendo game is a bit lost on me btw) - but this is a perspective
|
|
that is actually quite widespread as a premise of interaction design.
|
|
We might think of Brenda Laurel's 'Computers as Theatre' or notions of
|
|
staging found in HCI approaches like those advocated by Bruce
|
|
Tognazzini, or Joanna Drucker's use of frame analysis in the context
|
|
of interface theory. Perhaps it would be interesting to connect this
|
|
with other theories of performativity and identity as well, or power
|
|
in the mode of Jon McKenzie's 'Perform or Else.' Performance in this
|
|
latter case, interestingly, would also connect to the processes of
|
|
scripted abstraction found in corporate systems analysis and the
|
|
mental division of labour, where 'to perform' equates with accounting
|
|
for efficiency as value. This is a particular way of thinking through
|
|
what the post-digital might mean that I find interesting. Indeed,
|
|
drawing from Manovich's own interest in the research conducted at
|
|
Xerox PARC, these various compulsions are consolidate nicely, for
|
|
instance, in Tim Mott's idle sketches of office work routines on a bar
|
|
napkin sometime during the late 1970s. Such hand-drawn images of
|
|
making work discrete (they are, therefore, already digital images as a
|
|
grammar of action) are the inspiration for the iconic representations
|
|
of the contemporary desktop interface. They inscribe workflow analysis
|
|
and commands such as READ, WRITE, OPEN and MOVE as the now familiar
|
|
options PRINT, FILE, and DELETE:
|
|
http://www.designinginteractions.com/img/chapters/ch_1.jpg
|
|
|
|
When considered in terms of socio-political techniques, a series of
|
|
medial dynamics might then be diagrammed as central to the concerns of
|
|
post-digital aesthetics, things like: delegation, acceleration and
|
|
scaleability (along with Manovich's LoNM terms). These different
|
|
impulses, what could be read in terms of what Matthew Fuller and Andy
|
|
Goffey call evil media, are often arranged to be extensible in the
|
|
sense that they can broadly be assumed to function as global
|
|
information infrastructures. With the post-digital, these are then
|
|
investigated through scaled down characteristics or features in
|
|
translated material states. The post-digital, therefore, exists as a
|
|
'small' orientation device, but it also raises questions of beauty and
|
|
elegance, and in an exemplary way, speaks to the struggle to make
|
|
sense of digital today in any meaningful register beyond the profit
|
|
motive and the control of problems.
|
|
|
|
So what's interesting to me is how the digital understood in these
|
|
ways is rendered or characterized through its absence. Does it come to
|
|
signify an informational sublimity, perhaps a resources as cultural
|
|
materials, a site of excess or dumping ground, some weird array of
|
|
stuff comparable to what Marx once described as dead labor, or perhaps
|
|
closer to general intellect?
|
|
|
|
That's quite a long post, but I guess I wanted to throw some more
|
|
references into the mix. There's also a lot of connections, but these
|
|
are just some notes so I'm not sure they are interesting or relevant
|
|
for people. Perhaps Mercedes has some ideas to add? What, for
|
|
instance, does the hybrid refer to for the hybrid publishing lab? What
|
|
is the digital for you?
|
|
--
|
|
Michael Dieter
|
|
Lecturer
|
|
Media Studies
|
|
The University of Amsterdam
|
|
Turfdraagsterpad 9
|
|
1012 XT Amsterdam
|
|
http://home.medewerker.uva.nl/m.j.dieter/</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>3.4</nbr>
|
|
<subject>[-empyre-] Week One - Between Print and Pixels: Computationality, Post-Digital, Hybrid</subject>
|
|
<from>Alessandro Ludovico</from>
|
|
<to><empyre@lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au></to>
|
|
<date>Tue Feb 11 05:35:04 EST 2014</date>
|
|
<content>Hi Adam and thanks for stepping in (very welcome).</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>3.5</nbr>
|
|
<subject>[-empyre-] Week One - Between Print and Pixels: Computationality, Post-Digital, Hybrid</subject>
|
|
<from>Alessandro Ludovico</from>
|
|
<to><empyre@lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au></to>
|
|
<date>Tue Feb 11 07:09:54 EST 2014</date>
|
|
<content>Hi Michael,
|
|
|
|
only a few answers to your direct questions.
|
|
|
|
> "> I think this is an interesting issue and I was curious if this has
|
|
> been the behaviour of media from the beginning? A cone transformed the
|
|
> voice, radio transformed the cone, the codex transformed the scroll
|
|
> etc. I bring this up because the 'core form' you refer to is perhaps
|
|
> already a multi-hybridised outcome of decades/centuries of
|
|
> transformation. Perhaps one of the core roles of any new medium,
|
|
> analog or digital, is to transform the old. Any thoughts to that? If
|
|
> it were true then 'digital' could be *both* a medium and a
|
|
> transformative agent."
|
|
>
|
|
> I'd like to take this a bit further as well, and ask Alessandro and
|
|
> Mercedes for some response to the term 'digital' and hybrid in the
|
|
> first place. If it might be taken as a medium and transformative
|
|
> agent, then what do different definitions mean for the prefix "post"?
|
|
|
|
Well *if* it'd be proven to be somehow true, then post-digital would mean not that digital is now 'assumed', but that digital has already accomplished its main transformations (although it's still an ongoing process).
|
|
|
|
> And how then does this actually relate to contemporary artistic and
|
|
> experimental practices aligned with the post-digital, or medial
|
|
> hybridity?
|
|
|
|
It can still relate in a quite similar way, only that the hybridity (declined in many various ways) would be seen as true embodiment of "post-digital", which could not then be eventually claimed for any experimental practice dealing with digital.
|
|
|
|
> The invisibility or absence of the digital itself for these practices
|
|
> is, of course, part of the problem. And as Alessandro notes, this is a
|
|
> broader question, since at our present juncture, many aesthetic
|
|
> characteristics and principles of 'old media' have seemingly been
|
|
> maintained, while a range of compound techniques supported by
|
|
> massively distributed and standardized software also appear ascendant;
|
|
> yet this is not always explicitly identified or discussed in terms of
|
|
> a recognizable and coherent new cultural vernacular.
|
|
>
|
|
> In his writing on the topic of the post-digital, Florian Cramer goes
|
|
> to great lengths to argue for some precision in defining the digital
|
|
> itself as a term, highlighting the fact that it is often aligned with
|
|
> a kind of high-tech kitsch, rather than described as the basic act of
|
|
> making discrete. This is a position he already developed in
|
|
> 'Exe.cut[up]able Statements' and 'Words Made Flesh', where counting,
|
|
> separating and sampling comes to define the digital as an act of
|
|
> quantification. In this case, the digital is not simply electronic,
|
|
> but potentially refers to a wide array of cultural techniques that
|
|
> involve making things discrete. In other words, the magnetic
|
|
> orientations, electrical impulses or optical arrays of contemporary
|
|
> computational technologies is merely one subset of the digital broadly
|
|
> understood. Hopefully, Florian can clarify the significance of these
|
|
> arguments later on in the month (I hope the summary is alright for
|
|
> now).
|
|
>
|
|
> In the meantime, there's another dynamic that is part of our
|
|
> contemporary experience of the digital that I want to highlight for
|
|
> the sake of discussion, and this involves the implementation of
|
|
> discrete measurements for the purpose of expanding surplus value or
|
|
> profit. In other words, these are the economic lineages that inform
|
|
> the contemporary digital. They exist, for example, in Charles
|
|
> Babbage's inspiration from Adam Smith's economic divisions of labor,
|
|
> but applied to the mechanization of mathematical tables in the
|
|
> development of the Difference Engine and (proposed) Analytic Engine.
|
|
> Especially pertinent would be his study of 19th century factories (a
|
|
> point of engagement for Marx), 'On the Economy of Machinery and
|
|
> Manufacture', and the argument for the digital as the 'division of
|
|
> mental labours' whereby certain tedious or monotonous tasks are
|
|
> delegated away to labor and machinery at lowered rates of pay, expense
|
|
> and care. This approach is echoed in the articulation of corporate
|
|
> systems analysis in the late 20th century with the kinds of procedural
|
|
> initiatives that Philip Agre insightfully referred to as the capture
|
|
> model. Similarly, as Bernard Stiegler might put it, there is a process
|
|
> involving the grammatization of labour here, but one in which a
|
|
> fixation on increased profit drives the systematic implementation and
|
|
> configuration of these digital infrastructures as a disassociated
|
|
> milieu.
|
|
>
|
|
> Perhaps these are familiar arguments, but I'm interested then in how
|
|
> the digital, understood in this way, can be read in terms of media
|
|
> theory and the idea of there being 'post'? Certainly, these procedures
|
|
> are present as a primary mode of producing knowledge in the
|
|
> development of analogue systems and what Friedrich Kittler called
|
|
> technical media. Maybe the situation today involves something like the
|
|
> simultaneous expansion and diversification of these rationalization
|
|
> techniques in specific ways? That would seem to be argument that Lev
|
|
> Manovich makes in 'Software Takes Command.' If 'Language of New Media'
|
|
> was based on outlining a formalist account of contemporary
|
|
> grammatization expressed through numerical representation, modularity,
|
|
> automation, variability and transcoding, then his new work looks to
|
|
> how such a language leads itself to far-reaching hybridization through
|
|
> the permanent extendibility of software uses and possibilities.
|
|
> Software can do this since it functions as an implementation of
|
|
> digital as meta-medium; in Alessandro's account, it infects, but does
|
|
> not entirely remediate.
|
|
|
|
Actually I think that remediation intended as Bolter’s definition: "the formal logic by which new media refashion prior media forms" can be seen as a lower lever of hybridisation. A video inserted in a digital publication is refashioning video, but it's not taking into account the whole "reading experience" that we have consolidated in centuries, so it's (for the better or worse) disrupting it. Hybridising a digital publication can be more effective using software and networks (eventually in an ever more extreme way than Manovich suggests) to create a unique synthesis, not just "sampled" or "calculated" from big data, but stringently "processed" through different customisable parameters.
|
|
|
|
> These ideas are, of course, central to
|
|
> theories of computation proposed by the Church-Turing hypothesis or by
|
|
> Van Neumann, but Manovich argues Alan Kay should also be taken
|
|
> seriously for inaugurating a 'democratization' of this digital
|
|
> approach to cultural software development. This sets off a continual
|
|
> upheaval in the cultural mode of development associated with cultural
|
|
> software today, so that older media formats remain recognizable, yet
|
|
> also become mixed together into a new expressiveness. The challenge
|
|
> for Manovich's highly modernist project is to locate cultural
|
|
> techniques of the present and future within this massively moving
|
|
> revolutionary infrastructure.
|
|
>
|
|
> There's also this other interesting aspect of Manovich's argument
|
|
> found in the idea of performance; it's an idea that's been kicking
|
|
> around for a while in his work - for instance, in the 'delightful
|
|
> narrative' of Mario falling down a hill (when this actually happens in
|
|
> a Nintendo game is a bit lost on me btw) - but this is a perspective
|
|
> that is actually quite widespread as a premise of interaction design.
|
|
> We might think of Brenda Laurel's 'Computers as Theatre' or notions of
|
|
> staging found in HCI approaches like those advocated by Bruce
|
|
> Tognazzini, or Joanna Drucker's use of frame analysis in the context
|
|
> of interface theory. Perhaps it would be interesting to connect this
|
|
> with other theories of performativity and identity as well, or power
|
|
> in the mode of Jon McKenzie's 'Perform or Else.' Performance in this
|
|
> latter case, interestingly, would also connect to the processes of
|
|
> scripted abstraction found in corporate systems analysis and the
|
|
> mental division of labour, where 'to perform' equates with accounting
|
|
> for efficiency as value. This is a particular way of thinking through
|
|
> what the post-digital might mean that I find interesting. Indeed,
|
|
> drawing from Manovich's own interest in the research conducted at
|
|
> Xerox PARC, these various compulsions are consolidate nicely, for
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> instance, in Tim Mott's idle sketches of office work routines on a bar
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> napkin sometime during the late 1970s. Such hand-drawn images of
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> making work discrete (they are, therefore, already digital images as a
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> grammar of action) are the inspiration for the iconic representations
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> of the contemporary desktop interface. They inscribe workflow analysis
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> and commands such as READ, WRITE, OPEN and MOVE as the now familiar
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> options PRINT, FILE, and DELETE:
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> http://www.designinginteractions.com/img/chapters/ch_1.jpg
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>
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> When considered in terms of socio-political techniques, a series of
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> medial dynamics might then be diagrammed as central to the concerns of
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> post-digital aesthetics, things like: delegation, acceleration and
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> scaleability (along with Manovich's LoNM terms). These different
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> impulses, what could be read in terms of what Matthew Fuller and Andy
|
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> Goffey call evil media, are often arranged to be extensible in the
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> sense that they can broadly be assumed to function as global
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> information infrastructures. With the post-digital, these are then
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> investigated through scaled down characteristics or features in
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> translated material states. The post-digital, therefore, exists as a
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> 'small' orientation device, but it also raises questions of beauty and
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> elegance, and in an exemplary way, speaks to the struggle to make
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> sense of digital today in any meaningful register beyond the profit
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> motive and the control of problems.
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>
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> So what's interesting to me is how the digital understood in these
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> ways is rendered or characterized through its absence. Does it come to
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> signify an informational sublimity, perhaps a resources as cultural
|
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> materials, a site of excess or dumping ground, some weird array of
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> stuff comparable to what Marx once described as dead labor, or perhaps
|
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> closer to general intellect?
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>
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> That's quite a long post, but I guess I wanted to throw some more
|
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> references into the mix. There's also a lot of connections, but these
|
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> are just some notes so I'm not sure they are interesting or relevant
|
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> for people. Perhaps Mercedes has some ideas to add? What, for
|
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> instance, does the hybrid refer to for the hybrid publishing lab? What
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> is the digital for you?
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>
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>
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> --
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> Michael Dieter
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> Lecturer
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> Media Studies
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> The University of Amsterdam
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> Turfdraagsterpad 9
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> 1012 XT Amsterdam
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> http://home.medewerker.uva.nl/m.j.dieter/
|
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> _______________________________________________
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> empyre forum
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> empyre at lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au
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> http://www.subtle.net/empyre
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></content>
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</mail>
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<mail>
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<nbr>3.6</nbr>
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<subject>[-empyre-] Week One - Between Print and Pixels: Computationality, Post-Digital, Hybrid</subject>
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<from>Mercedes Bunz</from>
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<to><empyre@lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au></to>
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<date>Wed Feb 12 03:45:29 EST 2014</date>
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<content>> Perhaps Mercedes has some ideas to add? What, for instance, does the hybrid refer to for the hybrid publishing lab? What is the digital for you?
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Now you make me laugh, Michael. I don’t think I can come up with a definition that will hold, but I guess you are not too disappointed about this. Of course, I feel much more comfortable with complicating things a little bit further. Indeed, I think we often mix up disparate levels, when we talk about a medium - the technical functionality, the social or cultural technique it enables, and how it is occupied by power/control are three different lines which cross or levels we find acting within a medium. Mixing these levels, leads us often to strange conclusions. Instead of giving a definition, I will rather take it further apart! Let’s have a look at digital book publishing and book sprints, for example.
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|
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> I think this is an interesting issue and I was curious if this has been the behaviour of media from the beginning? A cone transformed the voice, radio transformed the cone, the codex transformed the scroll etc. I bring this up because the 'core form' you refer to is perhaps already a multi-hybridised outcome of decades/centuries of transformation. Perhaps one of the core roles of any new medium, analog or digital, is to transform the old. Any thoughts to that? If it were true then 'digital' could be *both* a medium and a transformative agent.
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I agree with Adam, I think the digital is both, medium and transformative agent - and I would even differentiate the last into transformative and agent. The whole messy situation bears the pressing problem which we theory people have, when we talk and analyse media. For what do we look at? A) the technical medium, or B) its transformation, the cultural technique it allows and c) how this is used by power, [or D) what Alessandro calls agency]?
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If I may use the example of "Book sprints” here, as Adam is an expert for this and the innovative method of producing books he came up with has been quite inspiring for the research in our lab... Of course, one can say that “new media” like desktop publishing tools, content management, and digital on-demand-distribution have made this interesting new form of producing books collectively possible. In that sense, new digital media transforms the old paper media to enable a different production as well as different books.
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But the digital hasn’t just transformed book production, it also transformed our knowledge production, i.e. the knowledge we use when writing books - or when writing essays, or when making arguments. Due to its digitalization, knowledge can now be found via search engines, and this allows us to handle knowledge fields in a very different way: we scan them. Scanning or cursory reading becomes a new knowledge technique, besides using search engines, we often also google each other - at least this is I can observe us doing in some of our team meetings (my students love this as well). Here I can locate Alessandro’s statement, when he writes: "New media are affecting the other ones” - but this is something that happens more on level B) and C), its a social or cultural technique and how it is enacted and appropriated. Personally, I see the post-digital located here, at least at the moment. One reason for this is, I have Florian Cramer’s excellent example of students on my mind who sit together to produce a paper fanzine, and he commented that: they are doing it as if they are doing social media.
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I think A, B, and C are all on a similar level - the present - but much like Alessandro I am fascinated that there is something else, the moment/aspect he calls agency [D]. I researched this silent technical “ghost" a bit for my book (The Silent Revolution), and noticed that philosophers and thinkers (Latour, Simondon, Verbeek, Ihde, Blumenberg, Kittler, or Nigel Thrift, or...) all were fascinated by it. I tried to explain this “agency", but as my interest was not to describe it as technical determination, I chose the term "technical gesture”. The concept is borrowed from Ferdinand Braudel, of course. He brought something similar into play, when besides short-term historic events, he focussed on the shift of long-term historical structures. Analog to this, I came up with a structure or 'schema' inherent in technology and changing with each new technical revolution. Here, I think my argument is related to Alessandro’s idea of the digital as being something more than just a new medium, seeing it more like electricity. However, I would say while this has an effect, I wouldn’t describe it as agency. It is more a structure or a pattern: industrialization, for example, is based on the construction of systems for which the process of standardization is essential. The digital, on the other hand, has a more disruptive and fragmented side so that flexibility is a far more important aspect to it than rigid norms.
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Now the question is: what would that mean for publishing, or writing?
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Personally, I see some of this ‘gesture’ in my own writing. I tend to start my thinking less from an opposing argument, I find refuting someone less and less productive. Instead, I prefer to use fragments of other people’s theory and thinking as bricks to build my own argument, and find myself interested in things like “Reading Diffractively” (see Iris van der Tuin 2013: http://www.academia.edu/4679458/The_Untimeliness_of_Bergsons_Metaphysics_Reading_Diffractively_2013_ ) Or is this just a … trend? What do you guys think?
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> Perhaps one of the core roles of any new medium, analog or digital, is to transform the old. Any thoughts to that? If it were true then 'digital' could be *both* a medium and a transformative agent.
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By the way, Michael, I don’t really get your point here, like I don’t understand the “economic lineage” but with it you seem to go somewhere very interesting. Maybe you can explain this a bit?
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> In other words, these are the economic lineages that inform
|
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> the contemporary digital. They exist, for example, in Charles
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> Babbage's inspiration from Adam Smith's economic divisions of labor,
|
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> but applied to the mechanization of mathematical tables in the
|
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> development of the Difference Engine and (proposed) Analytic Engine.
|
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> Especially pertinent would be his study of 19th century factories (a
|
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> point of engagement for Marx), 'On the Economy of Machinery and
|
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> Manufacture', and the argument for the digital as the 'division of
|
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> mental labours' whereby certain tedious or monotonous tasks are
|
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> delegated away to labor and machinery at lowered rates of pay, expense
|
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> and care. This approach is echoed in the articulation of corporate
|
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> systems analysis in the late 20th century with the kinds of procedural
|
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> initiatives that Philip Agre insightfully referred to as the capture
|
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> model. Similarly, as Bernard Stiegler might put it, there is a process
|
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> involving the grammatization of labour here, but one in which a
|
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> fixation on increased profit drives the systematic implementation and
|
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> configuration of these digital infrastructures as a disassociated
|
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> milieu.
|
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>
|
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> Perhaps these are familiar arguments, but I'm interested then in how
|
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> the digital, understood in this way, can be read in terms of media
|
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> theory and the idea of there being 'post'?</content>
|
|
</mail>
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<mail>
|
|
<nbr>3.7</nbr>
|
|
<subject>[-empyre-] Week One - Between Print and Pixels: Computationality, Post-Digital, Hybrid</subject>
|
|
<from>David Berry</from>
|
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<to><empyre@lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au></to>
|
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<date>Thu Feb 13 03:17:25 EST 2014</date>
|
|
<content>I want to take up the question of the definitional a little, more because I think that what the post-digital is pointing towards as a concept is the multiple moments in which the digital was operative in various ways. Indeed, historicising the “digital" can be a useful, if not crucial step, in understanding the transformation(s) of digital technologies. That is, we are at a moment whereby we are able to survey the various constellations of factors that made up a particular historical configuration around the digital and in which the “digital” formed an “imagined" medium to which existing analogue mediums where often compared, and to which the digital tended to be seen as suffering from a lack, e.g. not a medium for “real” news, for film, etc. etc. The digital was another medium to place at the end (of the list) after all the other mediums were counted – and not a very good one. It was where the digital was understood, if it were understood at all, as a complement to other media forms, somewhat lacking, geeky, glitchy, poor quality and generally suited for toys, like games or the web, or for “boring” activities like accountancy or infrastructure. The reality is that in many ways the digital was merely a staging post, whilst computing capacity, memory, storage and display resolutions could fall in price/rise in power enough to enable a truly “post-digital” environment that could produce new mediated experiences. That is, that it appears that the digital was “complementary” but the post-digital is zero-sum. Here is my attempt to sum up some of the moments that I think might serve as a provocation to debate the post-digital.
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+-----------------+------------------+
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| DIGITAL | POST-DIGITAL |
|
|
+------------------------------------>
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|
| Non-zero sum | Zero-sum |
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|
| Objects | Streams |
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| Files | Clouds |
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| Programs | Apps |
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| SQL databases | NoSQL storage |
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| HTML | node.js/APIs |
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| Disciplinary | Control |
|
|
| Administration | Logistics |
|
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| Connect | Always-on |
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| Copy/Paste | Intermediate |
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| Digital | Computal |
|
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| Hybrid | Unified |
|
|
| Interface | Surface |
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| BitTorrent | Scraping |
|
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| Participation | Sharing/Making |
|
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| Metadata | Metacontent |
|
|
| Web 2.0 | Stacks |
|
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| Medium | Platform |
|
|
| Games | World |
|
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| Software agents | Compactants |
|
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| Experience | Engagement |
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| Syndication | Push notification|
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| GPS | Beacons (IoTs) |
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| Art | Aesthetics |
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| Privacy | Personal Cloud |
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| Plaintext | Cryptography |
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| Big data | Real-time |
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| Responsive | Anticipatory |
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| Tracing | Tracking |
|
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+------------------------------------>
|
|
Best
|
|
|
|
David</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>4.0</nbr>
|
|
<subject>[-empyre-] HYBRID BOOKWORK, Week Two - Paradoxical Publishing, Postmedia, Critical Aesthetics</subject>
|
|
<from>Michael Dieter</from>
|
|
<to><empyre@lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au></to>
|
|
<date>Wed Feb 12 04:27:24 EST 2014</date>
|
|
<content>Hi all,
|
|
|
|
The discussion is still rolling from the first week, but I would like
|
|
to nevertheless introduce and welcome three more guests onto the list:
|
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Lukas Jost Gross, Domenico Quaranta and Rita Raley.
|
|
|
|
I've put together some keywords for this introduction - Paradoxical
|
|
Publishing, Postmedia, Critical Aesthetics - (apologies for yet
|
|
another 'post' in there), but this is just a formality. I want to keep
|
|
things quite open in terms of how the conversation develops and what
|
|
gets discussed. Perhaps subscribers have specific questions or
|
|
comments to add at this point.
|
|
|
|
Indeed, hopefully many of you are also already familiar with their
|
|
work. If not, please check out TRAUMAWIEN's inspiring projects and
|
|
publications; the absolutely essential Link Editions series that
|
|
Domenico's been running and along with an overview of his curatorial
|
|
work and criticism; and some of Rita's key publications on a range of
|
|
influential media arts practices, concepts and themes from codework to
|
|
tactical media and counterveillance.
|
|
|
|
It's great to have you all on empyre!
|
|
|
|
- M.
|
|
|
|
Bios:
|
|
|
|
Lukas Jost Gross is an artist and paradoxical print publisher based in
|
|
Vienna. He co-founded TRAUMAWIEN in 2010 with Peter Moosgaard and
|
|
Julian Palacz as a non-academic initiative exploring new forms of
|
|
publishing. An important aspect is the ARTCLUB involving discussions
|
|
of various issues, books and releases
|
|
(http://traumawien.at/stuff/artclub/). Some key projects, meanwhile,
|
|
have included exploiting "Domains of Distribution" Ad Contaminated
|
|
Ebooks (Trojan Horses) exploring the connectivity and underground
|
|
distribution of ebooks by algorithmically changing/contaminating them
|
|
while feeding them back into Systems of Distribution
|
|
(http://rhizome.org/announce/events/59833/view/). In certain ways,
|
|
augmented reality is also an important concept for TRAUMAWIEN, as seen
|
|
in the development of Augmented Reality Software for YORICK/REPLIK in
|
|
2010, which was sold as 'Hybrids'. For more information on their
|
|
various projects and publications, see http://traumawien.at/
|
|
|
|
Domenico Quaranta (1978, Brescia, Italy, http://domenicoquaranta.com)
|
|
is an art critic and curator. He is a regular contributor to Flash Art
|
|
and Artpulse. He is the editor (with M. Bittanti) of the book
|
|
"GameScenes: Art in the Age of Videogames" (2006) and the author of
|
|
"Media, New Media, Postmedia" (2010; translated into English in 2013
|
|
with the title "Beyond New Media Art") and "In Your Computer" (2011).
|
|
He has curated various exhibitions, including "Holy Fire: Art of the
|
|
Digital Age" (Bruxelles 2008, with Y. Bernard), Playlist (Gijon 2009
|
|
and Bruxelles 2010) and "Collect the WWWorld. The Artist as Archivist
|
|
in the Internet Age" (Brescia 2011; Basel and New York 2012). He is a
|
|
co-founder of the Link Center for the Arts of the Information Age
|
|
(http://www.linkartcenter.eu/).
|
|
|
|
Rita Raley researches and teaches at the University of California,
|
|
Santa Barbara. Her work is situated at the intersection of digital
|
|
media and humanist inquiry, with a particular emphasis on cultural
|
|
critique, artistic practices, language, and textuality. She is the
|
|
author of Tactical Media (Electronic Mediations) (University of
|
|
Minnesota, 2009), co-editor of the Electronic Literature Collection,
|
|
Volume 2 (2011), and has more recently published articles in the
|
|
edited collections "Raw Data" Is an Oxymoron (2013) and Comparative
|
|
Textual Media: Transforming the Humanities in the Postprint Era
|
|
(2013). She has had fellowship appointments at the National Humanities
|
|
Center; UCLA (as part of the Mellon-funded project on the Digital
|
|
Humanities); University of Bergen, Norway (with "ELMCIP: Electronic
|
|
Literature as a Model of Creativity and Innovation in Practice"); and
|
|
the Dutch Foundation for Literature in Amsterdam. She currently
|
|
co-edits the "Critical Issues in Media Aesthetics" book series for
|
|
Bloomsbury and the "Electronic Mediations" book series for the
|
|
University of Minnesota Press.</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>4.1</nbr>
|
|
<subject>[-empyre-] HYBRID BOOKWORK, Week Two - Paradoxical Publishing, Postmedia, Critical Aesthetics</subject>
|
|
<from>Domenico Quaranta</from>
|
|
<to><empyre@lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au></to>
|
|
<date>Wed Feb 12 19:09:13 EST 2014</date>
|
|
<content>Dear empyreans,
|
|
|
|
I have been producing content for books, catalogues and magazines for a while, but if Michael kindly invited me in this discussion on empyre, it is because, at some point, I became an editor and publisher. In the following, I will try to explain shortly how it happened, because it can be useful to introduce you to the approach and structure of Link Editions (http://editions.linkartcenter.eu/).
|
|
|
|
In 2011, while working with some partners on setting up the Link Center for the Arts of the Information Age (the no-profit organization behind Link Editions), I started collecting ideas for a personal side project. I wanted to go through the texts I wrote for magazines, catalogues and blogs in previous years, select the ones that were still meaningful to me, edit them (most of them were badly translated in English by third parties), publish an anthology and remove everything from my website. I felt it was time to review this material, take it off from the fluidity of the internet, and make it more readable: a better formatting, a better design, a better indexing. Self-editing with a bit of make-up.
|
|
|
|
I didn't know how to do it, but I knew that I didn't want to submit it to a publishing house. At the time, I had just published a book in Italian, and even if it was a wonderful experience, I didn't see any advantage in following the same path again. Maybe if you are a better writer it goes differently, but with my 2010 book what happened was that (1) I gave all the rights on the book to the publisher (2) for almost no money and for (3) 30 free copies of my book. Since then, (4) I can't put the pdf online for free, (5) I have no control on distribution and (6) I can have a rough idea about how sales are going only through the (rather opaque) filter of the publisher. I can't even allow my students to make photocopies, even if I do it all the time.
|
|
|
|
So, I started exploring print-on-demand platforms, and what I saw was very interesting. With, for example, Lulu.com 1) I could keep my rights on the book and choose the kind of license I wanted to apply to it; 2) I could potentially make money, or decide on my own - not because I was forced by a contract - that I didn't want to make money at all; 3) I could buy as many books I wanted at author's price; 4) I could circulate the book in digital form, even on the same platform, without any restriction; 5) I couldn't be in my neighborhood bookstore, but I could access some of the biggest bookstores in the world, and 6) I could keep track of sales and downloads. I could even send the download link to monoskop, and spread the digital file through my students. Of course, print-on-demand platforms have their faults too, but at least everything that made me upset in traditional publishing seemed to be healed there.
|
|
|
|
From here to Link Editions, the step was short. I talked about all this to my partners, and they agreed to set up a publishing initiative grounded in print-on-demand and free download. I published my book, In Your Computer, in May 2011. By September 2011, three other books were released: Random, by Valentina Tanni; In My Computer # 1, by Miltos Manetas; and the catalogue of the first exhibition produced by the Link Art Center, Collect the WWWorld. The Artist as Archivist in the Internet Age. Feel free to download all of them.
|
|
|
|
With these books, our three main book collections were born. "Clouds" is both an attempt to allow other writers the kind of freedom I experienced working outside of traditional publishing, and to bring to shelves some good theoretical writing that meets our interests as an institution. "In My Computer" is a kind of concept magazine, inviting artists to share meaningful content stored in their hard drive (or in the cloud) that for some reason never got released, and that can be meaningful in book form. "Catalogues" collects our monographs and exhibition catalogues. Recently Link Editions started being an interesting platform also for other organizations, and we are exploring different modes of co-publishing. These books are filed under "Open".
|
|
|
|
Simply put, Link Editions is an attempt to conceal the advantages of self publishing with the ones of working with a publishing house. One of the faults of POD platforms is the lack of a context around the book you publish. Of course, you can use categories and tags in order to index your book and make it easy to retrieve. But how many people look for books this way? Landing on Lulu.com is like entering a giant bookstore, with thousands of bad books welcoming you at the entrance, and with an unreliable indexing system. You head to the art shelf and you see calendars; you look for the contemporary art shelf and you see self produced portfolios; you look closer for "new media art" books and you find ten bad ones - the best one is actually indexed under Essays > Photography, and, if you spend a whole day there, you may be able to find a great artist book under "Software and code".
|
|
Another problem, when you self-publish a book, is your lack of professionalism. You may be a good writer, but still need an editor and a proof reader for your contents, and a good designer for your book. With Link Editions, we tried to bypass these problems without rebuilding the barriers someone experiences when working with a traditional publisher. We offer to our authors our editing and design expertise; due to our weak economic model, we can't design all the books we publish, but we try to keep an high level of quality. We set a low income for Link Editions that basically pays back the expenses produced by the initiative, and we offer all books in free download; everything is done in a very transparent way, and authors are always free to request statistics on their sales / downloads, as well as to but their books at author's price through our account. It's basically like self publishing, but with a professional assistance, and delivering the book in a context that becomes more interesting and rewarding for us and for authors any time a new book is published.
|
|
|
|
Sorry for the long presentation post, but I assumed that my role in this conversation was more that of presenting a concrete "case study", than that of addressing the interesting topics raised in the first part of this discussion. Hopefully I will be able to say something about them later on.
|
|
|
|
My warm regards,
|
|
Domenico
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
Domenico Quaranta
|
|
|
|
email: quaranta.domenico at gmail.com
|
|
skype: dom_40
|
|
|
|
http://domenicoquaranta.com
|
|
http://www.linkartcenter.eu</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>4.2</nbr>
|
|
<subject>[-empyre-] HYBRID BOOKWORK, Week Two - Paradoxical Publishing, Postmedia, Critical Aesthetics</subject>
|
|
<from>Ethel Baraona Pohl</from>
|
|
<to><empyre@lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au></to>
|
|
<date>Thu Feb 13 00:12:42 EST 2014</date>
|
|
<content>Dear all,
|
|
Thank you for all the inputs an the generosity of sharing valuable
|
|
information to enhance the conversation and to learn from each other.
|
|
I have been following with lots of interest this discussion, as publisher
|
|
myself and having several questions on the transformation of the publishing
|
|
field in the current times, let's say pre-digital, digital and post-digital.
|
|
|
|
To contextualize, we have an independent publishing house called
|
|
dpr-barcelona [www-dpr-barcelona.com] specialised in architecture, theory
|
|
and art. On the past years we have been researching on the concept of
|
|
"hybrid books" with the combination of printed and digital by different
|
|
approaches, including different formats that already have been mentioned by
|
|
some of you, such as e-Books, Print-on-Demand and enriched ePubs, among
|
|
others.
|
|
|
|
I'll share here two case studies that, in my opinion are the closest we're
|
|
reaching to the concept of *hybridization*, to hear your feedback about
|
|
them and join the conversation.
|
|
|
|
1. The first one is the use of Augmented Reality interactions on a printed
|
|
book, to connect the paperback edition with the digital tools. The first
|
|
experiment we did was as contributors for Domus Magazine, where we proposed
|
|
to the editor to include this technology in one of the articles we wrote.
|
|
The result was very dynamic and well received, as being an architecture and
|
|
design magazine, the possibility to link videos and 3D-models using the
|
|
printed images to visualize them on any smart phone with the app [please
|
|
watch the video: https://vimeo.com/39580799]. After that we have used the
|
|
same technology in a few of our books, the interactions works really good
|
|
but maybe the most difficult part is how to communicate to our readers that
|
|
the printed book is enriched with this technology... I think even if people
|
|
think it's good or they talk about it, there are only few ones using it;
|
|
and this fact opens lots of questions in our minds.
|
|
|
|
2. The second case study is what we call "*multiplatform* projects". The
|
|
most recent one is *The Kent State Forum on the City: MADRID*, which
|
|
includes Book + Web + App, all of them complementary and inter-connected,
|
|
trying to enhance information exchange. The book also contains Augmented
|
|
Reality features accessible through mobile devices. Here we try to share
|
|
different contents depending on the platform and try to avoid repetition of
|
|
contents in order to exploit the tool according to its possibilities. This
|
|
project is so new that I can't yet share with you if it's successful or
|
|
not, not talking about commercial issues but focusing (as part of this
|
|
discussion) on how people use the different platforms and to envision what
|
|
we can learn from this experiment.
|
|
More info: http://www.ksuforumonthecity.com/
|
|
|
|
I really appreciate to be reading all your experiences and wanted to share
|
|
ours, so we all can learn from each others.
|
|
|
|
Best regards,
|
|
Ethel
|
|
---
|
|
Ethel Baraona Pohl | dpr-barcelona <http://www.dpr-barcelona.com/>
|
|
Curator Think Space MONEY <http://www.think-space.org/en/theme/money_2013/>
|
|
twitter @ethel_baraona <https://twitter.com/ethel_baraona> |
|
|
about.me<http://about.me/ethel_baraona>
|
|
(+34) 626 048 684
|
|
|
|
*Before you print think about the environment*</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>4.3</nbr>
|
|
<subject>[-empyre-] HYBRID BOOKWORK, Week Two - Paradoxical Publishing, Postmedia, Critical Aesthetics</subject>
|
|
<from>Michael Dieter</from>
|
|
<to><empyre@lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au></to>
|
|
<date>Thu Feb 13 19:56:54 EST 2014</date>
|
|
<content>Hi Domenico,
|
|
|
|
Thanks for grounding the conversation a bit with some background
|
|
information about Link Editions. From your description, the move to
|
|
start working with POD and ebooks seems to have been lead by a range
|
|
of motives - some of which were pragmatic, experimental, somewhat
|
|
intuitive and already informed by your experience as a curator.
|
|
|
|
I imagine the freedom to experiment is one attractive aspect of this
|
|
model. To a certain extent, as you imply, the content on these
|
|
platforms will only ever be as good as we make it, and the
|
|
possibilities and affordances will remain unknown until we begin
|
|
actively exploring them. In that respect, the series reminds me of the
|
|
Institute of Network Cultures Theory on Demand (ToD) series as a
|
|
relatively flexible and open channel for publishing (although the
|
|
focus content-wise is slightly different of course) -
|
|
http://networkcultures.org/wpmu/theoryondemand/titles/. I know
|
|
anecdotally that some traditional academic publishers have some desire
|
|
to move into this kind of model, especially given the shift to
|
|
mini-monographs and short essay collections more broadly. Editors at
|
|
old school publication houses will often express a desire to innovate
|
|
and experiment, but that they are restricted to their existing
|
|
financial arrangements, professional relationships, tools and
|
|
publishing workflows. There's a lot of anxiety there, but presumably
|
|
this approach would allow them to open things up, even just a little
|
|
bit as an offshoot series. It would also allow for existing content to
|
|
be repackaged and repurposed quite easily, as Link Editions and ToD
|
|
demonstrate. This already seems like a more viable model than
|
|
networked books, apps or anything involving multimedia.
|
|
|
|
That said, something about your move into becoming a publisher appears
|
|
to be informed by your wider concerns with the location of art today,
|
|
something you've written about in terms of the so-called digital
|
|
divide between media and contemporary art practices (in addition to
|
|
their disassociations with digital and networked modes of cultural
|
|
production at large). Elsewhere, you've described the "baggage of
|
|
ignorance (technological on one hand, artistic on the other)" that's
|
|
structured a lot of problems and misunderstandings in
|
|
media/contemporary art contexts, especially when it comes to the
|
|
embedded discourses attached to residual and emergent cultural
|
|
institutions. I wonder whether you've encountered comparable baggage
|
|
in your experience with publishing? Certainly, the trial of putting
|
|
out your first book with a traditional publisher runs at odds with the
|
|
goal of actively expanding frameworks, conversations and imaginaries
|
|
for what contemporary art might mean, but can you say something about
|
|
how you've seen these works received in different contexts? Do these
|
|
publications end up in unexpected settings and contexts? How far and
|
|
wide do they travel to reach diverse audiences? Perhaps you've got
|
|
some interesting stories and insights here.
|
|
|
|
Some other quick follow up questions: Link Editions seems to have been
|
|
born from an archival impulse; to what extent have, for instance,
|
|
libraries acquired print copies of these publications? Is that
|
|
something you're interested in pursuing? Have you also considered
|
|
feeding back this publishing momentum into print distribution for
|
|
galleries or more specialty bookshops beyond the Lulu.com platform?
|
|
Would it make sense to do so?
|
|
|
|
Cheers,
|
|
|
|
- M.</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>4.4</nbr>
|
|
<subject>[-empyre-] HYBRID BOOKWORK, Week Two - Paradoxical Publishing, Postmedia, Critical Aesthetics</subject>
|
|
<from>domenico quaranta</from>
|
|
<to><empyre@lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au></to>
|
|
<date>Fri Feb 14 09:07:13 EST 2014</date>
|
|
<content>Dear Michael,
|
|
|
|
thanks for your reply and your questions!
|
|
> That said, something about your move into becoming a publisher appears
|
|
> to be informed by your wider concerns with the location of art today,
|
|
> something you've written about in terms of the so-called digital
|
|
> divide between media and contemporary art practices
|
|
of course, any time you start producing content of any kind, you do it
|
|
because you see room for that - to fill a hole, so to speak. In Italy,
|
|
there is very little literature about art and new media, and just a few of
|
|
the books I enjoy in English are translated, often quite lately. That said,
|
|
Link Editions publishes mainly in English for an international audience
|
|
that have access to a wide literature on this subject. What I felt was
|
|
missing, and what the "Clouds" series is trying to offer, was a fast
|
|
translation of the vast literature we experience online in the shape of a
|
|
book. Most of what we read today is on a screen. Sometimes, a blog post or
|
|
a short essay published online has a stronger impact than a book or an
|
|
article on a printed magazine. But the web is fluid, permalinks decade,
|
|
retrieving content that we forgot to save, archive, tag or post to Facebook
|
|
is hard. A book - be it a paperback or a digital file - is more reliable;
|
|
it lasts longer, and can be quoted years later.
|
|
> how you've seen these works received in different contexts? Do these
|
|
> publications end up in unexpected settings and contexts? How far and
|
|
> wide do they travel to reach diverse audiences? Perhaps you've got
|
|
> some interesting stories and insights here.
|
|
>
|
|
|
|
One of the faults of working online is that you don't hear stories, you
|
|
just see facts and figures. I can tell you that the books have been
|
|
downloaded and bought from all over the world, mostly from the US, Europe
|
|
and Australia, and that the proportion between free downloads and sales is
|
|
more or less 1:10; I can tell you that bookstores don't like to buy from
|
|
Lulu - so they don't buy our books, even if we offer them to buy at
|
|
author's price; but the only feedback I get comes from people that bought
|
|
or downloaded the books, when I meet them. Also, it's funny when I make a
|
|
presentation and say "you can buy the paperback or download the book for
|
|
free" - many people still look at me like if I was an alien...
|
|
> Some other quick follow up questions: Link Editions seems to have been
|
|
> born from an archival impulse; to what extent have, for instance,
|
|
> libraries acquired print copies of these publications? Is that
|
|
> something you're interested in pursuing? Have you also considered
|
|
> feeding back this publishing momentum into print distribution for
|
|
> galleries or more specialty bookshops beyond the Lulu.com platform?
|
|
> Would it make sense to do so?
|
|
>
|
|
|
|
It would definitely make sense, even if it has been, so far, quite hard to
|
|
do. We don't have the budget to buy copies and send them to selected
|
|
bookstores or galleries, and we can't do donations to public libraries, but
|
|
we suggest to do it to people that download our books for free (a strategy
|
|
we learnt from Cory Doctorow). It has been possible for specific
|
|
publications, though. The F.A.T. Manual was co-produced with MU, Eindhoven
|
|
and supported by XPO Gallery, Paris - they both have copies for sale. Soon,
|
|
you will be able to find some Link Editions books at Eyebeam, New York.
|
|
Hopefully in the future we will work more on this.
|
|
Talking about the archival impulse, of course you are right. But it's not
|
|
just about libraries - I think disseminating the digital file goes in the
|
|
same direction. When I think that only 100 copies of "Peer Pressure" have
|
|
been sold, but some thousands have been downloaded, I feel that this book
|
|
is somehow "safe". I know, you don't always read what you downloaded, but
|
|
you always store it somewhere for later reading. Maybe at some point people
|
|
will start donating their old Kindles and Kobos to public libraries - and
|
|
they will accept them.
|
|
|
|
My bests,
|
|
Domenico</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>4.5</nbr>
|
|
<subject>[-empyre-] HYBRID BOOKWORK, Week Two - Paradoxical Publishing, Postmedia, Critical Aesthetics</subject>
|
|
<from>verlag at traumawien.at</from>
|
|
<to><empyre@lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au></to>
|
|
<date>Sat Feb 15 21:48:33 EST 2014</date>
|
|
<content>1 Literary Trojan Horses
|
|
2 Augmented Reality
|
|
3 Post-Digital
|
|
4 Print on Demand
|
|
|
|
1 Since our Ghostwriters (
|
|
http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20120613/03584719300/amazon-deletes-ebooks-automatically-generated-youtube-comments-leaving-many-questions-unanswered.shtml)
|
|
Intervention we put a great effort in manipulating huge bunchs of text
|
|
algorithmically. During the whole last year we have been working on an
|
|
algorithm to contaminate contents by subversively contaminatig them with
|
|
advertising. This is focused on german ebook piracy mechanisms which turn
|
|
ot to be by far most progressive experiments in terms of distribution. Just
|
|
for the case as they also constantly invent alternative economic systems,
|
|
always on nomadic moves, where they curate contents, as opposed to raw
|
|
bunches of material like all german bestellers at once like this 1 >
|
|
http://thepiratebay.se/torrent/9150293/42.000_deutsche_epub_eBooks_(42.740_eBooks_komplettes_Boox.to-Ar[decide
|
|
if they are what they are labeled, by your self]. If you are
|
|
interested, a driving force behind ever changing 'domains of distribution'
|
|
here has been and still is 'spiegelbest', here is an essential interview
|
|
with him > http://traumawien.at/stuff/texts/interview-mit-einem-buchpiraten/,
|
|
also he has a blog where he writes about where the scene locates at the
|
|
moment. They truly are always on the move, and they are huge and that s why
|
|
i wonder why this discussion is so much skipped in publishing.
|
|
|
|
2 Augmented Reality. To me AR still is the most close to working science
|
|
fiction concept in digital and i am highly fascinated thinking about it. To
|
|
put it short > as long as we need our hands for computers, we'll have to
|
|
wait, and no, i don't like 'glasses'. We have been greatly influenced here
|
|
by the fantastic Mez Breeze Blog Augmentology which stopped in 2010 >
|
|
http://arsvirtuafoundation.org/research/
|
|
We are open to any collaborations here. Please contact. We have our own
|
|
software and some Scheme concepts. AR does need a lot of work.
|
|
|
|
3 Post-Digital. After reading the mails from last week i asked my friend
|
|
about 'post-digital' and he said 'Alzheimers'. I thought this was
|
|
something, as it brought up the human connection, which i completely miss
|
|
in your notes. Also, it could be turned in as the 'space left by the
|
|
absence of the digital' - a generative amnesia, sort of. Unlearning
|
|
learning, Tech drugs and the Kurzweil Cyborg, all the archives etc come in
|
|
here. Just my thoughts without juggle-stretch terms too much.
|
|
|
|
4 Pod. We, of course, used pod in the beginning for most of the reasons
|
|
Domenico listed. Still, in June 2012, when Amazon terminated our Accounts
|
|
life-long because of the 'Ghostwriters' Intervention, we decided to not use
|
|
pod (and it's Amazon gateway) anymore and instead have our books printed
|
|
locally, in limited runs of 50-100. Our orderings through Lulu where really
|
|
marginal and their quality was just bad. Not to mention tax and check
|
|
issues with the US you suddenly have to deal with. To have our backlist (
|
|
http://traumawien.at/prints/) out of print is a thing, nowadays. Sticking
|
|
back to great quality prints is also the (.) left by the absence of the
|
|
digital and therefore probably post-digital. Our posters, for example, are
|
|
printed at a letterpress in St. Gallen. We just want best, long lasting
|
|
quality you can get, again. Those products are data carriers to survive.
|
|
|
|
Don't get me wrong, but it will be true pod if espresso book machines
|
|
arrive to print the pdf at the copy shop around the corner.
|
|
|
|
I am also having problems to use the word book in general for any digital
|
|
processes. Just to avoid tedious (especially 'ebook') discussions.
|
|
|
|
>>> Apologize for my late introduction. I have a familiy emergency here in
|
|
switzerland and been offline most of the last week. Also, this is written
|
|
from a cafe. Hope to add more to the discussion, later. See you around, L</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>4.6</nbr>
|
|
<subject>[-empyre-] HYBRID BOOKWORK, Week Two - Paradoxical Publishing, Postmedia, Critical Aesthetics</subject>
|
|
<from>Michael Dieter</from>
|
|
<to><empyre@lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au></to>
|
|
<date>Wed Feb 19 06:26:36 EST 2014</date>
|
|
<content>Thanks for the post Lukas! I'm also a bit late responding so
|
|
apologies, but I did want to just pick up on this point quickly...
|
|
>
|
|
"3 Post-Digital. After reading the mails from last week i asked my
|
|
friend about 'post-digital' and he said 'Alzheimers'. I thought this
|
|
was something, as it brought up the human connection, which i
|
|
completely miss in your notes. Also, it could be turned in as the
|
|
'space left by the absence of the digital' - a generative amnesia,
|
|
sort of. Unlearning learning, Tech drugs and the Kurzweil Cyborg, all
|
|
the archives etc come in here. Just my thoughts without juggle-stretch
|
|
terms too much."
|
|
|
|
Post-digital brain damage - this is one of the more interesting
|
|
definitions I've read! While I'm a bit skeptical of neurological
|
|
explanations for what the web has done to us ala Carr's Is Google
|
|
Making Us Stupid, continual partial awareness, overall cognitive
|
|
fatigue and a sense of informationally-induced distraction is
|
|
something I do recognize in myself. Sometimes I wonder if I'm just
|
|
getting older and have more responsibilities.
|
|
|
|
There is a real problem of our technologies being always on, too many
|
|
browser tabs open, the smart phone buzzing an email update, the
|
|
continual connection to social media streams - 24/7, real subsumption.
|
|
Of course, there's the obvious pharmacological dimensions of the info
|
|
attention economy as well, the rise of ADHD diagnoses, what Bifo
|
|
theorizes as the pharmacological character of the 'schizo-economy' -
|
|
including the need for 'panic' to be alleviated through the use of
|
|
cocaine, ritalin, speed, modafinil and other nootropics. Maybe
|
|
disciplinary software like Freedom and Anti-Social has something
|
|
post-digital about it, or more accurately, Morozov's locked up router
|
|
cable, smartphone and screwdrivers? That's the real neo-analogue
|
|
response!
|
|
|
|
In any case, this backdrop of attention is crucial I think in terms of
|
|
how people deal with books today. It is something that Hayles, for
|
|
instance, has explored in her book How We Think within the context of
|
|
education and literary studies. Certainly, coping strategies have now
|
|
also become a major topic in the mainstream press, even when it comes
|
|
to ebooks as well -
|
|
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/01/05/books/review/how-do-e-books-change-the-reading-experience.html?_r=0
|
|
|
|
- M.
|
|
|
|
--
|
|
Michael Dieter
|
|
Lecturer
|
|
Media Studies
|
|
The University of Amsterdam
|
|
Turfdraagsterpad 9
|
|
1012 XT Amsterdam
|
|
http://home.medewerker.uva.nl/m.j.dieter/</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>4.7</nbr>
|
|
<subject>[-empyre-] HYBRID BOOKWORK, Week Two - Paradoxical Publishing, Postmedia, Critical Aesthetics</subject>
|
|
<from>verlag at traumawien.at</from>
|
|
<to><empyre@lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au></to>
|
|
<date>Thu Feb 20 17:38:24 EST 2014</date>
|
|
<content>Hi Michael thanks for the reply.
|
|
|
|
I wasn't to put [3] as a kind of 'brain damage'. Was just an
|
|
[alter]na[t]ive (yy my first actual use of mezangelle, it s coming) input
|
|
without relying on hermetic academic backup too much. Also, i wouldn't want
|
|
to turn the discussion to Nick Carr etc, just wanted to throw in sth. But -
|
|
as the human factor is so much important to us, the question here would
|
|
rather (and much more interesting) be, at what extent we are giving treats
|
|
to the algorithms ourselves at what cost and return. Like in terms of how
|
|
it RECURSIVELY learns from us as we teach it our whole cultural sphere and
|
|
after that - what is happening there as a post-something on the other side.
|
|
As the 1 obvious example: while algorithms are about to learn our language
|
|
through form inputs etc, we are evolving a new written language ourselves.
|
|
Maybe for it not to understand us anymore? Or while algorithmic transcripts
|
|
of speech work almost perfect these days, we don't even listen to that
|
|
speech anymore (at least as we did), what for, if it is transcribed and
|
|
rolled out and backuped. Or we don't listen to the speech anymore but make
|
|
a book of it just to have to have the option of the real back? Alzheimers
|
|
def is the wrong word, but how does that kind of negative space (meant as
|
|
sth positive) look like and how do we act upon it?
|
|
|
|
The works collected by Silvio probably are a lot about what is is thrown
|
|
back here. The exemplary American Psycho by Huff/Cabell is what is left
|
|
after algorithms went through handling 'culture'. Why do we make a book out
|
|
of it and even party it and even exhibit it at the Jeu deu Paume in Paris?
|
|
Obviously, culture turns out to be something different and in that and many
|
|
other cases, culture becomes nothing but advertising, as Lanier once put
|
|
it. That kind of Number 1 SPAM, the whole pop-web works upon! At least it
|
|
is what i learn about it and i think those algorithmic examples are much
|
|
more defining and important than artists books of conceptual writing, which
|
|
became just too obvious (Push the 'make a book' button, out of that
|
|
breakfast plan).
|
|
|
|
L
|
|
|
|
Forgot the best thing happened in 2013 was the postartpoets as an
|
|
outstanding work of relational publishing performance. Starting here > >
|
|
http://www.postartpoets.com/</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>4.3</nbr>
|
|
<subject>[-empyre-] HYBRID BOOKWORK, Week Two - Paradoxical Publishing, Postmedia, Critical Aesthetics</subject>
|
|
<from>Rita Raley</from>
|
|
<to><empyre@lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au></to>
|
|
<date>Thu Feb 13 16:39:25 EST 2014</date>
|
|
<content>An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
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|
URL: <http://lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au/pipermail/empyre/attachments/20140212/cd6ad14e/attachment.htm></content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>5.0</nbr>
|
|
<subject>[-empyre-] post-digital print</subject>
|
|
<from>Søren Pold</from>
|
|
<to><empyre@lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au></to>
|
|
<date>Wed Feb 26 19:48:29 EST 2014</date>
|
|
<content>I've been working on and off with relations between literature and digitization almost the last twenty years since I began my PhD on relations between media and literature affected by the digital. In my PhD dissertation, completed in 2000, it was my point that literature has consistently dealt with media as part of its content but also as a formal reflection taking up panoramic (Honoré de Balzac) and cinematographic (Raymond Chandler, Steve Erickson) ways of structuring the urban experience of respectively Paris and Los Angeles. This generally happened in two ways: 1) an experiential, visual media related or multimedia-related way relating to the spread of new forms of (mainly but not only) visual experience ; 2) a formal, structural, bureaucratic way, e.g. relating to the rise of statistics, surveillance, intelligence, etc. With the computer we also see both threads as e.g. related to multimedia (games, etc.), GUIs and on the other hand programming, networked structures, hypertext can be said to follow the formal, structural, bureaucratic line of development, e.g. through control and management. However, my point at the time (2000) was that because of the digital, alphabetic nature of the digital, the computer was a medium (or a meta-/post-medium or perhaps language system?), which can be directly written, edited and in general treated like a language system. At that time my examples were etoy's digital hijack, jodi.org and i/o/d's webstalker. So in my understanding the computer and digital publishing was not a break with - but a continuation of print - an understanding, which I built on e.g. Walter Benjamin, Walter J. Ong and Florian Cramer among others. In this way, the computer can be seen as a literary machine where the writing doesn't only happen on the surface as content, but through coding and structuring becomes part of the functioning of the medium.
|
|
|
|
In 2000 and 2004 when I published my dissertation this felt on pretty dry ground, at least nationally (the diss. is in Danish), and I moved on to digital aesthetics. However I've recently experienced a renewed interest from literary circles in work related to mine - perhaps because of the relative success of e-books. I've written on how it affects (digital) culture that it now becomes embedded in cultural interfaces and platforms such as smart-phones, tablets, e-readers and game consoles - all platforms that control copying and access through a controlled consumption scheme with heavy monitoring of user behaviour. This has actually led to quite some discussion nationally - both before and after Snowden - that e.g. Amazon, Apple, Microsoft and Google closely monitor their users reading behavior. Furthermore, I've collaborated with libraries in exploring the media changes, e.g. through installations of digital/electronic literature in library spaces such as the installation Ink created with colleagues and collaborators. (http://darc.imv.au.dk/?p=2931).
|
|
This installation can be seen as post-digital in that it aims to make people in libraries reflect on the media change by letting them compose poems (Queneau-style but written by a Danish author Peter-Clement Woetman) through using books as interaction device, producing texts on screen and on print. In this way it focuses on the media change, the ergodic reading process and social, performative collaboration. Another project has been conducting workshops with colleagues (Morten Riis, Andrew Prior, Sandra Boss, Lone Koefoed Hansen and more) around cassette tapes and bygone music media (which we've written on in the APRJA Transmediale newspaper and in the journal issue that comes out very soon). Furthermore we've been publishing, e.g. POD books in Danish and English by e.g. Christian Ulrik Andersen, Geoff Cox and Tatiana Bazzichelli and Geoff Cox and Christian Ulrik Andersen have done the newspaper series of which the post-digital newspaper was the fourth. (See http://darc.imv.au.dk/ and http://www.aprja.net/).
|
|
|
|
Concludingly, things are strangely coming together for me, and I see the post-digital (sharing the idea that it is a crappy concept that is useful) as potentially a critical way to discuss media change confronted with digitization after the digital revolution is over. A few points to this:
|
|
- The digital revolution is over. The utopian times are past. This is somewhat healthy, since we can now begin to look more concretely and in a sober way on the material changes that are happening and how they affect culture.
|
|
- However, we also miss the utopian days now, when digital technologies and media are only about rationalization, capitalization, control, monitoring. How do we develop alternatives, when we've stopped believing in the power of technology? And this 'we' is not only 'us', but increasingly the broad culture, who've stopped believing in the promises of technology. We need alternative uses, designs, understandings - and perhaps we can find them by combining history, technology and cultural uses?
|
|
- The post-digital is a broad realization that digitization is not a binary transformation from old to new media, but is a layered process affecting both production, archiving, distribution and reception in different combinations and ways.
|
|
- The post-digital is thus a realization, that the digital does not simply transform everything into some virtual dimension, but that it is - and needs to be in ways we haven't quite yet imagined - coupled with the material, spatial, urban, cultural, human flesh. This is both good and bad news.
|
|
- The post-digital is an opportunity to develop the historical: both the histories of digital media, from Turing to Kurenniemi and the histories of media and media use from Raymond Williams to Matthew Fuller. Furthermore it is the opportunity to realize that this history is not linear nor straigh-forward but that e.g. the history of hypertext is forking and looping and the culture of the computer does not compute.
|
|
|
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Btw. I excuse I haven't been that active, but we're going through quite some turmoil at Aarhus University because of the biggest lay-off in Danish university history…
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--
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-------------------------------------------------------------
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Søren Pold
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Lektor (Ass. Prof.), Ph.d.
|
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Informationsvidenskab & Digital Design
|
|
DAC Katrinebjerg
|
|
Aarhus Universitet
|
|
Helsingforsgade 14
|
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DK-8200 Aarhus N
|
|
Danmark
|
|
|
|
Chair of the Research Program Humans & IT
|
|
http://dac.au.dk/en/research/research-programmes/humans-and-information-technology/
|
|
Participatory Information Technology
|
|
http://pit.au.dk/
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http://darc.imv.au.dk/
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Office: Wiener 224
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**** NEW EMAIL**** pold at cavi.au.dk
|
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(+45) 871 61994
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skype: soerenpold
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-----------------------------------------------------------</content>
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</mail>
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<mail>
|
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<nbr>5.1</nbr>
|
|
<subject>[-empyre-] post-digital print</subject>
|
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<from>Florian Cramer</from>
|
|
<to><empyre@lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au></to>
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<date>Fri Feb 28 08:46:32 EST 2014</date>
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|
<content>My own self-description is very similar to Søren's. As matter of fact, both
|
|
of us have worked on the same subjects and experienced similar developments
|
|
of our research interests in the past 1 1/2 decades - with the difference
|
|
however that I left university humanities in 2006. (Just as Søren's or even
|
|
much worse, my dissertation fell on dry ground and is probably my least
|
|
known and read text ever although it has appeared as a book by a reputable
|
|
academic publisher - for me the proof that either I can't write books or
|
|
print publishing is factually dead while being kept artificially alive as a
|
|
'radioactive cadaver', to quote Raoul Vaneigem. My recent book Anti-Media
|
|
might be another such disaster despite greatest and most amicable support
|
|
from Geert Lovink's Institute of Network Culture.) Since then, I have been
|
|
working for Rotterdam's art school which is part of a larger polytechnic,
|
|
Hogeschool Rotterdam. The Dutch dual system draws strong dividing lines
|
|
between universities and polytechnics. Our research therefore has to be
|
|
strictly practice- and work field-oriented. My own task is to investigate
|
|
the impact of changes in media and communication on art and design
|
|
professions by creating interconnections between the school and external
|
|
practitioners, and help the school adapt its curricula.
|
|
|
|
Besides that, I work for WORM (http://www.worm.org), a space for
|
|
experimental music, film and events of all kinds, as dean of the WORM
|
|
Parallel University (http://wpu.worm.org), an DIY university for
|
|
non-traditional students. The more our students do themselves, the easier
|
|
they can obtain our Master of Parallels (MoP) degree. The Dutch music
|
|
critic Peter Bruyn was our first laureate.
|
|
|
|
Research facilitated by my center Creating 010 includes Alessandro
|
|
Ludovico's book "Post-Digital Print", Olia Lialina's research on Geocities,
|
|
Hyves and Rotterdam Internet cafés [
|
|
http://contemporary-home-computing.org/still-there/intro.html], Renee
|
|
Turner's research - in collaboration with students and teachers from Piet
|
|
Zwart Institute - on privacy and surveillance [
|
|
http://www.metamute.org/services/openmute-press/sniff-scrape-crawl...-privacy-surveillance-and-our-shadowy-data-double]
|
|
and Aymeric Mansoux' ongoing research on the misunderstandings of Free
|
|
Software, Open Source and copyleft in the arts [
|
|
http://dpi.studioxx.org/demo/?q=fr/node/304].
|
|
|
|
In art and design education, we see that most teachers still live in a
|
|
pre-digital world. Students, on the other hand, are avid consumers mainly
|
|
of social media but hardly participate in online culture or produce work in
|
|
electronic form. This has been researched for us by my Willem de Kooning
|
|
Academy colleague Aldje van Meer [
|
|
http://iwouldratherdesignaposterthanawebsite.nl/]. Currently, 70-80 graphic
|
|
designers graduate at our school every year who have been almost
|
|
exclusively educated to be print designers. At the same time, print
|
|
publishing is shrinking while electronic publishing is steadily growing.
|
|
(Rotterdam, the second-largest city of the Netherlands with 600,000
|
|
inhabitants - 1.1 Million including the metropolitan area -, currently has
|
|
no large bookstore anymore; only two very small ones are left in the city
|
|
center.) According to our knowledge, there are less than ten graphic
|
|
designers in the entire Netherlands who know to design an epub file.
|
|
|
|
I only mention the above to put things into perspective. When we are
|
|
talking about post-digital culture, and new hybrid forms of analog and
|
|
digital, electronic and print media, then often our problem remains that
|
|
the first step to digital hasn't been made yet. There is a tendency in this
|
|
country that the art schools, most of which have more design than art
|
|
students and have curricula based on the classical Bauhaus curriculum,
|
|
resort to an anti-industrial Arts-and-Crafts niche of beautifully crafted
|
|
non-electronic products. For me, this implies a highly political issue of
|
|
art retreating to a luxury niche, giving up on the idea that it should
|
|
engage with and shape everyday culture. (A concept underlying - among
|
|
others - constructivist, Fluxus and Situationist avant-garde, and
|
|
interventionist net art/media art as well.)
|
|
|
|
When I use and cautiously advocate the term "post-digital", I can't avoid
|
|
playing with the fire that this will get misunderstood as a carte blanche
|
|
for uncritical indulgence in neo-crafts.
|
|
|
|
I've collaborated in Søren's transmediale newspaper and 'A Peer-Reviewed
|
|
Journal' (http://www.aprja.net/) with an essay on useful definitions of
|
|
'post-digital'.
|
|
|
|
I agree with Søren's concluding points so fully and wholeheartedly that
|
|
I'll just repeat them:
|
|
|
|
- The digital revolution is over. The utopian times are past. This is
|
|
> somewhat healthy, since we can now begin to look more concretely and in a
|
|
> sober way on the material changes that are happening and how they affect
|
|
> culture.
|
|
>
|
|
> - However, we also miss the utopian days now, when digital technologies
|
|
> and media are only about rationalization, capitalization, control,
|
|
> monitoring. How do we develop alternatives, when we've stopped believing in
|
|
> the power of technology? And this 'we' is not only 'us', but increasingly
|
|
> the broad culture, who've stopped believing in the promises of technology.
|
|
> We need alternative uses, designs, understandings - and perhaps we can find
|
|
> them by combining history, technology and cultural uses?
|
|
>
|
|
> - The post-digital is a broad realization that digitization is not a
|
|
> binary transformation from old to new media, but is a layered process
|
|
> affecting both production, archiving, distribution and reception in
|
|
> different combinations and ways.
|
|
>
|
|
> - The post-digital is thus a realization, that the digital does not simply
|
|
> transform everything into some virtual dimension, but that it is - and
|
|
> needs to be in ways we haven't quite yet imagined - coupled with the
|
|
> material, spatial, urban, cultural, human flesh. This is both good and bad
|
|
> news.
|
|
>
|
|
> - The post-digital is an opportunity to develop the historical: both the
|
|
> histories of digital media, from Turing to Kurenniemi and the histories of
|
|
> media and media use from Raymond Williams to Matthew Fuller. Furthermore it
|
|
> is the opportunity to realize that this history is not linear nor
|
|
> straigh-forward but that e.g. the history of hypertext is forking and
|
|
> looping and the culture of the computer does not compute.
|
|
>
|
|
|
|
Florian</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>6.0</nbr>
|
|
<subject><nettime> Hans Magnus Enzensberger: Rules for the digital world</subject>
|
|
<from>Florian Cramer</from>
|
|
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
|
<date>Sat, 1 Mar 2014 14:53:30 +0100</date>
|
|
<content>Published yesterday by Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung,
|
|
http://www.faz.net/frankfurter-allgemeine-zeitung/enzensbergers-regeln-fuer-die-digitale-welt-wehrt-euch-12826195.html
|
|
|
|
Written by the same Enzensberger who wrote "Constituents of a Theory of the
|
|
Media" (first published in German as "Baukasten zu einer Theorie der
|
|
Medien" in Kursbuch, 20, 1970, first published in English in the New Left
|
|
Review, no. 64, 1970, reprinted in 2003 in the The New Media Reader).
|
|
|
|
This is an unauthorized, quick translation.
|
|
Defend Yourselves!
|
|
|
|
For those who aren't nerds, hackers or cryptographers and have better
|
|
things to do than keep up with the pitfalls of digitalization every hour,
|
|
there are ten simple rules to resist exploitation and surveillance:
|
|
|
|
1
|
|
If you own a mobile phone, throw it away. You had a life before this
|
|
device, and the human race will continue to exist after its disappearance.
|
|
One should avoid the superstitious worship that it enjoys. Neither those
|
|
devices nor their users are any smart, but only those who plug them to us
|
|
in order to accumulate boundless riches and control ordinary people.
|
|
|
|
2
|
|
Whoever offers something for free is suspicious. One should categorically
|
|
refuse anything that passes itself off as a bargain, bonus or freebie. It's
|
|
always a lie. The dupes pay with their privacy, their data and often enough
|
|
with their money.
|
|
|
|
3
|
|
Online banking is a blessing, but only for secret services and criminals.
|
|
|
|
4
|
|
Governments and industries want to abolish cash. They would like to get rid
|
|
of a legal tender that anyone can redeem. Coins and bills are annoying for
|
|
banks, traders, security and fiscal authorities. Plastic cards are not only
|
|
cheaper to produce. Our watchdogs prefer them because they allow tracing of
|
|
any transaction. Therefore, we all should avoid credit, debit and loyalty
|
|
cards. These permanent companions are bothersome and dangerous.
|
|
|
|
5
|
|
The madness of networking every object of daily use - from toothbrush to
|
|
TV, from car to refrigerator - via the Internet, can only be met with total
|
|
boycott. Their manufacturers don't give a single thought to privacy. They
|
|
have a only one vulnerable body part, their bank account. Only bankruptcy
|
|
will teach them.
|
|
|
|
6
|
|
The same applies to politicians. They ignore any objection to their actions
|
|
and omissions. They are submissive to the financial markets and don't dare
|
|
to go against the activities of secret services. But they have a vested
|
|
interest to be reelected. As long as the right to vote still exists, one
|
|
should deny anyone the vote who tolerates digital expropriation instead of
|
|
taking action against it.
|
|
|
|
7
|
|
E-Mail is nice, fast and free. So watch out! If you have a confidential
|
|
message or don't want to be surveilled, take a postcard and pencil.
|
|
Handwriting is hard to read for machines. Nobody suspects important
|
|
information on a 45 cent picture postcard. You don't have to resort to a
|
|
dead drop like in old-fashioned spy novels.
|
|
|
|
8
|
|
Avoid obtaining goods and services via Internet. Vendors like Amazon, Ebay
|
|
and so on store all data and molest their customers with advertising spam.
|
|
Anonymous shopping is better. Acceptable exceptions can be made for
|
|
individual sites that one knows well.
|
|
|
|
9
|
|
Just like network television, the big Internet corporations are primarily
|
|
financed by advertising. This way, they steal their customers' time and
|
|
attention. Someone who ceaseless yells at you and molests you deserves
|
|
punishment. It's recommendable to stay away from everything marketed this
|
|
way, and switch off, once and for all, the stations terrorizing you with
|
|
advertising. This should not only be done for hygienic reasons. As we know,
|
|
particularly the American mega corporations collaborate closely with secret
|
|
services to spy out and control, if possible, any human activity.
|
|
|
|
10
|
|
Networks like Facebook call themselves "social" despite their eagerness to
|
|
treat their customers in the utmost anti-social ways. Whoever wants to have
|
|
friends like this, is a hopeless case. Those who are unfortunate enough to
|
|
be part of such a company, should try to take flight as fast as possible.
|
|
This is not so easy. An octopus won't consent to letting his prey escape.
|
|
|
|
* * *
|
|
|
|
These simple measures can't solve the political problem that society is
|
|
faced with. Given the passiveness and servility of the parties ruling this
|
|
country [the coalition of Christian and Social Democrats in Germany], it's
|
|
remarkable enough if one notable politician speaks up. His name is Martin
|
|
Schulz, and he's not only president of the European Parliament but even a
|
|
Social Democrat. Until now, neither he nor his party objected to the
|
|
rampant security and control mania in any remarkable way. All respective
|
|
violations, no matter whether foreign imports or domestic products of
|
|
German workmanship, have been given the nod. Storing data, intercepting,
|
|
appeasing - the standard procedure.
|
|
|
|
The sleep of reason will continue to the day when a majority of this
|
|
country's citizens will experience firsthand what has been done to them.
|
|
Perhaps, they will rub their eyes and ask why they let it slip in a time
|
|
when resistance was still possible.</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>6.1</nbr>
|
|
<subject>Re: <nettime> Hans Magnus Enzensberger: Rules for the digital world</subject>
|
|
<from>Cornelia Sollfrank</from>
|
|
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
|
<date>Sun, 2 Mar 2014 14:30:32 +0100</date>
|
|
<content>Thanks for sending via email.
|
|
|
|
Imagine you would have had to hand-write the information and send it to all subscribers of nettime via postcard;-)
|
|
|
|
Cornelia</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>6.2</nbr>
|
|
<subject>Re: <nettime> Hans Magnus Enzensberger: Rules for the digital world</subject>
|
|
<from>Geert Lovink</from>
|
|
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
|
<date>Mon, 3 Mar 2014 12:24:57 +0100</date>
|
|
<content>Thanks Cornelia, and Florian for making the translation. I don't mind the piece but what misses here is a bit of self-reflection of a writer who has been inside the media realm his entire life, and who is unable to put his own 'offline romanticism' in the larger picture of the (German) history of ideas. Apart from this, it is also sad that he is simply badly informed about the current state of the postal system in the age of global surveillance. One link will do: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/07/04/us/monitoring-of-snail-mail.html (U.S. Postal Service Logging All Mail for Law Enforcement). Geert</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>6.3</nbr>
|
|
<subject>Re: <nettime> Hans Magnus Enzensberger: Rules for the digital world</subject>
|
|
<from>Nick</from>
|
|
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
|
<date>Mon, 3 Mar 2014 07:54:57 -0500</date>
|
|
<content>Quoth Cornelia Sollfrank:
|
|
|
|
> Thanks for sending via email.
|
|
>
|
|
> Imagine you would have had to hand-write the information and send it to all subscribers of nettime via postcard;-)
|
|
|
|
Well in fairness the postcard suggestion was "If you have a
|
|
confidential message", which I'm pretty sure doesn't count for
|
|
posting a translation of a message to a publically archived list.
|
|
|
|
Thanks Florian for the translation, I like the rules very much. I do
|
|
wish the sort of "stay safe online" advice schools give out was more
|
|
like this. But that assumes schools to be quite different
|
|
institutions than they are.
|
|
|
|
The one rule I wasn't sure about was #3, "Online banking is a
|
|
blessing, but only for secret services and criminals." It's
|
|
certainly useful for a criminal (though depending on the bank, that
|
|
may be more of a problem for them than for you, according to if
|
|
they'll admit responsibility and refund you), but is it useful for
|
|
secret services? All the transactions you can make with online
|
|
banking are recorded and (I presume) can be obtained easily by
|
|
secret services just as readily offline.
|
|
|
|
Nick</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>6.4</nbr>
|
|
<subject>Re: <nettime> Hans Magnus Enzensberger: Rules for the digital world</subject>
|
|
<from>verlag</from>
|
|
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
|
<date>Mon, 3 Mar 2014 15:24:03 +0100</date>
|
|
<content>If you have a confidential message use poetry for encryption.
|
|
|
|
"Moazzam Begg, who spent three years in Guant?namo Bay before being
|
|
released without charge in January 2005, began writing poetry as a way of
|
|
explaining what he was going through. He knew that everything he wrote
|
|
would be censored, so used poetry to try to describe his situation to his
|
|
family." (http://www.theguardian.com/books/2007/feb/26/poetry.guantanamo)
|
|
|
|
I think today's kids are instinctively aware of those issues. It's a matter
|
|
of "being On/Off" for them, as they put it into words. Like walking down a
|
|
street in public, "being On".</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>6.5</nbr>
|
|
<subject>Re: <nettime> Hans Magnus Enzensberger: Rules for the digital world</subject>
|
|
<from>Florian Cramer</from>
|
|
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
|
<date>Mon, 3 Mar 2014 20:19:47 +0100</date>
|
|
<content>Since several people asked me off-list about my own opinion on
|
|
Enzensberger's piece and my reasons for posting it here, the best answer I
|
|
can give is an essay I completed just a few weeks ago for _A Peer-Review
|
|
Journal_ (APRJA, http://www.aprja.net), an Open Access journal on digital
|
|
culture edited by Christian Ulrik Andersen and Geoff Cox at Aarhus
|
|
University in Denmark. While it now reads like a reply to Enzensberger, it
|
|
was actually written early as part of a larger "post-digital research"
|
|
workshop organized by Aarhus University at Kunsthal Aarhus in collaboration
|
|
with transmediale festival; all other essays in the current number of APRJA
|
|
were products of this workshop, too.
|
|
|
|
The original essay, including images that are missing here, has been
|
|
published at http://www.aprja.net/?p=1318
|
|
|
|
Florian
|
|
|
|
# What is 'Post-digital'?
|
|
|
|
## Typewriters vs. imageboard memes
|
|
|
|
In January 2013, a picture of a young man typing on a mechanical typewriter
|
|
while sitting on a park bench went 'viral' on the popular website [Reddit](
|
|
http://www.reddit.com/r/funny/comments/16vlkc/youre_not_a_real_hipster_until/).
|
|
The image was presented in the typical style of an 'image macro' or
|
|
'imageboard meme' (Klok 16-19), with a sarcastic caption in bold white
|
|
Impact typeface that read: "You're not a real hipster ??? until you take your
|
|
typewriter to the park".
|
|
|
|
The meme, which was still making news at the time of writing this paper in
|
|
late 2013 (Hermlin), nicely illustrates the rift between 'digital' and
|
|
'post-digital' cultures. Imageboard memes are arguably the best example of
|
|
a contemporary popular mass culture which emerged and developed entirely on
|
|
the Internet. Unlike earlier popular forms of visual culture such as comic
|
|
strips, they are anonymous creations ??? and as such, even gave birth to the
|
|
now-famous Anonymous movement, as described by (Klok 16-19).
|
|
|
|
The 'digital' imageboard meme portrays the 'analog' typewriter hipster as
|
|
its own polar opposite ??? in a strictly technical sense however, even a
|
|
mechanical typewriter is a digital writing system, as I will explain later
|
|
in this text. Also, the typewriter's keyboard makes it a direct precursor
|
|
of today's personal computer systems, which were used for typing the text
|
|
of the imageboard meme in question. Yet in a colloquial sense, the
|
|
typewriter is definitely an 'analog' machine, as it does not contain any
|
|
computational electronics.
|
|
|
|
In 2013, using a mechanical typewriter rather than a mobile computing
|
|
device is, as the imageboard meme suggests, no longer a sign of being
|
|
old-fashioned. It is instead a deliberate choice of renouncing electronic
|
|
technology, thereby calling into question the common assumption that
|
|
computers, as meta-machines, represent obvious technological progress and
|
|
therefore constitute a logical upgrade from any older media technology ???
|
|
much in the same way as using a bike today calls into question the common
|
|
assumption, in many Western countries since World War II, that the
|
|
automobile is by definition a rationally superior means of transportation,
|
|
regardless of the purpose or context.
|
|
|
|
Typewriters are not the only media which have recently been resurrected as
|
|
literally post-digital devices: other examples include vinyl records, and
|
|
more recently also audio cassettes, as well as analog photography and
|
|
artists' printmaking. And if one examines the work of contemporary young
|
|
artists and designers, including art school students, it is obvious that
|
|
these 'old' media are vastly more popular than, say, making imageboard
|
|
memes.[^1]
|
|
## Post-digital: a term that sucks but is useful
|
|
|
|
### 1. Disenchantment with 'digital'
|
|
|
|
I was first introduced to the term 'post-digital' in 2007 by my
|
|
then-student Marc Chia ??? now Tara Transitory, also performing under the
|
|
moniker _One Man Nation_. My first reflex was to dismiss the whole concept
|
|
as irrelevant in an age of cultural, social and economic upheavals driven
|
|
to a large extent by computational digital technology. Today, in the age of
|
|
ubiquitous mobile devices, drone wars and the gargantuan data operations of
|
|
the NSA, Google and other global players, the term may seem even more
|
|
questionable than it did in 2007: as either a sign of ignorance of our
|
|
contemporary reality, or else of some deliberate Thoreauvian-Luddite
|
|
withdrawal from this reality.
|
|
|
|
More pragmatically, the term 'post-digital' can be used to describe either
|
|
a contemporary disenchantment with digital information systems and media
|
|
gadgets, or a period in which our fascination with these systems and
|
|
gadgets has become historical ??? just like the dot-com age ultimately became
|
|
historical in the 2013 novels of Thomas Pynchon and Dave Eggers. After
|
|
Edward Snowden's disclosures of the NSA's all-pervasive digital
|
|
surveillance systems, this disenchantment has quickly grown from a niche
|
|
'hipster' phenomenon to a mainstream position ??? one which is likely to have
|
|
a serious impact on all cultural and business practices based on networked
|
|
electronic devices and Internet services.
|
|
|
|
### 2. Revival of 'old' media
|
|
|
|
While a Thoreauvian-Luddite digital withdrawal may seem a tempting option
|
|
for many, it is fundamentally a na??ve position, particularly in an age when
|
|
even the availability of natural resources depends on global computational
|
|
logistics, and intelligence agencies such as the NSA intercept paper mail
|
|
as well as digital communications. In the context of the arts, such a
|
|
withdrawal seems little more than a rerun of the 19th-century Arts and
|
|
Crafts movement, with its programme of handmade production as a means of
|
|
resistance to encroaching industrialisation. Such (romanticist) attitudes
|
|
undeniably play an important role in today's renaissance of artists'
|
|
printmaking, handmade film labs, limited vinyl editions, the rebirth of the
|
|
audio cassette, mechanical typewriters, analog cameras and analog
|
|
synthesizers. An empirical study conducted by our research centre Creating
|
|
010 in Rotterdam among Bachelor students from most of the art schools in
|
|
the Netherlands indicated that contemporary young artists and designers
|
|
clearly prefer working with non-electronic media: given the choice, some
|
|
70% of them "would rather design a poster than a website" (Van Meer, 14).
|
|
In the Netherlands at least, education programmes for digital communication
|
|
design have almost completely shifted from art academies to engineering
|
|
schools, while digital media are often dismissed as commercial and
|
|
mainstream by art students (Van Meer, 5). Should we in turn dismiss their
|
|
position as romanticist and neo-Luddite?
|
|
## Post-what?
|
|
|
|
### Post-digital = postcolonial; post-digital ??? post-histoire
|
|
|
|
On closer inspection however, the dichotomy between digital big data and
|
|
neo-analog do-it-yourself (DIY) is really not so clear-cut. Accordingly,
|
|
'post-digital' is arguably more than just a sloppy descriptor for a
|
|
contemporary (and possibly nostalgic) cultural trend. It is an objective
|
|
fact that the age in which we now live is _not_ a post-digital age, neither
|
|
in terms of technological developments ??? with no end in sight to the trend
|
|
towards further digitisation and computerisation ??? nor from a
|
|
historico-philosophical perspective. Regarding the latter, (Cox) offers a
|
|
valid critique of the "periodising logic" embedded in the term
|
|
'post-digital', which places it in the dubious company of other
|
|
historico-philosophical 'post'-isms, from postmodernism to post-histoire.
|
|
|
|
However, 'post-digital' can be defined more pragmatically and meaningfully
|
|
within popular cultural and colloquial frames of reference. This applies to
|
|
the prefix 'post' as well as the notion of 'digital'. The prefix 'post'
|
|
should not be understood here in the same sense as postmodernism and
|
|
post-histoire, but rather in the sense of post-punk (a continuation of punk
|
|
culture in ways which are somehow still punk, yet also beyond punk);
|
|
post-communism (as the ongoing social-political reality in former Eastern
|
|
Bloc countries); post-feminism (as a critically revised continuation of
|
|
feminism, with blurry boundaries with 'traditional', unprefixed feminism);
|
|
postcolonialism (see next paragraph); and, to a lesser extent,
|
|
post-apocalyptic (a world in which the apocalypse is not over, but has
|
|
progressed from a discrete breaking point to an ongoing condition ??? in
|
|
Heideggerian terms, from _Ereignis_ to _Being_ ??? and with a contemporary
|
|
popular iconography pioneered by the _Mad Max_ films in the 1980s).
|
|
|
|
None of these terms ??? post-punk, post-communism, post-feminism,
|
|
postcolonialism, post-apocalyptic ??? can be understood in a purely Hegelian
|
|
sense of an inevitable linear progression of cultural and intellectual
|
|
history. Rather, they describe more subtle cultural shifts and ongoing
|
|
mutations. Postcolonialism does not in any way mean an end of colonialism
|
|
(akin to Hegel's and Fukuyama's "end of history"), but rather its mutation
|
|
into new power structures, less obvious but no less pervasive, which have a
|
|
profound and lasting impact on languages and cultures, and most
|
|
significantly continue to govern geopolitics and global production chains.
|
|
In this sense, the post-digital condition is a post-apocalyptic one: the
|
|
state of affairs after the initial upheaval caused by the computerisation
|
|
and global digital networking of communication, technical infrastructures,
|
|
markets and geopolitics.
|
|
### 'Digital' = sterile high tech?
|
|
|
|
Also, the 'digital' in 'post-digital' should not be understood in any
|
|
technical-scientific or media-theoretical sense, but rather in the way the
|
|
term is broadly used in popular culture ??? the kind of connotation best
|
|
illustrated by a recent Google Image Search result for the word 'digital':
|
|
The first thing we notice is how the term 'digital' is, still in 2013,
|
|
visually associated with the colour blue. Blue is literally the coolest
|
|
colour in the colour spectrum (with a temperature of 15,000 to 27,000
|
|
Kelvin), with further suggestions of cultural coolness and cleanness. The
|
|
simplest definition of 'post-digital' describes a media aesthetics which
|
|
opposes such digital high-tech and high-fidelity cleanness. The term was
|
|
coined in 2000 by the musician Kim Cascone, in the context of glitch
|
|
aesthetics in contemporary electronic music (Cascone, 12). Also in 2000,
|
|
the Australian sound and media artist Ian Andrews used the term more
|
|
broadly as part of a concept of "post-digital aesthetics" which rejected
|
|
the "idea of digital progress" as well as "a teleological movement toward
|
|
'perfect' representation" (Andrews).
|
|
|
|
Cascone and Andrews considered the notion of 'post-digital' primarily as an
|
|
antidote to techno-Hegelianism. The underlying context for both their
|
|
papers was a culture of audio-visual production in which 'digital' had long
|
|
been synonymous with 'progress': the launch of the Fairlight CMI audio
|
|
sampler in 1979, the digital audio CD and the MIDI standard (both in 1982),
|
|
software-only digital audio workstations in the early 1990s, real-time
|
|
programmable software synthesis with Max/MSP in 1997. Such teleologies are
|
|
still prevalent in video and TV technology, with the ongoing transitions
|
|
from SD to HD and 4K, from DVD to BluRay, from 2D to 3D ??? always marketed
|
|
with a similar narrative of innovation, improvement, and higher fidelity of
|
|
reproduction. In rejecting this narrative, Cascone and Andrews opposed the
|
|
paradigm of technical quality altogether.
|
|
|
|
Ironically, the use of the term 'post-digital' was somewhat confusing in
|
|
the context of Cascone's paper, since the glitch music defined and
|
|
advocated here actually _was_ digital, and even based on specifically
|
|
digital sound-processing artefacts. On the other hand, and in the same
|
|
sense as post-punk can be seen as a reaction to punk, Cascone's concept of
|
|
'post-digital' may best be understood as a reaction to an age in which
|
|
even camera tripods are being labelled as 'digital', in an effort to market
|
|
them as new and superior technology.
|
|
### 'Digital' = low-quality trash?
|
|
|
|
There is a peculiar overlap between on one hand a post-digital rejection of
|
|
digital high tech, and on the other hand a post-digital rejection of
|
|
digital low quality. Consider for example the persisting argument that
|
|
vinyl LPs sound better than CDs (let alone MP3s); that film photography
|
|
looks better than digital photography (let alone smartphone snapshots);
|
|
that 35mm film projection looks better than digital cinema projection (let
|
|
alone BitTorrent video downloads or YouTube); that paper books are a richer
|
|
medium than websites and e-books; and that something typed on a mechanical
|
|
typewriter has more value than a throwaway digital text file (let alone
|
|
e-mail spam). In fact, the glitch aesthetics advocated by Cascone as
|
|
'post-digital' are precisely the same kind of digital trash dismissed by
|
|
'post-digital' vinyl listeners.
|
|
## Digression: what is digital, what is analog?
|
|
|
|
### Digital ??? binary; digital ??? electronic
|
|
|
|
>From a strictly technological or scientific point of view, Cascone's use of
|
|
the word 'digital' was inaccurate. This also applies to most of what is
|
|
commonly known as 'digital art', 'digital media' and 'digital humanities'.
|
|
Something can very well be 'digital' without being electronic, and without
|
|
involving binary zeroes and ones. It does not even have to be related in
|
|
any way to electronic computers or any other kind of computational device.
|
|
|
|
Conversely, 'analog' does not necessarily mean non-computational or
|
|
pre-computational. There are also analog computers. Using water and two
|
|
measuring cups to compute additions and subtractions ??? of quantities that
|
|
can't be counted exactly ??? is a simple example of analog computing.
|
|
|
|
'Digital' simply means that something is divided into discrete, countable
|
|
units ??? countable using whatever system one chooses, whether zeroes and
|
|
ones, decimal numbers, tally marks on a scrap of paper, or the fingers
|
|
(digits) of one's hand ??? which is where the word 'digital' comes from in
|
|
the first place; in French, for example, the word is 'num??rique'.
|
|
Consequently, the Roman alphabet is a digital system; the movable types of
|
|
Gutenberg's printing press constitute a digital system; the keys of a piano
|
|
are a digital system; Western musical notation is mostly digital, with the
|
|
exception of instructions with non-discrete values such as adagio, piano,
|
|
forte, legato, portamento, tremolo and glissando. Floor mosaics made of
|
|
monochrome tiles are digitally composed images. As all these examples
|
|
demonstrate, 'digital' information never exists in a perfect form, but is
|
|
instead an idealised abstraction of physical matter which, by its material
|
|
nature and the laws of physics, has chaotic properties and often ambiguous
|
|
states.[^2]
|
|
|
|
The hipster's mechanical typewriter, with its discrete set of letters,
|
|
numbers and punctuation marks, is therefore a 'digital' system as defined
|
|
by information science and analytic philosophy (Goodman, 161). However, it
|
|
is also 'analog' in the colloquial sense of the word. This is also the
|
|
underlying connotation in the meme image, with its mocking of 'hipster'
|
|
retro culture. An art curator, on the other hand, might consider the
|
|
typewriter a 'post-digital' medium.
|
|
### Analog = undivided; analog ??? non-computational
|
|
|
|
Conversely, 'analog' means that the information has not been chopped up
|
|
into discrete, countable units, but instead consists of one or more signals
|
|
which vary on a continuous scale, such as a sound wave, a light wave, a
|
|
magnetic field (for example on an audio tape, but also on a computer hard
|
|
disk), the flow of electricity in any circuit including a computer chip, or
|
|
a gradual transition between colours, for example in blended paint.
|
|
(Goodman, 160) therefore defines analog as "undifferentiated in the
|
|
extreme" and "the very antithesis of a notational system".
|
|
|
|
The fingerboard of a violin is analog: it is fretless, and thus undivided
|
|
and continuous. The fingerboard of a guitar, on the other hand, is digital:
|
|
it is divided by frets into discrete notes. What is commonly called
|
|
'analog' cinema film is actually a digital-analog hybrid: the film emulsion
|
|
is analog, since its particles are undifferentiated blobs ordered
|
|
organically and chaotically, and thus not reliably countable in the way
|
|
that pixels are. The combined frames of the film strip, however, are
|
|
digital since they are discrete, chopped up and unambiguously countable.
|
|
|
|
The structure of an analog signal is determined entirely by its
|
|
correspondence (analogy) with the original physical phenomenon which it
|
|
mimics. In the case of the photographic emulsion, the distribution of the
|
|
otherwise chaotic particles corresponds to the distribution of light rays
|
|
which make up an image visible to the human eye. On the audio tape, the
|
|
fluctuations in magnetisation of the otherwise chaotic iron or chrome
|
|
particles correspond to fluctuations in the sound wave which it reproduces.
|
|
|
|
However, the concept of 'post-digital' as defined by Cascone ignored such
|
|
technical-scientific definitions of 'analog' and 'digital' in favour of a
|
|
purely colloquial understanding of these terms.
|
|
## Post-digital = against the universal machine
|
|
|
|
Proponents of 'post-digital' attitudes may reject digital technology as
|
|
either sterile high tech or low-fidelity trash. In both cases, they dismiss
|
|
the idea of digital processing as the sole universal all-purpose form of
|
|
information processing. Consequently, they also dismiss the notion of the
|
|
computer as the universal machine, and the notion of digital computational
|
|
devices as all-purpose media.
|
|
## What, then, is 'post-digital'?
|
|
|
|
(The following is an attempt to recapitulate and order some observations
|
|
which I have formulated in previous publications.[^3])
|
|
### Post-digital = post-digitisation
|
|
|
|
Returning to Cascone and Andrews, but also to post-punk, postcolonialism
|
|
and Mad Max, the term 'post-digital' in its simplest sense describes the
|
|
messy state of media, arts and design _after_ their digitisation (or at
|
|
least the digitisation of crucial aspects of the channels through which
|
|
they are communicated). Sentiments of disenchantment and scepticism may
|
|
also be part of the equation, though this need not necessarily be the case
|
|
??? sometimes, 'post-digital' can in fact mean the exact opposite.
|
|
Contemporary visual art, for example, is only slowly starting to accept
|
|
practitioners of net art as regular contemporary artists ??? and then again,
|
|
preferably those like Cory Arcangel whose work is white cube-compatible.
|
|
Yet its discourse and networking practices have been profoundly transformed
|
|
by digital media such as the e-flux mailing list, art blogs and the
|
|
electronic e-flux journal. In terms of circulation, power and influence,
|
|
these media have largely superseded printed art periodicals, at least as
|
|
far as the art system's in-crowd of artists and curators is concerned.
|
|
Likewise, when printed newspapers shift their emphasis from daily news
|
|
(which can be found quicker and cheaper on the Internet) to investigative
|
|
journalism and commentary ??? like _The Guardian_'s coverage of the NSA's
|
|
PRISM programme ??? they effectively transform themselves into post-digital
|
|
or post-digitisation media.
|
|
### Post-digital = anti-'new media'
|
|
|
|
'Post-digital' thus refers to a state in which the disruption brought upon
|
|
by digital information technology has already occurred. This can mean, as
|
|
it did for Cascone, that this technology is no longer perceived as
|
|
disruptive. Consequently, 'post-digital' stands in direct opposition to the
|
|
very notion of 'new media'. At the same time, as its negative mirror image,
|
|
it exposes ??? arguably even deconstructs ??? the latter's hidden teleology:
|
|
when the term 'post-digital' draws critical reactions focusing on the
|
|
dubious historico-philosophical connotations of the prefix 'post', one
|
|
cannot help but wonder about a previous lack of such critical thinking
|
|
regarding the older (yet no less Hegelian) term 'new media'.
|
|
### Post-digital = hybrids of 'old' and 'new' media
|
|
|
|
'Post-digital' describes a perspective on digital information technology
|
|
which no longer focuses on technical innovation or improvement, but instead
|
|
rejects the kind of techno-positivist innovation narratives exemplified by
|
|
media such as _Wired_ magazine, Ray Kurzweil's Google-sponsored
|
|
'singularity' movement, and of course Silicon Valley. Consequently,
|
|
'post-digital' eradicates the distinction between 'old' and 'new' media, in
|
|
theory as well as in practice. Kenneth Goldsmith notes that his students
|
|
"mix oil paint while Photoshopping and scour flea markets for vintage vinyl
|
|
while listening to their iPods" (Goldsmith, 226). Working at an art school,
|
|
I observe the same. Young artists and designers choose media for their own
|
|
particular material aesthetic qualities (including artefacts), regardless
|
|
of whether these are a result of analog material properties or of digital
|
|
processing. Lo-fi imperfections are embraced ??? the digital glitch and
|
|
jitter of Cascone's music along with the grain, dust, scratches and hiss in
|
|
analog reproduction ??? as a form of practical exploration and research that
|
|
examines materials through their imperfections and malfunctions. It is a
|
|
post-digital hacker attitude of taking systems apart and using them in ways
|
|
which subvert the original intention of the design.
|
|
### Post-digital = retro?
|
|
|
|
No doubt, there is a great deal of overlap between on one hand post-digital
|
|
mimeograph printmaking, audio cassette production, mechanical typewriter
|
|
experimentation and vinyl DJing, and on the other hand various
|
|
hipster-retro media trends ??? including digital simulations of analog lo-fi
|
|
in popular smartphone apps such as Instagram, Hipstamatic and iSupr8. But
|
|
there is a qualitative difference between simply using superficial and
|
|
stereotypical ready-made effects, and the thorough discipline and study
|
|
required to make true 'vintage' media work, driven by a desire for
|
|
non-formulaic aesthetics.
|
|
|
|
Still, such practices can only be meaningfully called 'post-digital' when
|
|
they do not merely revive older media technologies, but functionally
|
|
repurpose them in relation to digital media technologies: zines that become
|
|
anti-blogs or non-blogs, vinyl as anti-CD, cassette tapes as anti-MP3,
|
|
analog film as anti-video.
|
|
### Post-digital = 'old' media used like 'new media'
|
|
|
|
At the same time, new ethical and cultural conventions which became
|
|
mainstream with Internet communities and Open Source culture are being
|
|
retroactively applied to the making of non-digital and post-digital media
|
|
products. A good example of this are collaborative zine conventions, a
|
|
thriving subculture documented on the blog [fanzines.tumblr.com](
|
|
http://fanzines.tumblr.com/) and elsewhere. These events, where people come
|
|
together to collectively create and exchange zines (i.e. small-circulation,
|
|
self-published magazines, usually focusing on the maker's cultural and/or
|
|
political areas of interest), are in fact the exact opposite of the 'golden
|
|
age' zine cultures of the post-punk 1980s and 1990s, when most zines were
|
|
the hyper-individualistic product and personality platforms of one single
|
|
maker. If we were to describe a contemporary zine fair or mimeography
|
|
community art space using Lev Manovich's _new media_ taxonomy of 'Numerical
|
|
Representation', 'Modularity', 'Automation', 'Variability' and
|
|
'Transcoding' (Manovich, _The Language of New Media_, 27-48), then
|
|
'Modularity', 'Variability' and ??? in a more loosely metaphorical sense ???
|
|
'Transcoding' would still apply to the contemporary cultures working with
|
|
these 'old' media. In these cases, the term 'post-digital' usefully
|
|
describes 'new media'-cultural approaches to working with so-called 'old
|
|
media'.
|
|
### DIY vs. corporate media, rather than 'new' vs. 'old' media
|
|
|
|
When hacker-style and community-centric working methods are no longer
|
|
specific to 'digital' culture (since they are now just as likely to be
|
|
found at an 'analog' zine fair as in a 'digital' computer lab), then the
|
|
established dichotomy of 'old' and 'new' media ??? as synonymous in practice
|
|
with 'analog' and 'digital' ??? becomes obsolete, making way for a new
|
|
differentiation: one between shrink-wrapped culture and do-it-yourself
|
|
culture. The best example of this development (at least among mainstream
|
|
media) is surely the magazine and website _Make_, published by O'Reilly
|
|
since 2005, and instrumental for the foundation of the contemporary 'maker
|
|
movement'. _Make_ covers 3D printing, Arduino hardware hacking, fab lab
|
|
technology, as well as classical DIY and crafts, and hybrids between
|
|
various 'new' and 'old' technologies.
|
|
|
|
The 1990s / early 2000s assumption that 'old' mass media such as
|
|
newspapers, movies, television and radio are corporate, while 'new media'
|
|
such as websites are DIY, is no longer true now that user-generated content
|
|
has been co-opted into corporate social media and mobile apps. The Internet
|
|
as a self-run alternative space ??? central to many online activist and
|
|
artist projects, from _The Thing_ onwards ??? is no longer taken for granted
|
|
by anyone born after 1990: for younger generations, the Internet is
|
|
associated mainly with corporate, registration-only services.[^4]
|
|
## Revisiting the typewriter hipster meme
|
|
|
|
The alleged typewriter hipster later turned out to be a writer who earned
|
|
his livelihood by selling custom-written stories from a bench in the park.
|
|
The imageboard meme photo was taken from an angle that left out his sign,
|
|
taped to his typewriter case: "One-of-a-kind, unique stories while you
|
|
wait". In an article for the website _The Awl_, he recollects how the meme
|
|
made him "An Object Of Internet Ridicule" and even open hatred.[^7] Knowing
|
|
the whole story, one can only conclude that his decision to bring a
|
|
mechanical typewriter to the park was pragmatically the best option.
|
|
Electronic equipment (a laptop with a printer) would have been cumbersome
|
|
to set up, dependent on limited battery power, and prone to weather damage
|
|
and theft, while handwriting would have been too slow, insufficiently
|
|
legible, and lacking the appearance of a professional writer's work.
|
|
|
|
Had he been an art student, even in a media arts programme, the typewriter
|
|
would still have been the right choice for this project. This is a perfect
|
|
example of a post-digital choice: using the technology most suitable to the
|
|
job, rather than automatically 'defaulting' to the latest 'new media'
|
|
device. It also illustrates the post-digital hybridity of 'old' and 'new'
|
|
media, since the writer advertises (again, on the sign on his typewriter
|
|
case) his Twitter account " {AT} rovingtypist", and conversely uses this account
|
|
to promote his story-writing service. He has effectively repurposed the
|
|
typewriter from a prepress tool to a personalised small press, thus giving
|
|
the 'old' technology a new function usually associated with 'new media', by
|
|
exploiting specific qualities of the 'old' which make up for the
|
|
limitations of the 'new'. Meanwhile, he also applies a 'new media'
|
|
sensibility to his use of 'old media': user-customised products, created in
|
|
a social environment, with a "donate what you can" payment model. Or
|
|
rather, the dichotomy of community media vs. mass media has been flipped
|
|
upside-down, so that a typewriter is now a community media device, while
|
|
participatory websites have turned into the likes of _Reddit_, assuming the
|
|
role of yellow press mass media ??? including mob hatred incited by wilful
|
|
misrepresentation.
|
|
## The desire for agency
|
|
|
|
Cascone and Andrews partly contradicted themselves when they defined the
|
|
concept of 'post-digital' in the year 2000. Though they rejected the
|
|
advocacy of 'new media', they also relied heavily on it. Cascone's paper
|
|
drew on Nicholas Negroponte's _Wired_ article "Beyond Digital"
|
|
(Negroponte), while Ian Andrews' paper referenced Lev Manovich's
|
|
"Generation Flash", an article which promoted the very opposite of the
|
|
analog/digital, retro/contemporary hybridisations currently associated with
|
|
the term 'post-digital' (Manovich, "Generation Flash"). We could
|
|
metaphorically describe post-digital cultures as postcolonial practices in
|
|
a communications world taken over by a military-industrial complex made up
|
|
of only a handful of global players. More simply, we could describe these
|
|
cultures as a rejection of such dystopian techno-utopias as Ray Kurzweil's
|
|
and Google's Singularity University, the Quantified Self movement, and
|
|
sensor-controlled 'Smart Cities'.
|
|
|
|
And yet, post-digital subculture, whether in Detroit, Rotterdam or
|
|
elsewhere, is on a fundamental level not so different from such mainstream
|
|
Silicon Valley utopias. For (Van Meer), the main reason why art students
|
|
prefer designing posters to designing websites is due to a fiction of
|
|
agency - in this case, an illusion of more control over the medium.
|
|
Likewise, 'digital' cultures are driven by similar illusions of free will
|
|
and individual empowerment. The Quantified Self movement, for example, is
|
|
based on a fiction of agency over one's own body. The entire concept of
|
|
DIY, whether non-digital, digital or post-digital, is based on the fiction
|
|
of agency implied by the very notion of the self-made.
|
|
|
|
Each of these fictions of agency represents one extreme in how individuals
|
|
relate to the techno-political and economic realities of our time: either
|
|
over-identification with systems, or rejection of these same systems. Each
|
|
of these extremes is, in its own way, symptomatic of a _systems crisis_ ???
|
|
not a crisis of this or that system, but rather a crisis of the very
|
|
paradigm of 'system', as defined by General Systems Theory, itself an
|
|
offshoot of cybernetics. A term such as "post-Snowden" describes only one
|
|
(important) aspect of a bigger picture:[^8] a crisis of the cybernetic
|
|
notion of 'system' which neither 'digital' nor 'post-digital' ??? two terms
|
|
ultimately rooted in systems theory ??? are able to leave behind, or even
|
|
adequately describe.
|
|
## Works cited
|
|
|
|
Andrews, Ian. "Post-digital Aesthetics and the return to Modernism." (2000)
|
|
Web. December 2013 <http://www.ian-andrews.org/texts/postdig.html>
|
|
|
|
Cascone, Kim. "The Aesthetics of Failure: 'Post-Digital' Tendencies in
|
|
Contemporary Computer Music." _Computer Music Journal_, 24.4 (2000): 12-18.
|
|
Print.
|
|
|
|
Cox, Geoff. "Prehistories of the Post-digital: some old problems with
|
|
post-anything." (2013) Web. December 2013 <
|
|
http://post-digital.projects.cavi.dk/?p=578>
|
|
|
|
Cramer, Florian. "Post-Digital Aesthetics." _Jeu de Paume le magazine_, May
|
|
2013. Web. December 2013 <
|
|
http://lemagazine.jeudepaume.org/2013/05/florian-cramer-post-digital-aesthetics/
|
|
>
|
|
|
|
Cramer, Florian. "Post-Digital Writing." _electronic book review_, December
|
|
2012. Web. December 2013 <
|
|
http://electronicbookreview.com/thread/electropoetics/postal>
|
|
|
|
Eggers, Dave. _The Circle._ New York: Knopf, 2013. Print.
|
|
|
|
Goldsmith, Kenneth. _Uncreative Writing: Managing Language in the Digital
|
|
Age_. New York: Columbia UP, 2011. Print.
|
|
|
|
Goodman, Nelson. _Languages of Art_, Indianapolis/Cambridge: Hacket, 1976.
|
|
Print.
|
|
|
|
Gurstein, Michael. "So What Do We Do Now? Living in a Post-Snowden World",
|
|
January 2014. Web. January 2014 <
|
|
http://gurstein.wordpress.com/2014/01/01/so-what-do-we-do-now-living-in-a-post-snowden-world/
|
|
>
|
|
|
|
Hermlin, C.D.. "I Am An Object Of Internet Ridicule, Ask Me Anything." _The
|
|
Awl_, 18 September 2013. Web. December 2013 <
|
|
http://www.theawl.com/2013/09/i-was-a-hated-hipster-meme-and-then-it-got-worse
|
|
>
|
|
|
|
Kittler, Friedrich. "There Is No Software." _Stanford Literature Review_ 9
|
|
(1992): 81-90. Print.
|
|
|
|
Klok, Timo. "4chan and Imageboards", _post.pic_. Ed. Research Group
|
|
Communication in a Digital Age. Rotterdam: Piet Zwart Institute, Willem de
|
|
Kooning Academy Rotterdam University, 2010: 16-19. Print.
|
|
|
|
Manovich, Lev. 'Generation Flash.' (2002). Web. December 2013 <
|
|
http://www.manovich.net/DOCS/generation_flash.doc>
|
|
|
|
Manovich, Lev. _The Language of New Media_. Cambridge, MA: MIT, 2002.
|
|
Print.
|
|
|
|
Negroponte, Nicholas. _Beyond Digital_. _Wired_ 6.12 (1998). Web. December
|
|
2013 <http://web.media.mit.edu/~nicholas/Wired/WIRED6-12.html>
|
|
|
|
Pynchon, Thomas. _Bleeding Edge._ London: Penguin, 2013. Print.
|
|
|
|
Van Meer, Aldje. "I would rather design a poster than a website." _Willem
|
|
de Kooning Academy Rotterdam University_, 2012-2013. Web. December 2013 <
|
|
http://www.iwouldratherdesignaposterthanawebsite.nl>, <
|
|
http://crosslab.wdka.hro.nl/ioi/C010_folder.pdf>
|
|
|
|
[^1]: (Van Meer); also discussed later in this text.
|
|
|
|
[^2]: Even the piano (if considered a medium) is digital only to the degree
|
|
that its keys implement abstractions of its analog-continuous strings.
|
|
|
|
[^3]: (Cramer, _Post-Digital Writing_), (Cramer, _Post-Digital
|
|
Aesthetics_).
|
|
|
|
[^4]: In a project on Open Source culture organised by Aymeric Mansoux with
|
|
Bachelor-level students from the Willem de Kooning Academy in Rotterdam, it
|
|
turned out that many students believed that website user account
|
|
registration was a general feature and requirement of the Internet.
|
|
|
|
[^5]: It's debatable to which degree this reflects the influence of
|
|
non-Western, particularly Japanese (popular) culture on contemporary
|
|
Western visual culture, especially in the field of illustration ??? which
|
|
accounts for an important share of contemporary zine making. This influence
|
|
is even more obvious in digital meme and imageboard culture.
|
|
|
|
[^6]: For example (and six years prior to the typewriter hipster meme),
|
|
Linda Hilfling's contribution to the exhibition MAKEDO at V2_, Rotterdam,
|
|
June 29-30, 2007.
|
|
|
|
[^7]: (Hermlin) writes: "Someone with the user handle 'S2011' summed up the
|
|
thoughts of the hive mind in 7 words: 'Get the fuck out of my city.'
|
|
Illmatic707 chimed in: I have never wanted to fist fight someone so badly
|
|
in my entire life."
|
|
|
|
[^8]: A term frequently used at the Chaos Computer Club's 30th Chaos
|
|
Communication Congress in Hamburg, December 2013, and also very recently by
|
|
(Gurstein).
|
|
|
|
(With cordial thanks to Wendy Hui Kyong Chun, Nishant Shah, Geoff Cox,
|
|
S??ren Pold, Stefan Heidenreich and Andreas Broeckmann for their critical
|
|
feedback, and to Aldje van Meer for her empirical research.)</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>6.6</nbr>
|
|
<subject>Re: <nettime> Hans Magnus Enzensberger: Rules for the digital world</subject>
|
|
<from>Jon Ippolito</from>
|
|
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
|
<date>Wed, 5 Mar 2014 10:01:14 -0500</date>
|
|
<content>I enjoyed Florian Cramer's "What Is 'Post-digital'" essay and share his disdain for our overuse of the word digital. Calling Cornelia Sollfrank's or John Hopkin's work "digital art" seems to me like calling a tiger a large housecat--a convenient identification for zookeepers and curators.
|
|
|
|
So much of this work has already bent the "digital" category. If Enzensberger wants us to send our secrets via postcards, he need look no further than "digital artist" Aram Bartholl's practice of printing postcards with pictures of WiFi passwords (http://datenform.de/greetings-from-the-internet-eng.html).
|
|
|
|
Enzensberger's essay and the typewriter-in-the-park meme are deceptively quaint. Both seem to be throwbacks until you examine them a bit more closely, at which point references to the contemporary culture of Facebook and PRISM emerge. I grew up writing on a typewriter and certainly never saw one in the park before the age of netbooks and iPads.
|
|
|
|
On the other hand, neither the manifesto nor the meme is nuanced enough to apply to my life. When I hear an octogenarian say, "Whoever offers something for free is suspicious," I'm glad he's paying some attention to today's social media critics but I wish he'd thought more carefully before parroting this cliche. Most of the software I use today is "free" and I make most of my software available to others for the same price. I worry that the "free-as-in-Facebook" meme plays easily into the old Microsoft "open source isn't trustworthy" campaign of Fear, Uncertainty, and Doubt.
|
|
|
|
So for me, whoever claims whoever offers something for free is suspicious is suspicious.
|
|
|
|
What happened to the Enzensberger who advocated being "as free as dancers, as aware as football players, as surprising as guerillas?" I'm not surprised (if I understand Andreas Broeckmann correctly) that Enzensberger's essay was published in a conservative newspaper. As much as I despise Facebook, I think we can summon a better response than a curmudgeonly "get off my lawn."
|
|
|
|
Cheers,
|
|
|
|
jon
|
|
|
|
______________________________
|
|
Save culture from oblivion
|
|
Digital Curation online certificate
|
|
http://DigitalCuration.UMaine.edu</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>6.7</nbr>
|
|
<subject>Re: <nettime> Hans Magnus Enzensberger: Rules for the digital world</subject>
|
|
<from>Andreas Broeckmann</from>
|
|
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
|
<date>Mon, 10 Mar 2014 13:35:10 +0100</date>
|
|
<content>Am 10.03.14 02:58, schrieb Nick:
|
|
|
|
> Quoth Felix Stalder:
|
|
>
|
|
>> Enzensberger's text was just a joke, and the FAZ printed
|
|
>> it because it would stir controversy, not because it had much to
|
|
>> offer intellectually.
|
|
>
|
|
> Was it really just a joke? I'm not so sure dismissing it as that is
|
|
> appropriate. Sure it necessarily isn't a deep critique of the power
|
|
> dynamics at play with some of the newer technologies people are
|
|
> using now, but it wasn't designed as that, and I for one find the
|
|
> provocations basically reasonable.</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>6.8</nbr>
|
|
<subject>Re: <nettime> Hans Magnus Enzensberger: Rules for the digital world</subject>
|
|
<from>Armin Medosch</from>
|
|
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
|
<date>Mon, 10 Mar 2014 14:32:40 +0000</date>
|
|
<content>The point I want to make is not so much about Enzensbergers text -
|
|
the poet has clearly let himself down - but the publishing context.
|
|
FAZ is on a campaign against Gratiskultur - the free culture of
|
|
the internet. A few days earlier there was a text by Jaron Lanier
|
|
which was pretty much a repetition of his older rant against Digital
|
|
Maoism with a little added surveillance sauce. FAZ does not like the
|
|
net, never did. So they mix cleverly two things, using widespread
|
|
dissatisfaction with surveillance to fight against free culture. This
|
|
is clearly old capital against new capital - the enemy is Google. What
|
|
a pity that Enzensberger allowed himself to be used in that way by an
|
|
arch-conservative newspaper. Lanier also allowed himself to be used
|
|
but thats not such a pity because as his Digital Maoism text showed he
|
|
is beyond the beyond.
|
|
|
|
regards
|
|
Armin</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>6.9</nbr>
|
|
<subject>Re: <nettime> Hans Magnus Enzensberger: Rules for the digital world</subject>
|
|
<from>mp</from>
|
|
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
|
<date>Mon, 10 Mar 2014 18:54:07 +0100</date>
|
|
<content>Armin Medosch wrote:
|
|
> is clearly old capital against new capital - the enemy is Google.
|
|
|
|
so, old capital is a bad thing and new capital is a bad thing, or
|
|
what's the moral of this?
|
|
|
|
or speaking against new capital from the platform of old capital is
|
|
bad?
|
|
|
|
or anything bad about new capital is old bad?
|
|
|
|
or my bad?</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>6.9</nbr>
|
|
<subject>Re: <nettime> Hans Magnus Enzensberger: Rules for the digital world</subject>
|
|
<from>Heiko Recktenwald</from>
|
|
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
|
<date>Mon, 10 Mar 2014 17:15:10 +0100</date>
|
|
<content>Andreas:
|
|
> can be effective in any way if performed in such privatistic ways as
|
|
> suggested in HME's "rules".)
|
|
|
|
Thats what I thought too -- and I think it is completely impossible
|
|
and not even a topic worth to be discussed. The article was not even
|
|
good as a shameless plug for this terrible pathetic social democratic
|
|
former bookseller who wants to rule the EU.
|
|
|
|
What a nonsense and what a megastrange "souvereingty language" for a
|
|
social democrat? Such language was until now used only in the German
|
|
far right (where it is the only important motivation except to have
|
|
fun by provocations).
|
|
|
|
Best, H.</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>6.10</nbr>
|
|
<subject>Re: <nettime> Hans Magnus Enzensberger: Rules for the digital world</subject>
|
|
<from>Florian Cramer</from>
|
|
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
|
<date>Mon, 10 Mar 2014 18:05:52 +0100</date>
|
|
<content>While I'd like to chime in with Andreas' fact check of Enzensberger's
|
|
ten rules:
|
|
|
|
> For those who aren't nerds, hackers or cryptographers and have
|
|
> better things to do than keep up with the pitfalls of digitalization
|
|
> every hour, there are ten simple rules to resist exploitation and
|
|
> surveillance:
|
|
|
|
Unlike Andreas, I think that Enzensberger is right and that critical
|
|
media activist culture delivered the proof in the pudding when it came
|
|
up with the format and name of "Crypto Parties". The implication is,
|
|
indeed, that you need to become at least a low-skilled cryptographer
|
|
who knows what PGP, SSL and TOR mean and how they are used.
|
|
|
|
In Rotterdam, on a CryptoParty last Friday at WORM, we just learned
|
|
again how difficult it is for contemporary Internet users to even
|
|
grasp the concept of a local mail client (like Thunderbird) as opposed
|
|
to Web Mail - and that does not even include complex stuff like
|
|
PGP encryption and key management. But using Web Mail means, by
|
|
definition, that others can read and data mine your correspondence.
|
|
And let's not even go into gory details like keeping up with software
|
|
vulnerabilities (like the SSL bug in Apple's operating systems or the
|
|
very similar GNU-TLS bug from last week). It's fair to say that all
|
|
the computer and Internet communication systems we currently use are
|
|
fundamentally insecure, and that there are likely only a handful of
|
|
systems in the world into which a skilled third party could not break
|
|
into to intercept the data stored on or sent from them.
|
|
|
|
> 1
|
|
> If you own a mobile phone, throw it away.
|
|
|
|
>From a hacker perspective, this is sound advice. Apart from a very
|
|
few fringe, mostly not-yet-existing mobile phone operating systems
|
|
(such as Phil Zimmerman's Black Phone), all of the existing mobile
|
|
phones leak your data. Even a most simple stripped-down mobile phone
|
|
constantly broadcasts your location. The technology to intercept calls
|
|
and data transfers has become trivially simple (as Danja Vasiliev
|
|
and Julian Oliver demonstrated on this year's transmediale festival
|
|
in Berlin). Another issue is that smartphones are multi-sensor
|
|
devices that broadcast megabytes of data (such as bodily movement via
|
|
accelerometers) with their users being aware of it.
|
|
|
|
> 2
|
|
> Whoever offers something for free is suspicious. One should categorically
|
|
> refuse anything that passes itself off as a bargain, bonus or freebie. It's
|
|
> always a lie.
|
|
|
|
I agree with Andreas, but a problem remains that this advice can
|
|
involuntarily backfire against ethical free services offered by
|
|
non-profits (from free WiFi access at a public library to Open Source
|
|
software).
|
|
|
|
> 3
|
|
> Online banking is a blessing, but only for secret services and criminals.
|
|
|
|
Here, Enzensberger's advice is naive, because banking in these times is
|
|
online anyway. If people go to a bank counter instead of homebanking, the
|
|
transaction will travel over the same networks (and most likely, the bank
|
|
employee will use the same online banking web interface). It also ignores
|
|
the data retention and customer tracking built into the international
|
|
banking system via, for example, the SWIFT accord between the EU and the
|
|
USA.
|
|
|
|
> 4
|
|
> Governments and industries want to abolish cash. They would like to get rid
|
|
> of a legal tender that anyone can redeem.
|
|
|
|
This is indeed an important point, and has become a reality in countries
|
|
like Sweden. Contrary to common belief and letting aside all other issues
|
|
of this payment system, Bitcoin is not a solution for this problem because
|
|
all Bitcoin transaction records are publicly visible (as discussed here on
|
|
Nettime previously - no need to open this can of worms again). So far, cash
|
|
is the only truly anonymous, hard-to-trace payment method.
|
|
|
|
> 5
|
|
> The madness of networking every object of daily use - from toothbrush to
|
|
> TV, from car to refrigerator - via the Internet, can only be met with total
|
|
> boycott.
|
|
|
|
The recent news about "smart TVs" spying on its viewers (
|
|
https://securityledger.com/2013/11/fix-from-lg-ends-involuntary-smartt
|
|
v-snooping-but-privacy-questions-remain/) indeed confirm this - and
|
|
the news that "smart refrigerators" are now running spam botnets (
|
|
http://arstechnica.com/security/2014/01/is-your-refrigerator-really-pa
|
|
rt-of-a-massive-spam-sending-botnet/ ). This is one example of the
|
|
term "post-digital" making sense - that in many cases, it's better
|
|
that devices are offline than online.
|
|
|
|
> 6
|
|
> The same applies to politicians. They ignore any objection to their actions
|
|
> and omissions. They are submissive to the financial markets and don't dare
|
|
> to go against the activities of secret services.
|
|
|
|
No point in arguing with that. Most likely, most of them are in the pockets
|
|
of the secret services that have collected compromising information on them.
|
|
|
|
> 7
|
|
> E-Mail is nice, fast and free. So watch out! If you have a confidential
|
|
> message or don't want to be surveilled, take a postcard and pencil.
|
|
|
|
This advice is technologically naive. It's known that the NSA and other
|
|
secret services have systematically scanned and collected postal mail meta
|
|
data (sender and receiver adresses along with timestamps), postal mail
|
|
relies on digital logistics (and digitized meta data) anyway.
|
|
Nearly-unreadable handwriting on post cards would not last very long as an
|
|
obfuscation device. All the secret service had to do is to run a Captcha
|
|
program for the handwriting that would fail OCR.
|
|
|
|
> 8
|
|
> Avoid obtaining goods and services via Internet. Vendors like Amazon, Ebay
|
|
> and so on store all data and molest their customers with advertising spam.
|
|
|
|
Naive advice, again, since your supermarket collects the same information -
|
|
either via loyalty discount cards or simply by collecting data from card
|
|
payments.
|
|
|
|
> 9
|
|
> Just like network television, the big Internet corporations are primarily
|
|
> financed by advertising.
|
|
|
|
This is a naive view as well, or it might at best be true for Google.
|
|
Enzensberger fails to understand the system of venture capital
|
|
financing in combination with IPOs and stock markets that work as a
|
|
global speculative scheme. (In less abstract words: It doesn't matter
|
|
whether a company like Facebook will ever make real profits since its
|
|
founders, venture capital investors and first-wave stock buyers will
|
|
have made billions before the company tanks.) He also excludes the
|
|
possibility that selling customer data with third parties, including
|
|
law enforcement, intelligence agencies, insurance companies, banks
|
|
etc. might already be a major source of revenue for many Internet
|
|
companies.
|
|
|
|
> 10
|
|
> Networks like Facebook call themselves "social" despite their eagerness to
|
|
> treat their customers in the utmost anti-social ways.
|
|
|
|
Here, Enzensberger sounds like a disgruntled airline customer who
|
|
wants his money back after a flight from hell. He misses the point
|
|
that nowadays, sites like Facebook exist because of peer pressure for
|
|
participation.
|
|
|
|
> friends like this, is a hopeless case. Those who are unfortunate
|
|
> enough to be part of such a company, should try to take flight as
|
|
> fast as possible. This is not so easy. An octopus won't consent to
|
|
> letting his prey escape.
|
|
|
|
True, since Facebook doesn't delete profile data even after people
|
|
have shut down their accounts, and even creates profiles of people who
|
|
aren't on Facebook (and don't intend to sign on) based on the social
|
|
network information (and uploaded E-Mail address books) of registered
|
|
users. This is also true for other web sites such as LinkedIn.
|
|
|
|
> These simple measures can't solve the political problem that society is
|
|
> faced with.
|
|
|
|
No point arguing with this.
|
|
|
|
> The sleep of reason will continue to the day when a majority of this
|
|
> country's citizens will experience firsthand what has been done to them.
|
|
> Perhaps, they will rub their eyes and ask why they let it slip in a time
|
|
> when resistance was still possible.
|
|
|
|
One only needs to ponder what the Hitler government would have been
|
|
able to pull off during the Third Reich, on top of everything it
|
|
already did, if it had had access to the kind of personal data that
|
|
is now stored at Google, Facebook and the NSA, for every citizen in
|
|
Germany and the countries occupied in WWII - and even keeping people
|
|
outside those territories in check by blackmail.
|
|
|
|
There's no question that we're living in societies of control and that
|
|
the Internet is their infrastructure.
|
|
|
|
-F</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>6.11</nbr>
|
|
<subject>Re: <nettime> Hans Magnus Enzensberger: Rules for the digital world</subject>
|
|
<from>Frank Rieger</from>
|
|
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
|
<date>Mon, 10 Mar 2014 18:41:12 +0100</date>
|
|
<content>Writing for the FAZ myself I can assure you, that there is no such
|
|
thing as "the FAZ". It is a multitude of oppinions, plenty of debates
|
|
and highly moble frontlines. There are some arch-conservative editors
|
|
and authors who would love to wake up one day and find the internet
|
|
gone (mostly in the politics and business parts of the paper). And
|
|
then there are plenty of others (more often in the Feuilleton) who
|
|
have distinctly different and certainly not conservative views.
|
|
|
|
You should not make the mistake to associate Google with "good" just
|
|
because they side with free culture sometimes when it fits their
|
|
business interests. We are deep inside a multi-front power struggle
|
|
with shifting alliances and neither the government nor the internet
|
|
ogliopolies are on our side.
|
|
|
|
btw: I read Enzensberger as satire.
|
|
|
|
Greetings from Berlin,
|
|
|
|
Frank Rieger</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>6.14</nbr>
|
|
<subject>Re: <nettime> Hans Magnus Enzensberger: Rules for the digital world</subject>
|
|
<from>morlockelloi</from>
|
|
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
|
<date>Mon, 10 Mar 2014 12:42:31 -0700</date>
|
|
<content>This is the essential fallacy.
|
|
|
|
The idea that the security is so complicated that only the guild
|
|
members (from gov/corporate employees to open source celebrities) are
|
|
supposed to handle it, has been successfully floated for a while.
|
|
Which leaves the unwashed with the choice of 'trusting' either the
|
|
former or the latter. Whoever they choose, those will continue to
|
|
earn 10-20x the poverty level income for performing the holy rites.
|
|
The guild members are likely sincere when promoting this notion:
|
|
self-preservation is a great motivator. "Never make home brew crypto"
|
|
is what got us where we are today.
|
|
|
|
It's like literacy. There is nothing easy or natural about learning
|
|
to read and write. Literacy used to be confined to the ruling circles
|
|
and prohibited to the rabble. But literacy for the masses caused great
|
|
power shifts, and very few question it today.
|
|
|
|
Fuck the scribes.
|
|
|
|
Learning basics about communications security may be somewhat harder
|
|
that learning to read and write, but it's not orders of magnitude.
|
|
The only security that will work is the one that a person truly
|
|
understands, and fuck the UI. Witness the very successful use of
|
|
cryptography by those who understand that their well-being depends on
|
|
it.
|
|
|
|
What needs to happen is a shift from "trust me, I'll do it for you",
|
|
to "I'll teach you how to make your own". Not the easiest path, not
|
|
the quick one, but the one that may work. Bickering about whom to
|
|
trust and begging the authorities to stop what they are doing is a
|
|
total waste of time.</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>6.15</nbr>
|
|
<subject>Re: <nettime> Hans Magnus Enzensberger: Rules for the digital world</subject>
|
|
<from>Armin Medosch</from>
|
|
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
|
<date>Tue, 11 Mar 2014 12:22:08 +0000</date>
|
|
<content>Hi Frank
|
|
|
|
sure, there is a diversity of opinion in any self-respecting newspaper. But
|
|
that does not change the fact that FAZ editors are conducting a kind of
|
|
campaign against the 'free' culture of the internet. I would certainly not
|
|
consider Google to be 'good'. I am observing, rather neutrally, that there
|
|
is a fight of old versus new capital. Google represents a new mode of
|
|
production, FAZ an old one. FAZ is trying to preserve its business model,
|
|
based on copyright and exclusivity. The new political economy is still in
|
|
its ascendancy, Google still represents a future (not THE future).
|
|
Therefore we should hold Google accountable, while not falling for the trap
|
|
of defending the interests of old capital
|
|
|
|
best,
|
|
Armin</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>6.16</nbr>
|
|
<subject>Re: <nettime> Hans Magnus Enzensberger: Rules for the digital world</subject>
|
|
<from>Armin Medosch</from>
|
|
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
|
<date>Tue, 11 Mar 2014 12:27:03 +0000</date>
|
|
<content>Hi MP,
|
|
|
|
it is not so difficult. There's capital, and its not homogenous. There are
|
|
capitals of a different era and of a different kind - such as industrial,
|
|
agro-business, and financial capital. There are different modes of
|
|
production and social relations that go with it. It is not about 'for' or
|
|
'against' or naive versions of 'good' and 'bad' but if we want to
|
|
understand the world we live in - and to preempt any questions, I think to
|
|
some degree this is possible - then we need to engage with such concepts
|
|
that great social scientists have developed
|
|
|
|
regards
|
|
Armin</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>6.17</nbr>
|
|
<subject>Re: <nettime> Hans Magnus Enzensberger: Rules for the digital world</subject>
|
|
<from>Roel Roscam Abbing</from>
|
|
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
|
<date>Tue, 11 Mar 2014 15:05:00 +0100</date>
|
|
<content>Florian Cramer wrote:
|
|
|
|
>> 7
|
|
>> > E-Mail is nice, fast and free. So watch out! If you have a confidential
|
|
>> > message or don't want to be surveilled, take a postcard and pencil.
|
|
>
|
|
> This advice is technologically naive. It's known that the NSA and other
|
|
> secret services have systematically scanned and collected postal mail meta
|
|
> data (sender and receiver adresses along with timestamps), postal mail
|
|
> relies on digital logistics (and digitized meta data) anyway.
|
|
> Nearly-unreadable handwriting on post cards would not last very long as an
|
|
> obfuscation device. All the secret service had to do is to run a Captcha
|
|
> program for the handwriting that would fail OCR.
|
|
|
|
Captcha is already being used to decipher hard-to-OCR street numbers
|
|
collected by Google Streetview. Traditionally captchas have been used to
|
|
tell humans from bots, ironically you must now prove your humanity by
|
|
ratting out somebody's address to Google.
|
|
http://techcrunch.com/2012/03/29/google-now-using-recaptcha-to-decode-street-view-addresses/
|
|
|
|
>> > The sleep of reason will continue to the day when a majority of this
|
|
>> > country's citizens will experience firsthand what has been done to them.
|
|
>> > Perhaps, they will rub their eyes and ask why they let it slip in a time
|
|
>> > when resistance was still possible.
|
|
>
|
|
> One only needs to ponder what the Hitler government would have been
|
|
> able to pull off during the Third Reich, on top of everything it
|
|
> already did, if it had had access to the kind of personal data that
|
|
> is now stored at Google, Facebook and the NSA, for every citizen in
|
|
> Germany and the countries occupied in WWII - and even keeping people
|
|
> outside those territories in check by blackmail.
|
|
|
|
There's an interesting book called IBM And The Holocaust that describes
|
|
the use of IBM punchcard systems and census data to aid in the
|
|
Holocaust. Not only to to crunch census data, but also cross referencing
|
|
records of governments and churches throughout occupied Europe and
|
|
solving difficult logistics problems to increase the efficiency of
|
|
deportation to concentration camps.
|
|
|
|
http://monoskop.org/log/?p=3076</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>6.18</nbr>
|
|
<subject>Re: <nettime> Hans Magnus Enzensberger: Rules for the digital world</subject>
|
|
<from>mp</from>
|
|
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
|
<date>Tue, 11 Mar 2014 15:16:11 +0100</date>
|
|
<content>Armin Medosch wrote:
|
|
|
|
> Hi MP,
|
|
>
|
|
> it is not so difficult. There's capital, and its not homogenous. There are
|
|
> capitals of a different era and of a different kind - such as industrial,
|
|
> agro-business, and financial capital. There are different modes of
|
|
> production and social relations that go with it. It is not about 'for' or
|
|
> 'against' or naive versions of 'good' and 'bad' but if we want to
|
|
> understand the world we live in - and to preempt any questions, I think to
|
|
> some degree this is possible - then we need to engage with such concepts
|
|
> that great social scientists have developed
|
|
|
|
I don't get it. Sounds strangely abstract/academic to me, or maybe I am
|
|
just stupid.
|
|
|
|
If a corporation is in a new kind of business, but owned by the same old
|
|
shareholder circles as those that came before, which category is it in,
|
|
then, new or old?
|
|
|
|
And what exactly does it matter? Does it, say, matter to a peasant
|
|
community whether their river is destroyed directly by Google's power
|
|
consumption or destroyed by the mining by an old corporation processing
|
|
minerals (that later end up in Google server farms)?
|
|
|
|
And then you throw "great social scientists" into the mix, too?!? Who
|
|
are they?</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>6.19</nbr>
|
|
<subject>Re: <nettime> Hans Magnus Enzensberger: Rules for the digital world</subject>
|
|
<from>dan</from>
|
|
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
|
<date>Tue, 11 Mar 2014 14:03:25 -0400</date>
|
|
<content>Posted on the chance that the speech which follows below has some
|
|
relevance to the current thread. It was given by invitation to the
|
|
RSA conference ten days ago now.
|
|
|
|
-----------------8<------------cut-here------------8<-----------------
|
|
|
|
[ nominal delivery draft ]
|
|
|
|
.We Are All Intelligence Officers Now
|
|
.Dan Geer, 28 February 14, RSA/San Francisco
|
|
|
|
Good morning. Thank you for the invitation to speak with you today,
|
|
which, let me be clear, is me speaking for myself, not for anyone
|
|
or anything else. As you know, I work the cyber security trade,
|
|
that is to say that my occupation is cyber security. Note that I
|
|
said "occupation" rather than "profession." Last September, the
|
|
U.S. National Academy of Sciences concluded that cyber security
|
|
should be seen as an occupation and not a profession because the
|
|
rate of change is simply too great to consider professionalization.[NAS]
|
|
You may well agree that that rate of change is paramount, and, if
|
|
so, you may also agree that cyber security is the most intellectually
|
|
demanding occupation on the planet.
|
|
|
|
The goal of the occupation called cyber security grows more demanding
|
|
with time, which I need tell no one here. That growth is like a
|
|
river with many tributaries. Part of the rising difficulty flows
|
|
from rising complexity, part of it from accelerating speed, and
|
|
part of it from the side effects of what exactly we would do if
|
|
this or that digital facility were to fail entirely -- which is to
|
|
say our increasing dependence on all things digital. One is at
|
|
risk when something you depend upon is at risk. Risk is, in other
|
|
words, transitive. If X is at risk and I depend on X, then I, too,
|
|
am at risk to whatever makes X be at risk. Risk is almost like
|
|
inheritance in a programming language.
|
|
|
|
I am particularly fond of the late Peter Bernstein's definition of
|
|
risk: "More things can happen than will."[PB] I like that definition
|
|
not because it tells me what to do, but rather because it tells me
|
|
what comes with any new expansion of possibilities. Put differently,
|
|
it tells me that with the new, the realm of the possible expands
|
|
and, as we know, when the realm of the possible expands, prediction
|
|
is somewhere between difficult and undoable. The dynamic is that
|
|
we now regularly, quickly expand our dependence on new things, and
|
|
that added dependence matters because the way in which we each and
|
|
severally add risk to our portfolio is by way of dependence on
|
|
things for which their very newness makes risk estimation, and thus
|
|
risk management, neither predictable nor perhaps even estimable.
|
|
|
|
The Gordian Knot of such tradeoffs -- our tradeoffs -- is this: As
|
|
society becomes more technologic, even the mundane comes to depend
|
|
on distant digital perfection. Our food pipeline contains less
|
|
than a week's supply, just to take one example, and that pipeline
|
|
depends on digital services for everything from GPS driven tractors
|
|
to robot vegetable sorting machinery to coast-to-coast logistics
|
|
to RFID-tagged livestock. Is all the technologic dependency, and
|
|
the data that fuels it, making us more resilient or more fragile?
|
|
|
|
In the cybersecurity occupation, in which most of us here work, we
|
|
certainly seem to be getting better and better. We have better
|
|
tools, we have better understood practices, and we have more and
|
|
better colleagues. That's the plus side. But from the point of
|
|
view of prediction, what matters is the ratio of skill to challenge;
|
|
as far as I can estimate, we are expanding the society-wide attack
|
|
surface faster than we are expanding our collection of tools,
|
|
practices, and colleagues. If your society is growing more food,
|
|
that's great. If your population is growing faster than your
|
|
improvements in food production can keep up, that's bad. So it is
|
|
with cyber risk management: Whether in detection, control, or
|
|
prevention, we are notching personal bests, but all the while the
|
|
opposition is setting world records. As with most decision making
|
|
under uncertainty, statistics have a role, particularly ratio
|
|
statistics that magnify trends so that the latency of feedback from
|
|
policy changes is more quickly clear. Yet statistics, of course,
|
|
require data, to which I will return in a moment.
|
|
|
|
In medicine, we have well established rules about medical privacy.
|
|
Those rules are helpful; when you check into the hospital there is
|
|
a licensure-enforced, accountability-based, need-to-know regime
|
|
that governs the handling of your data.[PHI] Most days, anyway.
|
|
But if you check in with Bubonic Plague or Typhus or Anthrax, you
|
|
will have zero privacy as those are "reportable conditions," as
|
|
variously mandated by public health law in all fifty States. So
|
|
let me ask you, would it make sense, in a public health of the
|
|
Internet way, to have a mandatory reporting regime for cybersecurity
|
|
failures? Do you favor having to report cyber penetrations of your
|
|
firm or of your household to the government? Should you face
|
|
criminal charges if you fail to make such a report? Forty-eight
|
|
States vigorously penalize failure to report sexual molestation of
|
|
children.[SMC] The (US) Computer Fraud and Abuse Act[CF] defines
|
|
a number of felonies related to computer penetrations, and the U.S.
|
|
Code says that it is a crime to fail to report a felony of which
|
|
you have knowledge.[USC] Is cybersecurity event data the kind of
|
|
data around which you want to enforce mandatory reporting? Forty-six
|
|
States require mandatory reporting of cyber failures in the form
|
|
of their data breach laws, while the Verizon Data Breach Investigations
|
|
Report[VDB] found, and the Index of Cyber Security[ICS] confirmed,
|
|
that 70-80% of data breaches are discovered by unrelated third
|
|
parties. If you discover a data breach, do you have an ethical
|
|
obligation to report it? Should the law mandate that you fulfill
|
|
such an obligation?
|
|
|
|
Almost everyone here has some form of ingress filtering in place
|
|
by whatever name -- firewall, intrusion detection, whitelisting,
|
|
and so forth and so on. Some of you have egress filtering because
|
|
being in a botnet, that is to say being an accessory to crime, is
|
|
bad for business. Suppose you discover that you are in a botnet;
|
|
do you have an obligation to report it? Do you have an obligation
|
|
to report the traffic that led you to conclude that you had a
|
|
problem? Do you even have an obligation to bother to look and, if
|
|
you don't have or want an obligation to bother to look, do you want
|
|
your government to require the ISPs to do your looking for you, to
|
|
notify you when your outbound traffic marks you as an accomplice
|
|
to crime, whether witting or unwitting? Do you want to lay on the
|
|
ISPs the duty to guarantee a safe Internet? They own the pipes and
|
|
if you want clean pipes, then they are the ones to do it. Does
|
|
deep packet inspection of your traffic by your ISP as a public
|
|
health measure have your support? Would you want an ISP to deny
|
|
access to a host, which might be your host, that is doing something
|
|
bad on their networks? Who gets to define what is "bad?"
|
|
|
|
If you are saying to yourself, "This is beginning to sound like
|
|
surveillance" or something similar, then you're paying attention.
|
|
Every one of you who lives in a community that has a neighborhood
|
|
watch already has these kinds of decisions to make. Let's say that
|
|
you are patrolling your street, alone, and there have been break-ins
|
|
lately, there have been thefts lately, there has been vandalism
|
|
lately. You've lived there for ten years and been on that neighborhood
|
|
watch for five. You are on duty and you see someone you've never
|
|
seen crossing the street first from one side then the other, putting
|
|
a hand on every garden gate. What do you do? Confront them the
|
|
way a polite neighbor would? Challenge them the way a security
|
|
guard would? Run home to lock your own doors and draw your drapes?
|
|
Resign from the neighborhood watch because you are really not ready
|
|
to do anything strenuous?
|
|
|
|
Returning to the digital sphere, we are increasing what it is that
|
|
can be observed, what is observable. Instrumentation has never
|
|
been cheaper. Computing to fiddle with what has been observed has
|
|
never been more available. As someone who sees a lot of fresh
|
|
business plans, I can tell you that these days Step Six is never
|
|
"Then we build a data center." Step Six, or whatever, is universally
|
|
now "Then we buy some cloud time and some advertising." This means
|
|
that those to whom these outsourcing contracts go are in a position
|
|
to observe, and observe a lot. Doubtless some of what they observe
|
|
will be problematic, whether on legal or moral grounds. Should a
|
|
vendor of X-as-a-Service be obliged to observe what their customers
|
|
are doing? And if they are obliged to observe, should they be
|
|
obliged to act on what they observe, be that to report, to deploy
|
|
countermeasures, or both?
|
|
|
|
As what is observable expands so, naturally, does what has been
|
|
observed. Dave Aitel says "There's no reason a company in this day
|
|
and age can't have their own Splunk or ElasticSearch engine that
|
|
allows them to search and sort a complete history of every program
|
|
anyone in the company has ever executed."[DA] Sometime in the last
|
|
five to ten years we passed the point on the curve where it became
|
|
much cheaper to keep everything than to do selective deletion. When
|
|
you read the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure with respect to
|
|
so-called e-discovery, you can certainly conclude that total retention
|
|
of observed data is a prudent legal strategy. What is less clear
|
|
is whether you have a duty to observe given that you have the
|
|
capacity to do so. All of which also applies to what others can
|
|
observe about you.
|
|
|
|
This is not, however, about you personally. Even Julian Assange,
|
|
in his book _Cypherpunks_, said "Individual targeting is not the
|
|
threat." It is about a culture where personal data is increasingly
|
|
public data, and assembled en masse. All we have to go on now is
|
|
the hopeful phrase "A reasonable expectation of privacy" but what
|
|
is reasonable when one inch block letters can be read from orbit?
|
|
What is reasonable when all of your financial or medical life is
|
|
digitized and available primarily over the Internet? Do you want
|
|
ISPs to retain e-mails when you are asking your doctor a medical
|
|
question (or, for that matter, do you want those e-mails to become
|
|
part of your Electronic Health Record)? Who owns your medical data
|
|
anyway? Until the 1970s, it was the patient but regulations then
|
|
made it the provider. With an Electronic Health Record, it is
|
|
likely to revert to patient ownership, but if the EHR belongs to
|
|
you, do you get to surveil the use that is made of it by medical
|
|
providers and those that recursively they outsource to? And if
|
|
not, why not?
|
|
|
|
Observability is fast extending to devices. Some of it has already
|
|
appeared, such as the fact that any newish car is broadcasting four
|
|
unique Bluetooth radio IDs, one for each tire's valve stem. Some
|
|
of it is in a daily progression, such as training our youngsters
|
|
to accept surveillance by stuffing a locator beacon in their backpack
|
|
as soon as they go off to Kindergarten. Some of it is newly
|
|
technologic, like through the wall imaging, and some of it is simply
|
|
that we are now surrounded by cameras that we can't even see where
|
|
no one camera is important but they are important in the aggregate
|
|
when their data is fused. Anything, and I mean anything, that has
|
|
"wireless" in its name creates the certainty of traffic analysis.
|
|
|
|
As an example relevant to rooms such as this, you should assume
|
|
that all public facilities will soon convert their lighting fixtures
|
|
to LEDs, LEDs that are not just lights but also have an embedded,
|
|
chip-based operating system, a camera, sensors for CO/CO2/pollutant
|
|
emissions, seismic activity, humidity & UV radiation, a microphone,
|
|
wifi and/or cellular interfaces, an extensible API, an IPv4 or v6
|
|
address per LED, a capacity for disconnected "decision making on
|
|
the pole," cloud-based remote management, and, of course, bragging
|
|
rights for how green you are which you can then monetize in the
|
|
form of tax credits.[S] I ask again, do you or we or they have a
|
|
duty to observe now that we have an ability to do so? It is, as
|
|
you know, a long established norm for authorities to seize the video
|
|
stored in surveillance cameras whether the issue at hand is a smash
|
|
and grab or the collapse of an Interstate highway bridge.[M] What
|
|
does that mean when data retention is permanent and recording devices
|
|
are omnipresent? Does that make you the observed or the observer?
|
|
Do we have an answer to "Who watches the watchmen?"[J]
|
|
|
|
By now it is obvious that we humans can design systems more complex
|
|
than we can then operate. The financial sector's "flash crashes"
|
|
are the most recent proof-by-demonstration of that claim; it would
|
|
hardly surprise anyone were the fifty interlocked insurance exchanges
|
|
for Obamacare to soon be another. Above some threshold of system
|
|
complexity, it is no longer possible to test, it is only possible
|
|
to react to emergent behavior. Even the lowliest Internet user is
|
|
involved -- one web page can easily touch scores of different
|
|
domains. While writing this, the top level page from cnn.com had
|
|
400 out-references to 85 unique domains each of which is likely to
|
|
be similarly constructed and all of which move data one way or
|
|
another. If you leave those pages up, then because many such pages
|
|
have an auto-refresh, moving to a new subnet signals to every one
|
|
of the advertising networks that you have done so. How is this
|
|
different than having a surveillance camera in the entry vestibule
|
|
of your home?
|
|
|
|
We know, and have known for some time, that traffic analysis is
|
|
more powerful than content analysis. If I know everything about
|
|
to whom you communicate including when, where, with what inter-message
|
|
latency, in what order, at what length, and by what protocol, then
|
|
I know you. If all I have is the undated, unaddressed text of your
|
|
messages, then I am an archaeologist, not a case officer. The
|
|
soothing mendacity of proxies for the President saying "It's only
|
|
metadata" relies on the ignorance of the listener. Surely no one
|
|
here is convinced by "It's only metadata" but let me be clear: you
|
|
are providing that metadata and, in the evolving definition of the
|
|
word "public," there is no fault in its being observed and retained
|
|
indefinitely. Harvard Law professor Jonathan Zittrain famously
|
|
noted that if you preferentially use online services that are free,
|
|
"You are not the customer, you're the product." Why? Because what
|
|
is observable is observed, what is observed is sold, and users are
|
|
always observable, even when they are anonymous.
|
|
|
|
Let me be clear, this is not an attack on the business of intelligence.
|
|
The Intelligence Community is operating under the rules it knows,
|
|
most of which you, too, know, and the goal states it has been tasked
|
|
to achieve. The center of gravity for policy is that of goal states,
|
|
not methods.
|
|
|
|
Throughout the 1990s, the commercial sector essentially caught up
|
|
with the intelligence sector in the application of cryptography --
|
|
not the creation of cyphers, but their use. (Intelligence needs
|
|
new cyphers on a regular basis whereas commercial entities would
|
|
rather not have to roll their cypher suites at all, much less
|
|
regularly.) In like manner commercial firms are today fast catching
|
|
up with the intelligence sector in traffic analysis. The marketing
|
|
world is leading the way because its form of traffic analysis is
|
|
behavior-aware and full of data fusion innovation -- everything
|
|
from Amazon's "people who bought this later bought that" to 1 meter
|
|
accuracy on where you are in the shopping mall so that advertisements
|
|
and coupons can appear on your smartphone for the very store you
|
|
are looking in the window of, to combining location awareness with
|
|
what your car and your bedroom thermostat had to say about you this
|
|
morning. More relevant to this audience, every cutting edge data
|
|
protection scheme now has some kind of behavioral component, which
|
|
simply means collecting enough data on what is happening that
|
|
subsequently highlighting anomalies has a false positive rate low
|
|
enough to be worth following up.
|
|
|
|
If you decide to in some broad sense opt out, you will find that
|
|
it is not simple. Speaking personally, I choose not to share
|
|
CallerID data automatically by default. Amusingly, when members
|
|
of my friends and family get calls from an unknown caller, they
|
|
assume it is me because I am the only person they know who does
|
|
this. A better illustration of how in a linear equation there are
|
|
N-1 degrees of freedom I can't imagine. Along those same lines,
|
|
I've only owned one camera in my life and it was a film camera.
|
|
Ergo, I've never uploaded any photos that I took. That doesn't
|
|
mean that there are no digital photos of me out there. There are
|
|
3+ billion new photos online each month, so even if you've never
|
|
uploaded photos of yourself someone else has. And tagged them. In
|
|
other words, you can personally opt out, but that doesn't mean that
|
|
other folks around you haven't effectively countermanded your intent.
|
|
|
|
In short, we are becoming a society of informants. In short, I
|
|
have nowhere to hide from you.
|
|
|
|
As I said before and will now say again, the controlling factor,
|
|
the root cause, of risk is dependence, particularly dependence on
|
|
the expectation of stable system state. Yet the more technologic the
|
|
society becomes, the greater the dynamic range of possible failures.
|
|
When you live in a cave, starvation, predators, disease, and lightning
|
|
are about the full range of failures that end life as you know it
|
|
and you are well familiar with each of them. When you live in a
|
|
technologic society where everybody and everything is optimized in
|
|
some way akin to just-in-time delivery, the dynamic range of failures
|
|
is incomprehensibly larger and largely incomprehensible. The wider
|
|
the dynamic range of failure, the more prevention is the watchword.
|
|
Cadres of people charged with defending masses of other people must
|
|
focus on prevention, and prevention is all about proving negatives.
|
|
Therefore, and inescapably so, there is only one conclusion: as
|
|
technologic society grows more interconnected, it becomes more
|
|
interdependent within itself. As society becomes more interdependent
|
|
within itself, the more it must rely on prediction based on data
|
|
collected in broad ways, not in targeted ways. That is surveillance.
|
|
That is intelligence practiced not by intelligence agencies but by
|
|
anyone or anything with a sensor network.
|
|
|
|
Spoken of in this manner, official intelligence agencies that hoover
|
|
up everything are simply obeying the Presidential Directive that
|
|
"Never again" comes true. And the more complex the society they
|
|
are charged with protecting becomes, the more they must surveil,
|
|
the more they must analyze, the more data fusion becomes their only
|
|
focus. In that, there is no operational difference between government
|
|
acquisition of observable data and private sector acquisition of
|
|
observable data, beyond the minor detail of consent.
|
|
|
|
David Brin was the first to suggest that if you lose control over
|
|
what data can be collected on you, the only freedom-preserving
|
|
alternative is that everyone else does, too.[DB1] If the government
|
|
or the corporation or your neighbor can surveil you without asking,
|
|
then the balance of power is preserved when you can surveil them
|
|
without asking. Bruce Schneier countered that preserving the balance
|
|
of power doesn't mean much if the effect of new information is
|
|
non-linear, that is to say if new information is the exponent in
|
|
an equation, not one more factor in a linear sum.[DB2] Solving
|
|
that debate requires that you have a strong opinion on what data
|
|
fusion means operationally to you, to others, to society. If,
|
|
indeed, and as Schneier suggested, the power of data fusion is an
|
|
equation where new data items are exponents, then the entity that
|
|
can amass data that is bigger by a little will win the field by a
|
|
lot. That small advantages can have big outcome effects is exactly
|
|
what fuels this or any other arms race.
|
|
|
|
Contradicting what I said earlier, there may actually be a difference
|
|
between the public and the private sector because the private sector
|
|
will collect data only so long as increased collection can be
|
|
monetized, whereas government will collect data only so long as
|
|
increased collection can be stored. With storage prices falling
|
|
faster than Moore's Law, government's stopping rule may thus never
|
|
be triggered.
|
|
|
|
In the Wikipedia article about Brin, there is this sentence, "It
|
|
will be tempting to pass laws that restrict the power of surveillance
|
|
to authorities, entrusting them to protect our privacy -- or a
|
|
comforting illusion" thereof.[W] I agree with one of the possible
|
|
readings of that sentence, namely that it is "tempting" in the sense
|
|
of being delusional. Demonstrating exactly the kind of good
|
|
intentions with which the road to Hell is paved, we have codified
|
|
rules that permit our lawmakers zero privacy, we give them zero
|
|
ability to have a private moment or to speak to others without
|
|
quotation, without attribution, without their game face on. In the
|
|
evolutionary sense of the word "select," we select for people who
|
|
are without expectation of authentic privacy or who jettisoned it
|
|
long before they stood for office. Looking in their direction for
|
|
salvation is absurd. And delusional.
|
|
|
|
I am, however, hardly arguing that "you" are powerless or that
|
|
"they" have taken all control. It is categorically true that
|
|
technology is today far more democratically available than it was
|
|
yesterday and less than it will be tomorrow. 3D printing, the whole
|
|
"maker" community, DIY biology, micro-drones, search, constant
|
|
contact with whomever you choose to be in constant contact with --
|
|
these are all examples of democratizing technology. This is perhaps
|
|
our last fundamental tradeoff before the Singularity occurs: Do we,
|
|
as a society, want the comfort and convenience of increasingly
|
|
technologic, invisible digital integration enough to pay for those
|
|
benefits with the liberties that must be given up to be protected
|
|
from the downsides of that integration? If risk is that more things
|
|
can happen than will, then what is the ratio of things that can now
|
|
happen that are good to things that can now happen that are bad?
|
|
Is the good fraction growing faster than the bad fraction or the
|
|
other way around? Is there a threshold of interdependence beyond
|
|
which good or bad overwhelmingly dominate?
|
|
|
|
We are all data collectors, data keepers, data analysts. Some
|
|
citizens do it explicitly; some citizens have it done for them by
|
|
robots. To be clear, we are not just a society of informants, we
|
|
are becoming an intelligence community of a second sort. Some of
|
|
it is almost surely innocuous, like festooning a house with wireless
|
|
sensors for home automation purposes. Some of it is cost effectiveness
|
|
driven, like measuring photosynthesis in a corn field by flying an
|
|
array of measurement devices over it on a drone. I could go on,
|
|
and so could you, because in a very real sense I am telling you
|
|
nothing you don't already know. Everyone in this and other audiences
|
|
knows everything that I have to say, even if they weren't aware
|
|
that they knew it.
|
|
|
|
The question is why is this so? Is this majority rule and the
|
|
intelligence function is one the majority very much wants done to
|
|
themselves and others? Is this a question of speed and complexity
|
|
such that citizen decision making is crippled not because facts are
|
|
hidden but because compound facts are too hard to understand? Is
|
|
this a question of wishful thinking of that kind which can't tell
|
|
the difference between a utopian fantasy, a social justice movement,
|
|
and a business opportunity? Is this nowhere near such a big deal
|
|
as I think it is because every day that goes by without a cascade
|
|
failure only adds evidence that such possibilities are becoming
|
|
ever less likely? Is the admonition to "Take care of yourself" the
|
|
core of a future where the guarantee of a good outcome for all is
|
|
the very fact that no one can hide? Is Nassim Taleb's idea that
|
|
we are easily fooled by randomness[TF] at play here, too? If the
|
|
level of observability to which you are subject is an asset to you,
|
|
then what is your hedge against that asset?
|
|
|
|
This is not a Chicken Little talk; it is an attempt to preserve if
|
|
not make a choice while choice is still relevant. As The Economist
|
|
in its January 18 issue so clearly lays out,[TE] we are ever more
|
|
a service economy, but every time an existing service disappears
|
|
into the cloud, our vulnerability to its absence increases as does
|
|
the probability of monopoly power. Every time we ask the government
|
|
to provide goodnesses that can only be done with more data, we are
|
|
asking government to collect more data.
|
|
|
|
Let me ask a yesterday question: How do you feel about traffic jam
|
|
detection based on the handoff rate between cell towers of those
|
|
cell phones in use in cars on the road? Let me ask a today question:
|
|
How do you feel about auto insurance that is priced from a daily
|
|
readout of your automobile's black box? Let me ask a tomorrow
|
|
question: In what calendar year will compulsory auto insurance be
|
|
more expensive for the driver who insists on driving their car
|
|
themselves rather than letting a robot do it? How do you feel about
|
|
public health surveillance done by requiring Google and Bing to
|
|
report on searches for cold remedies and the like? How do you feel
|
|
about a Smart Grid that reduces your power costs and greens the
|
|
atmosphere but reports minute-by-minute what is on and what is off
|
|
in your home? Have you or would you install that toilet that does
|
|
a urinalysis with every use, and forwards it to your clinician?
|
|
|
|
How do you feel about using standoff biometrics as a solution to
|
|
authentication? At this moment in time, facial recognition is
|
|
possible at 500 meters, iris recognition is possible at 50 meters,
|
|
and heart-beat recognition is possible at 5 meters. Your dog can
|
|
identify you by smell; so, too, can an electronic dog's nose. Your
|
|
cell phone's accelerometer is plenty sensitive enough to identify
|
|
you by gait analysis. The list goes on. All of these are data
|
|
dependent, cheap, convenient, and none of them reveal anything that
|
|
is a secret as we currently understand the term "secret" -- yet the
|
|
sum of them is greater than the parts. A lot greater. It might
|
|
even be a polynomial, as Schneier suggested. Time will tell, but
|
|
by then the game will be over.
|
|
|
|
Harvard Business School Prof. Shoshanna Zuboff has had much to say
|
|
on these topics since the 1980s, especially her Three Laws:[ZS]
|
|
|
|
. Everything that can be automated will be automated
|
|
|
|
. Everything that can be informated will be informated
|
|
|
|
. Every digital application that can be used for surveillance and
|
|
control will be used for surveillance and control
|
|
|
|
I think she is right, but the implication that this is all outside
|
|
the control of the citizen is not yet true. It may get to be true,
|
|
but in so many words that is why I am standing here. There are a
|
|
million choices the individual person, or for that matter the
|
|
free-standing enterprise, can take and I do not just mean converting
|
|
all your browsing over to Tor.
|
|
|
|
Take something mundane like e-mail: One might suggest never sending
|
|
the same message twice. Why? Because sending it twice, even if
|
|
encrypted, allows a kind of analysis by correlation that cannot
|
|
otherwise happen. Maybe that's too paranoid, so let's back off a
|
|
little. One might suggest that the individual or the enterprise
|
|
that outsources its e-mail to a third party thereby creates by
|
|
itself and for itself the risk of silent subpoenas delivered to
|
|
their outsourcer. If, instead, the individual or the enterprise
|
|
insources its e-mail then at the very least it knows when its data
|
|
assets are being sought because the subpoena comes to them. Maybe
|
|
insourcing your e-mail is too much work, but need I remind you that
|
|
plaintext e-mail cannot be web-bugged, so why would anyone ever
|
|
render HTML e-mail at all?
|
|
|
|
Take software updates: There is a valid argument to make software
|
|
auto-update the norm. As always, a push model has to know where
|
|
to push. On the other hand, a pull model must be invoked by the
|
|
end user. Both models generate information for somebody, but a
|
|
pull model leaves the time and place decisions to the end user.
|
|
|
|
Take cybersecurity technology: I've become convinced that all of
|
|
it is dual use. While I am not sure whether dual use is a trend
|
|
or a realization of an unchanging fact of nature, the obviousness
|
|
of dual use seems greatest in the latest technologies, so I am
|
|
calling it a trend in the sense that the straightforward accessibility
|
|
of dual use characteristics of new technology is itself a growing
|
|
trend. Leading cybersecurity products promise total surveillance
|
|
over the enterprise and are, to my mind, offensive strategies used
|
|
for defensive purposes. A fair number of those products not only
|
|
watch your machine, but take just about everything that is going
|
|
on at your end and copies that to their end. The argument for doing
|
|
so is well thought out -- by combining observational data from a
|
|
lot of places the probability of detection can be raised and the
|
|
latency of countermeasure can be reduced. Of course, there is no
|
|
reason such systems couldn't be looking for patterns of content in
|
|
human readable documents just as easily as looking for patterns of
|
|
content in machine readable documents.
|
|
|
|
Take communications technology: Whether we are talking about
|
|
triangulating the smartphone using the cell towers, geocoding the
|
|
Internet, or forwarding the GPS coordinates from onboard equipment
|
|
to external services like OnStar, everyone knows that there is a
|
|
whole lot of location tracking going on. What can you do to opt
|
|
out of that? That is not so easy because now we are talking not
|
|
about a mode of operation, like whether to insource or outsource
|
|
your e-mail, but a real opt-in versus opt-out decision; do you
|
|
accept the tracking or do you refuse the service? Paraphrasing
|
|
Zittrain's remark about being a customer or being a product, the
|
|
greater the market penetration of mobile communications, the more
|
|
the individual is either a data source or a suspect.
|
|
|
|
Take wearable computing: Google Glass is only the most famous.
|
|
There've been people working on such things for a long time now.
|
|
Folks who are outfitted with wearable computing are pretty much
|
|
identifiable today, but this brief instant will soon pass. You
|
|
will be under passive surveillance by your peers and contacts or,
|
|
to be personal, some of you will be surveilling me because you will
|
|
be adopters of this kind of technology. I would prefer you didn't.
|
|
I am in favor neither of cyborgs nor chimeras; I consider our place
|
|
in the natural world too great a gift to mock in those ways.
|
|
|
|
When it comes to ranking programs for how well they can observe
|
|
their surroundings and act on what they see without further
|
|
instructions, Stuxnet is the reigning world heavyweight champion.
|
|
Unless there is something better already out there. Putting aside
|
|
the business of wrecking centrifuges, just consider the observational
|
|
part. Look at other malware that seems to have a shopping list
|
|
that isn't composed of filenames or keywords but instead an algorithm
|
|
for rank-ordering what to look for and to exfiltrate documents in
|
|
priority order. As with other democratizations of technology, what
|
|
happens when that kind of improvisation, that kind of adaptation,
|
|
can be automated? What happens when such things can be scripted?
|
|
|
|
For those with less gray hair, once upon a time a firewall was
|
|
something that created a corporate perimeter. Then it was something
|
|
that created a perimeter around a department. Then around a given
|
|
computer. Then around a given datum. In the natural world,
|
|
perimeters shrink as risk grows -- think a circle of wildebeeste
|
|
with their horns pointed outward, the calves on the inside, and the
|
|
hyenas closing in. So it has been with perimeters in the digital
|
|
space, a steady shrinking of the defensible perimeter down to the
|
|
individual datum.
|
|
|
|
There are so many technologies now that power observation and
|
|
identification of the individual at a distance. They may not yet
|
|
be in your pocket or on your dashboard or embedded in all your smoke
|
|
detectors, but that is only a matter of time. Your digital exhaust
|
|
is unique hence it identifies. Pooling everyone's digital exhaust
|
|
also characterizes how you differ from normal. Suppose that observed
|
|
data does kill both privacy as impossible-to-observe and privacy
|
|
as impossible-to-identify, then what might be an alternative? If
|
|
you are an optimist or an apparatchik, then your answer will tend
|
|
toward rules of procedure administered by a government you trust
|
|
or control. If you are a pessimist or a hacker/maker, then your
|
|
answer will tend towards the operational, and your definition of a
|
|
state of privacy will be my definition: the effective capacity to
|
|
misrepresent yourself.
|
|
|
|
Misrepresentation is using disinformation to frustrate data fusion
|
|
on the part of whomever it is that is watching you. Some of it can
|
|
be low-tech, such as misrepresentation by paying your therapist in
|
|
cash under an assumed name. Misrepresentation means arming yourself
|
|
not at Walmart but in living rooms. Misrepresentation means swapping
|
|
affinity cards at random with like-minded folks. Misrepresentation
|
|
means keeping an inventory of misconfigured webservers to proxy
|
|
through. Misrepresentation means putting a motor-generator between
|
|
you and the Smart Grid. Misrepresentation means using Tor for no
|
|
reason at all. Misrepresentation means hiding in plain sight when
|
|
there is nowhere else to hide. Misrepresentation means having not
|
|
one digital identity that you cherish, burnish, and protect, but
|
|
having as many as you can. Your identity is not a question unless
|
|
you work to make it be. Lest you think that this is a problem
|
|
statement for the random paranoid individual alone, let me tell you
|
|
that in the big-I Intelligence trade, crafting good cover is getting
|
|
harder and harder and for the same reasons: misrepresentation is
|
|
getting harder and harder. If I was running field operations, I
|
|
would not try to fabricate a complete digital identity, I'd "borrow"
|
|
the identity of someone who had the characteristics that I needed
|
|
for the case at hand.
|
|
|
|
The Obama administration's issuance of a National Strategy for
|
|
Trusted Identities in Cyberspace[NS] is case-in-point; it "calls
|
|
for the development of interoperable technology standards and
|
|
policies -- an 'Identity Ecosystem' -- where individuals, organizations,
|
|
and underlying infrastructure -- such as routers and servers -- can
|
|
be authoritatively authenticated." If you can trust a digital
|
|
identity, that is because it can't be faked. Why does the government
|
|
care about this? It cares because it wants to digitally deliver
|
|
government services and it wants attribution. Is having a non-fake-able
|
|
digital identity for government services worth the registration of
|
|
your remaining secrets with that government? Is there any real
|
|
difference between a system that permits easy, secure, identity-based
|
|
services and a surveillance system? Do you trust those who hold
|
|
surveillance data on you over the long haul by which I mean the
|
|
indefinite retention of transactional data between government
|
|
services and you, the individual required to proffer a non-fake-able
|
|
identity to engage in those transactions? Assuming this spreads
|
|
well beyond the public sector, which is its designers' intent, do
|
|
you want this everywhere? If you are building authentication systems
|
|
today, then you are already playing ball in this league. If you
|
|
are using authentication systems today, then you are subject to the
|
|
pending design decisions of people who are themselves playing ball
|
|
in this league.
|
|
|
|
And how can you tell if the code you are running is collecting on
|
|
you or, for that matter, if the piece of code you are running is
|
|
collecting on somebody else? If your life is lived inside the
|
|
digital envelope, how do you know that this isn't The Matrix or The
|
|
Truman Show? Code is certainly getting bigger and bigger. A
|
|
nameless colleague who does world class static analysis said that
|
|
he "regularly sees apps that are over 2 GB of code" and sees
|
|
"functions with over 16K variables." As he observes, functions
|
|
like that are machine written. If the code is machine written,
|
|
does anyone know what's in it? The answer is "of course not" and
|
|
even if they did, malware techniques such as return-oriented-programming
|
|
can add features after the whitelist-mediated application launch.
|
|
But I'm not talking here about malware, I am talking about code
|
|
that you run that you meant to run and which, in one way or another,
|
|
is instrumented to record what you do with it. Nancy Pelosi's
|
|
famous remark[NP] about her miserable, thousand page piece of
|
|
legislation, "We have to pass the bill so that you can find out
|
|
what is in it" can be just as easily applied to code: it has become
|
|
"We have to run the code so that you can find out what is in it."
|
|
|
|
That is not going to change; small may be beautiful but big is
|
|
inevitable.[BI] A colleague notes that, with the cloud, all pretense
|
|
of trying to keep programs small and economical has gone out the
|
|
window -- just link to everything because it doesn't matter if you
|
|
make even one call to a huge library since the Elastic Cloud (or
|
|
whatever) charges you no penalty for bloat. As such, it is likely
|
|
that any weird machine[SB] within the bloated program is ever more
|
|
robust.
|
|
|
|
Mitja Kolsek was who made me aware of just how much the client has
|
|
become the server's server. Take Javascript, which is to say servers
|
|
sending clients programs to execute; the HTTP Archive says that the
|
|
average web page now makes out-references to 16 different domains
|
|
as well as making 17 Javascript requests per page, and the Javascript
|
|
byte count is five times the HTML byte count.[HT] A lot of that
|
|
Javascript is about analytics which is to say surveillance of the
|
|
user experience (and we're not even talking about Bitcoin mining
|
|
done in Javascript that you can embed in your website.[BJ])
|
|
|
|
So suppose everybody is both giving and getting surveillance, both
|
|
being surveilled and doing surveillance. Does that make you an
|
|
intelligence agent? A spreading of technology from the few to the
|
|
many is just the way world works. There are a hundred different
|
|
articles from high-brow to low- that show the interval between
|
|
market introduction and widespread adoption of technology has gotten
|
|
shorter as technology has gotten more advanced. That means that
|
|
technologies that were available only to the few become available
|
|
to the many in a shorter timeframe, i.e., that any given technology
|
|
advantage the few have has a shorter shelf-life. That would mean
|
|
that the technologies that only national laboratories had fifteen
|
|
years ago might be present among us soon, in the spirit of William
|
|
Gibson's famous remark that the future is already present, just
|
|
unevenly distributed. Or maybe it is only ten years now. Maybe
|
|
the youngest of you in this room will end up in a world where what
|
|
a national lab has today is something you can look forward to having
|
|
in only five year's time. Regardless of whether the time constant
|
|
is five or ten or even fifteen years, this is far, far faster than
|
|
any natural mixing will arrange for even distribution across all
|
|
people. The disparities of knowledge that beget power will each
|
|
be shorter lived in their respective particulars, but a much steeper
|
|
curve in the aggregate.
|
|
|
|
Richard Clarke's novel _Breakpoint_ centered around the observation
|
|
that with fast enough advances in genetic engineering not only will
|
|
the elite think that they are better than the rest, they will be.[RC]
|
|
I suggest that with fast enough advances in surveillance and the
|
|
inferences to be drawn from surveillance, that a different elite
|
|
will not just think that it knows better, it will know better.
|
|
Those advances come both from Moore's and from Zuboff's laws, but
|
|
more importantly they rest upon the extraordinarily popular delusion
|
|
that you can have freedom, security, and convenience when, at best,
|
|
you can have two out of three.
|
|
|
|
At the same time, it is said that the rightful role of government
|
|
is to hold a monopoly on the use of force. Is it possible that in
|
|
a fully digital world it will come to pass that everyone can see
|
|
what once only a Director of National Intelligence could see? Might
|
|
a monopoly of force resting solely with government become harder
|
|
to maintain as the technology that bulwarks such a monopoly becomes
|
|
democratized ever faster? Might reserving force to government
|
|
become itself an anachronism? That is almost surely not something
|
|
to hope for, even for those of us who agree with Thomas Jefferson
|
|
that the government that governs best is the government that governs
|
|
least. If knowledge is power, then increasing the store of knowledge
|
|
must increase the store of power; increasing the rate of knowlege
|
|
acquisition must increase the rate of power growth. All power tends
|
|
to corrupt, and absolute power corrupts absolutely,[LA] so sending
|
|
vast amounts of knowledge upstream will corrupt absolutely, regardless
|
|
of whether the data sources are reimbursed with some pittance of
|
|
convenience. Every tax system in the world has proven this time
|
|
and again with money. We are about to prove it again with data,
|
|
which has become a better store of value than fiat currency in any
|
|
case.
|
|
|
|
Again, that power has to go somewhere. If you are part of the
|
|
surveillance fabric, then you are part of creating that power, some
|
|
of which is reflected back on you as conveniences that actually
|
|
doubles as a form of control. Very nearly everyone at this conference
|
|
is explicitly and voluntarily part of the surveillance fabric because
|
|
it comes with the tools you use, with what Steve Jobs would call
|
|
your digital life. With enough instrumentation carried by those
|
|
who opt in, the person who opts out hasn't really opted out. If
|
|
what those of you who opt in get for your role in the surveillance
|
|
fabric is "security," then you had better be damnably sure that
|
|
when you say "security" that you all have close agreement on precisely
|
|
what you mean by that term.
|
|
|
|
And this is as good a place as any to pass on Joel Brenner's
|
|
insight:[JB]
|
|
|
|
During the Cold War, our enemies were few and we knew who they
|
|
were. The technologies used by Soviet military and intelligence
|
|
agencies were invented by those agencies. Today, our adversaries
|
|
are less awesomely powerful than the Soviet Union, but they are
|
|
many and often hidden. That means we must find them before we
|
|
can listen to them. Equally important, virtually every government
|
|
on Earth, including our own, has abandoned the practice of relying
|
|
on government-developed technologies. Instead they rely on
|
|
commercial off-the-shelf, or COTS, technologies. They do it
|
|
because no government can compete with the head-spinning advances
|
|
emerging from the private sector, and no government can afford
|
|
to try. When NSA wanted to collect intelligence on the Soviet
|
|
government and military, the agency had to steal or break the
|
|
encryption used by them and nobody else. The migration to COTS
|
|
changed that. If NSA now wants to collect against a foreign
|
|
general's or terorist's communications, it must break the same
|
|
encryption you and I use on our own devices... That's why NSA
|
|
would want to break the encryption used on every one of those
|
|
media. If it couldn't, any terrorist in Chicago, Kabul, or
|
|
Cologne would simply use a Blackberry or send messages on Yahoo!
|
|
But therein lies a policy dilemma, because NSA could decrypt
|
|
almost any private conversation. The distinction between
|
|
capabilities and actual practices is more critical than ever...
|
|
Like it or not, the dilemma can be resolved only through oversight
|
|
mechanisms that are publicly understood and trusted -- but are
|
|
not themselves ... transparent.
|
|
|
|
At the same time, for-profit and not-for-profit entites are collecting
|
|
on each other. They have to, even though private intelligence
|
|
doubtless leads directly to private law. On the 6th of this month,
|
|
the Harvard Kennedy School held a conference on this very subject;
|
|
let me read just the first paragraph:[HKS]
|
|
|
|
In today's world, businesses are facing increasingly complex
|
|
threats to infrastructure, finances, and information. The
|
|
government is sometimes unable to share classified information
|
|
about these threats. As a result, business leaders are creating
|
|
their own intelligence capabilities within their companies.
|
|
|
|
In a closely related development, the international traffic in arms
|
|
treaty known as the Wassenaar Agreement, was just amended to classify
|
|
"Intrusion Software" and "Network Surveillance Systems" as weapons.[WA]
|
|
|
|
So whom do you trust? Paul Wouters makes a telling point when he
|
|
says that "You cannot avoid trust. Making it hierarchical gives
|
|
the least trust to parties. You monitor those you have to trust
|
|
more, and more closely."[PW] As I've done with privacy and security,
|
|
I should now state my definition of trust, which is that trust is
|
|
where I drop my guard, which is to say that I only trust someone
|
|
against whom I have effective recourse. Does that mean I can only
|
|
trust those upon whom I can collect? At the nation state level
|
|
that is largely the case. Is this the way Brin's vision will work
|
|
itself out, that as the technology of collection democratizes, we
|
|
will trust those we can collect against but within the context of
|
|
whatever hierarchy is evolutionarily selected by such a dynamic?
|
|
|
|
It is said that the price of anything is the foregone alternative.
|
|
The price of dependence is risk. The price of total dependence is
|
|
total risk. Standing in his shuttered factory, made redundant by
|
|
coolie labor in China, Tom McGregor said that "American consumers
|
|
want to buy things at a price that is cheaper than they would be
|
|
willing to be paid to make them." A century and a half before Tom,
|
|
English polymath John Ruskin said that "There is nothing in the
|
|
world that some man cannot make a little worse and sell a little
|
|
cheaper, and he who considers price only is that man's lawful prey."
|
|
Invoking Zittrain yet again, the user of free services is not the
|
|
customer, he's the product. Let me then say that if you are going
|
|
to be a data collector, if you are bound and determined to instrument
|
|
your life and those about you, if you are going to "sell" data to
|
|
get data, then I ask that you not work so cheaply that you collectively
|
|
drive to zero the habitat, the lebensraum, of those of us who opt
|
|
out. If you remain cheap, then I daresay that opting out will soon
|
|
require bravery and not just the quiet tolerance to do without
|
|
digital bread and circuses.
|
|
|
|
To close with Thomas Jefferson:
|
|
|
|
I predict future happiness for Americans, if they can prevent
|
|
the government from wasting the labors of the people under the
|
|
pretense of taking care of them.
|
|
There is never enough time. Thank you for yours.
|
|
|
|
-------------
|
|
|
|
[NAS] "Professionalizing the Nation's Cyber Workforce?"
|
|
www.nap.edu/openbook.php?record_id=18446
|
|
|
|
[PB] _Against the Gods_ and this 13:22 video at
|
|
www.mckinsey.com/insights/risk_management/peter_l_bernstein_on_risk
|
|
...Bernstein was himself quoting Elroy Dimson and Paul Marsh from
|
|
their 1982 paper, "Calculating the Cost of Capital"...
|
|
|
|
[PHI] Personal Health Information, abbreviated PHI
|
|
|
|
[SMC] "Penalties for failure to report and false reporting of child
|
|
abuse and neglect," US Dept of Health and Human Services, Children's
|
|
Bureau, Child Welfare Information Gateway
|
|
|
|
[CFAA] U.S. Code, Title 18, Part I, Chapter 47, Section 1030
|
|
www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/18/1030
|
|
|
|
[USC] U.S. Code, Title 18, Part I, Chapter 1, Section 4
|
|
www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/18/4
|
|
|
|
[VDB] Verizon Data Breach Investigations Report
|
|
www.verizonenterprise.com/DBIR
|
|
|
|
[ICS] Index of Cyber Security
|
|
www.cybersecurityindex.org
|
|
|
|
[DA] "What is the next step?," Dave Aitel, 18 February 2014
|
|
seclists.org/dailydave/2014/q1/28
|
|
|
|
[S] Sensity's NetSense product, to take one (only) example
|
|
www.sensity.com/our-platform/our-platform-netsense
|
|
|
|
[M] For example, the 2007 collapse of I-35 in Minneapolis.
|
|
|
|
[J] "Quis custodiet ipsos custodes?," Juvenal, Satire VI ll.347-348
|
|
|
|
[DB1] _The Transparent Society_, David Brin, Perseus, 1998
|
|
[DB2] "The Myth of the 'Transparent Society'," Bruce Schneier
|
|
www.wired.com/politics/security/commentary/securitymatters/2008/03/securitymatters_0306
|
|
[DB3] "Rebuttal," David Brin
|
|
www.wired.com/politics/security/news/2008/03/brin_rebuttal
|
|
|
|
[W] minor quotation from
|
|
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Transparent_Society
|
|
|
|
[TF] _Fooled by Randomness_, Nassim Taleb, Random House, 2001
|
|
|
|
[TE] "Coming to an office near you," The Economist, 18 January 2014
|
|
cover/lead article, print edition
|
|
|
|
[ZS] "Be the friction - Our Response to the New Lords of the Ring," 6 Jun 2013
|
|
www.faz.net/aktuell/feuilleton/the-surveillance-paradigm-be-the-friction-our-response-to-the-new-lords-of-the-ring-12241996.html
|
|
|
|
[NS] National Strategy for Trusted Identities in Cyberspace, 2011
|
|
www.nist.gov/nstic
|
|
|
|
[NP] 2010 Legislative Conf. for the National Association of Counties
|
|
|
|
[BI] "Small Is Beautiful, Big Is Inevitable," IEEE S&P, Nov/Dec 2011
|
|
geer.tinho.net/ieee/ieee.sp.geer.1111.pdf
|
|
|
|
[SB] LANGSEC: Language-theoretic Security
|
|
www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~sergey/langsec/
|
|
|
|
[HT] Trends, HTTP Archive
|
|
www.httparchive.org/trends.php
|
|
|
|
[BJ] Bitcoin Miner for Websites
|
|
www.bitcoinplus.com/miner/embeddable
|
|
|
|
[RC] _Breakpoint_, Richard Clarke, Putnam's, 2007
|
|
|
|
[LA] "All power tends to corrupt and absolute power corrupts
|
|
absolutely. Great men are almost always bad men, even when they
|
|
exercise influence and not authority: still more when you superadd
|
|
the tendency or the certainty of corruption by authority."
|
|
-- Lord John Dalberg Acton to Bishop Mandell Creighton, 1887
|
|
|
|
[JB] "NSA: Not (So) Secret Anymore," 10 December 2013
|
|
joelbrenner.com/blog
|
|
|
|
[HKS] Defense and Intelligence: Future of Intelligence Seminars
|
|
belfercenter.ksg.harvard.edu/events/6230/intelligence_in_the_private_sector
|
|
|
|
[WA] "International Agreement Reached Controlling Export of Mass
|
|
and Intrusive Surveillance," 9 December 2013
|
|
oti.newamerica.net/blogposts/2013/international_agreement_reached_controlling_export_of_mass_and_intrusive_surveillance
|
|
|
|
[PW] "You Can't P2P the DNS and Have It, Too," Paul Wouters, 9 Apr 2012
|
|
nohats.ca/wordpress/blog/2012/04/09/you-cant-p2p-the-dns-and-have-it-too
|
|
|
|
=====
|
|
this and other material on file under geer.tinho.net/pubs</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>7.0</nbr>
|
|
<subject><nettime> Post-digital</subject>
|
|
<from>Felix Stalder</from>
|
|
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
|
<date>Sun, 09 Mar 2014 12:40:32 +0100</date>
|
|
<content>Florian Cramer wrote:
|
|
> # What is 'Post-digital'?
|
|
|
|
Florian and I have been talking for a long time now about the
|
|
notion of "post-digital", with me being rather skeptical about its
|
|
usefulness. I still am, but Florian's text clarifies a lot for me.
|
|
|
|
There are some areas in which the term does makes sense.
|
|
|
|
Primarily aesthetically, in terms of pointing towards a complex
|
|
blending of the digital and the non-digital, rather than a simple
|
|
substitution (aka the computer as the meta-medium that simulates all
|
|
others).
|
|
|
|
To some degree it makes also sense politically, in terms of a more
|
|
complex understanding of political processes not being driven by
|
|
technology, but still by power, institutions and competing collective
|
|
actors with unequal organizational resources to advance their
|
|
interests. Mozorov would be main exponent of such a position. It's a
|
|
valid position to critique the still powerful "Californian ideology",
|
|
but hardly new, particularly not in Europe.
|
|
|
|
Where the terms makes no sense, in my view (and also in Florian's),
|
|
is sociologically. The most powerful forces that transform globalized
|
|
societies, are all dependent on, and amplified by, digital
|
|
technologies. If anything, we are in the middle of the historical
|
|
run of this development rather than at the end. The idea that the
|
|
digital is just one dimension of society and that we can abandon it,
|
|
is ludicrous. Enzensberger's text was just a joke, and the FAZ printed
|
|
it because it would stir controversy, not because it had much to offer
|
|
intellectually.
|
|
|
|
So, what this leaves me wondering, in terms of a cultural theory, is
|
|
a term useful that makes sense of aesthetically, yet makes no sense
|
|
sociologically, or do we need to find terms than can articulate both
|
|
levels at the same time?
|
|
Felix
|
|
|
|
--
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||| http://felix.openflows.com
|
|
|OPEN PGP: 056C E7D3 9B25 CAE1 336D 6D2F 0BBB 5B95 0C9F F2AC</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>7.1</nbr>
|
|
<subject>Re: <nettime> Post-digital</subject>
|
|
<from>Patrice Riemens</from>
|
|
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
|
<date>Sun, 9 Mar 2014 23:17:55 +0100</date>
|
|
<content>> Florian Cramer wrote:
|
|
>
|
|
>> # What is 'Post-digital'?
|
|
>
|
|
> Florian and I have been talking for a long time now about the
|
|
> notion of "post-digital", with me being rather skeptical about its
|
|
> usefulness. I still am, but Florian's text clarifies a lot for me.
|
|
<...>
|
|
|
|
Hi Felix,
|
|
|
|
There is one context in which Enzensberger's 'cri de coeur' is not a joke,
|
|
but makes sense, and I am not really sure HME had not it in mind: that is
|
|
if you believe in the likelyhood of an impending 'system collapse' (cf
|
|
Paul Virilio's 'accident integral') , in which case all our beloved
|
|
technologies are likely collapse as well, either gradually or very fast
|
|
indeed, starting with the mother/ motor of all technologies, electricity,
|
|
aka 'the grid'. No grid, no cloud, and if & then just kiss your Youtube
|
|
addiction goodbye.
|
|
|
|
I am still somewhat neutral on this issue, mainly because of my 'Asiatic'
|
|
history. Yet I think it should be factored in. In my particular case, I
|
|
have experienced that 'technological restraint' has worked out quite fine:
|
|
I still don't have a mobile phone.
|
|
|
|
Cheerio, p+2D!</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>7.2</nbr>
|
|
<subject>Re: <nettime> Post-digital</subject>
|
|
<from>Nick</from>
|
|
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
|
<date>Sun, 9 Mar 2014 21:58:27 -0400</date>
|
|
<content>Quoth Felix Stalder:
|
|
|
|
> Enzensberger's text was just a joke, and the FAZ printed
|
|
> it because it would stir controversy, not because it had much to offer
|
|
> intellectually.
|
|
|
|
Was it really just a joke? I'm not so sure dismissing it as that is
|
|
appropriate. Sure it necessarily isn't a deep critique of the power
|
|
dynamics at play with some of the newer technologies people are
|
|
using now, but it wasn't designed as that, and I for one find the
|
|
provocations basically reasonable.
|
|
|
|
Florian's essay was great companion reading, and Geert is certainly
|
|
right to call it out as containing elements of 'offline
|
|
romanticism', but I don't see anything particularly off with the
|
|
essay, and there are certainly things about rejection of
|
|
technological 'necessities' like phones that it's quite reasonable
|
|
to be romantic about.
|
|
|
|
Nick</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>7.3</nbr>
|
|
<subject>Re: <nettime> Post-digital</subject>
|
|
<from>Sandra Braman</from>
|
|
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
|
<date>Mon, 10 Mar 2014 01:29:00 -0500 (CDT)</date>
|
|
<content>2% of people -- across socio-economic class, meaning it isn't about
|
|
cost -- do not want a telephone in the home
|
|
|
|
having lived that way for many years, i can report that the pleasures
|
|
of it are quite real
|
|
|
|
sandra braman</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>7.4</nbr>
|
|
<subject>Re: <nettime> Post-digital</subject>
|
|
<from>mp</from>
|
|
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
|
<date>Mon, 10 Mar 2014 09:51:22 +0100</date>
|
|
<content>Sandra Braman wrote:
|
|
|
|
> 2% of people -- across socio-economic class, meaning it isn't about
|
|
> cost -- do not want a telephone in the home
|
|
>
|
|
> having lived that way for many years, i can report that the
|
|
> pleasures of it are quite real
|
|
as long as you have somewhere to go to send emails like this,
|
|
|
|
and this is not a joke either: communal/collective spaces for
|
|
communication can be really good. A place to meet. A digital square.
|
|
|
|
At the moment the self-organisation appears to me to organise oneself
|
|
(and perhaps a partner and 1.1 child) at home, in your own home,
|
|
with all the revolutionary, connecting gadgets at hand.... The
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individualists' revolution.</content>
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</mail>
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<mail>
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<nbr>7.5</nbr>
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<subject>Re: <nettime> Post-Postism,</subject>
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<from>Keith Sanborn</from>
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<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
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<date>Mon, 10 Mar 2014 13:34:58 -0400</date>
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<content>It's sometimes difficult to distinguish between a Luddite geezer (in
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the Ame rican sense) and a person of age and wisdom with an historical
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perspective.
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<...></content>
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</mail>
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<mail>
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<nbr>7.6</nbr>
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<subject><nettime> Post-Postism,</subject>
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<from>temp</from>
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<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
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<date>Mon, 10 Mar 2014 11:45:05 -0600</date>
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<content>>I think I'll just say that I have become post-postist.
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I hear about post-digital/New Media/Internet/Human/etc that I believe
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that this only succeeds at placing us in a corner of opposition or
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refusal and makes no suggestions. For all my distrust of it, at least
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New Aestheticism posited something. Surfing clubs did. Post-ing does
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not.
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Post-ism paints us in the corner of refusal without proposition and
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little else. It breaks the discourse into a molecular one without
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any potential coherence; it is Babel-ism at its height, and paints
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the writer into a corner. I think it is some to begin framing new
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discourses not as "new" propositions, but as new propositions, like
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perhaps the age of convergence or integrationist, or mixed-reality
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art or even going back to intermedia. I am still a pluralist; not
|
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into master narratives, but I want propositions for the present, not
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mere refusnikism. I want something that says something, not just that
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"We're over that", because I'm over being over things.
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Patrick.</content>
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</mail>
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<mail>
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<nbr>7.7</nbr>
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<subject>Re: <nettime> Post-Postism,</subject>
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<from>Keith Hart</from>
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<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
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<date>Mon, 10 Mar 2014 18:57:58 +0100</date>
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<content>Patrick,
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Thank you for saying so elegantly what I have been thinking for the
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past 30 years or more. I always felt that the promise of fundamental
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change was illusory in the 60s and 70s. Things started really moving
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in the 80s. OK it was neoliberalism, but for the first time I knew
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that history was on the move. Of course it's impossible to understand
|
|
our contemporary dilemmas without going further back than that. Yet
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the literati produced as their blinding insight into that transitional
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decade the hangover of postmodernism, deconstruction, the commonplace
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|
that the contrasts of the Cold War were leaking into each other (what
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Hegel called negative dialectic). Postism is decadent or at best
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retro. What is postcolonial theory if not nationalism with its eyes
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glued to the rearview mirror?
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Keith</content>
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</mail>
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<mail>
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<nbr>7.6</nbr>
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<subject>Re: <nettime> Post-digital</subject>
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<from>kontakt | florian kuhlmann</from>
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<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
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<date>Mon, 10 Mar 2014 11:57:24 +0100</date>
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<content>Am 10.03.2014 um 09:51 schrieb mp:
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> and this is not a joke either: communal/collective spaces for
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> communication can be really good. A place to meet. A digital square.
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i have to admit i less and less believe in this.
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the only thing i am strongly recognizing is, that friends, people and socitey are getting more and more unreal, the more they are integrated in this digital communication sphere.
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the same thing applys to you.
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i can insult you, laugh about you, ignore you, or praise you.
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nothing happens.
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fact is, all of you are not real. so i am i to you.
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i am just an e-mail with some texts, letters, etc for you.
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believe it or not. this is the new antisocial reality.
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sincerely
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an e-mail
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|
--- -- -
|
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|
|
http://www.floriankuhlmann.com
|
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|
mobil 0175 / 4 17 26 05
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mail kontakt {AT} floriankuhlmann.com
|
|
twitter {AT} fkuhlmann
|
|
skype florian_kuhlmann
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|
|
--- -- -</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
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<nbr>7.7</nbr>
|
|
<subject>Re: <nettime> Post-digital</subject>
|
|
<from>mp</from>
|
|
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
|
<date>Mon, 10 Mar 2014 13:44:00 +0100</date>
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<content>florian kuhlmann wrote:
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> Am 10.03.2014 um 09:51 schrieb mp:
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>
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>> and this is not a joke either: communal/collective spaces for
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>> communication can be really good. A place to meet. A digital
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>> square.
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>
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> i have to admit i less and less believe in this. the only thing i am
|
|
> strongly recognizing is, that friends, people and socitey are getting
|
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> more and more unreal, the more they are integrated in this digital
|
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> communication sphere.
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>
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> the same thing applys to you. i can insult you, laugh about you,
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> ignore you, or praise you. nothing happens.
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>
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> fact is, all of you are not real. so i am i to you. i am just an
|
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> e-mail with some texts, letters, etc for you. believe it or not. this
|
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> is the new antisocial reality.
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|
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|
yes, and probably due to having stared at the screen for too long, you
|
|
missed the point (and you appear to say the same thing, but present as
|
|
if it was a contraindication): if we both had had to go to some real
|
|
space and place,
|
|
with chairs, windows, cables, doors and an outside, perhaps a little
|
|
cafe with some Zapatista coffee, we could have had a chat about this -
|
|
maybe at the "nettime table" - and then I wouldn't have had to clarify
|
|
by email and could instead have spend more time with you there, or my
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|
kids in the garden.
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Ever been in an Indian phone centre? Now that'a a buzzing place..
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mp</content>
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</mail>
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<mail>
|
|
<nbr>7.8</nbr>
|
|
<subject>Re: <nettime> Post-digital</subject>
|
|
<from>Griffis, Ryan</from>
|
|
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
|
<date>Mon, 10 Mar 2014 12:28:18 -0500</date>
|
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<content>This discussion, especially related to questions of "mindful
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disconnection," recalls Sigfried Giedion's 1948 "anonymous history,"
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"Mechanization Takes Command."
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http://quod.lib.umich.edu/cgi/t/text/text-idx?c=acls;idno=heb01139
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As he put it:
|
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|
"Never has mankind possessed so many instruments for abolishing
|
|
slavery. But the promises of a better life have not been kept. All we
|
|
have to show so far is a rather disquieting inability to organize the
|
|
world, or even to organize ourselves."
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|
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|
Of course, the idea that any instruments have the potential to abolish
|
|
slavery has to be read against Eric's statement: "Whatever technology
|
|
and/or social process that can be used to strengthen the interests of
|
|
strategic power, will be used to strengthen the interests of strategic
|
|
power."
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Nonetheless, I found it a very useful historical analysis to consider
|
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alongside these discussions.
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|
|
Best,
|
|
ryan</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>7.9</nbr>
|
|
<subject>Re: <nettime> Post-digital</subject>
|
|
<from>John Hopkins</from>
|
|
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
|
<date>Mon, 10 Mar 2014 10:33:49 -0700</date>
|
|
<content>Rousseau comes fleetingly to mind:
|
|
|
|
"The problem is to find a form of association which will defend and
|
|
protect with the whole common force the person and goods of each
|
|
associate, and in which each, while uniting himself with all, may
|
|
still obey himself alone, and remain as free as before."
|
|
|
|
And a short extract from my dissertation that resonates with that
|
|
question of how to proceed while propping up the wider techno-social
|
|
system *less*:
|
|
|
|
"We most impact the power concentrations of the Regime by cultivating
|
|
an understanding of where our energy comes from, at all scales,
|
|
where it goes, and most importantly, where our attention is engaged:
|
|
on which signals, on which flows. In the process of paying close
|
|
attention to the highly mediated, amplified, signals of the Regime,
|
|
directed by its protocols, we confirm our reciprocal role as its
|
|
optimized energy source. By (re)turning our creative attentions to
|
|
the granular sources of the Regime's energy -- to the individual
|
|
Others around us -- and spending our life-energy, our life-time in
|
|
less mediated Dialogue with them via our own protocols, we immediately
|
|
begin draining the Regime of its primary power source. We preserve
|
|
those limited life-energies for more local and immediate encounters.
|
|
It is within these energized encounters, these Dialogues between the
|
|
Self and the Other, where transformation, (r)evolution, and change
|
|
are ultimately sited. As a media artist, it is this generation of
|
|
localized protocols that is perhaps the most effective strategy to
|
|
mitigate or even reverse the slide toward hierarchic centralization
|
|
[and consequent surveillance!!]. It should be some solace that though
|
|
we cannot escape the ultimate destiny of Life on the planet: in the
|
|
mean while we may choose to go with the flow of dialogue, embracing
|
|
change in the Self and in the Other, here, now."
|
|
|
|
and this aside, crucially: http://tech-no-mad.net/blog/archives/1199
|
|
|
|
Cheers,
|
|
John
|
|
|
|
--
|
|
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
|
|
Dr. John Hopkins, BSc, MFA, PhD
|
|
photographer, media artist, archivist
|
|
http://tech-no-mad.net/blog/
|
|
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>7.22</nbr>
|
|
<subject>Re: <nettime> Post-digital</subject>
|
|
<from>d.garcia</from>
|
|
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
|
<date>Mon, 10 Mar 2014 18:10:26 +0000</date>
|
|
<content>Felix Wrote
|
|
|
|
> Where the terms makes no sense, in my view (and also in Florian's),
|
|
> is sociologically. The most powerful forces that transform globalized
|
|
> societies, are all dependent on, and amplified by, digital
|
|
> technologies. If anything, we are in the middle of the historical
|
|
> run of this development rather than at the end. The idea that the
|
|
> digital is just one dimension of society and that we can abandon it,
|
|
> is ludicrous.
|
|
|
|
Along with Sociology might it also be a worth including "psychology"
|
|
in the mix. Particularly in those spaces where digital management
|
|
tools such as gantt charts and other popular workflow apps along with
|
|
their digital jargon have shaped influential forms of pop psychology,
|
|
such as the Neuro Linguistic Programming (NLP) (whose very name is
|
|
self incriminating) In turn these 'instruments' insinuate themselves
|
|
in to the working day of most organisations becoming the default argot
|
|
of neo-manegerial audit culture with its positivistic lexicon of
|
|
'solutions' .
|
|
|
|
This landscape is described in rich and entertaining detail in Evil
|
|
Media by Mathew Fuller and Andrew Jofey who have done us a great
|
|
service of mapping and describing this domain of what they have dubbed
|
|
'grey media'. A range of connections linking computing, and digital
|
|
management and business applications with NLP type psychology and
|
|
management self help books. Collectively this digitally inspired
|
|
constellation has metastasised into a weirdly seductive language
|
|
(seductive because it suggests the possibility of controling our
|
|
events) that is all the more powerful BECAUSE it is unspectacular. As
|
|
the term 'grey media' suggests it fades into background becoming the
|
|
social and psychological infrastructure of the grey media age.
|
|
|
|
In a weird inversion of the Debord, Grey Media deploys digital culture
|
|
to bring us the 'society of the unspectacular'
|
|
|
|
David
|
|
|
|
------------------------
|
|
d a v i d g a r c i a
|
|
new-tactical-research.co.uk</content>
|
|
</mail>
|
|
<mail>
|
|
<nbr>8.0</nbr>
|
|
<subject>[spectre] M. Punt: Postdigital Analogue</subject>
|
|
<from>Andreas Broeckmann</from>
|
|
<to>spectre@mikrolisten.de</to>
|
|
<date>Mon, 5 Nov 2001 13:11:09 +0200</date>
|
|
<content>LEA Volume 9, Number 10
|
|
<http://mitpress.mit.edu/e-journals/LEA/>
|
|
|
|
Editorial
|
|
|
|
< Human Consciousness and the Postdigital Analogue >
|
|
by Michael Punt, E-mail: <Mpunt@easynet.co.uk>
|
|
|
|
As Steven Wilson points out in his review of the book Ars Electronica, Facing the Future, this book is "a marvelous resource that will be much appreciated by artists, critics, historians, and anyone interested in the convergence of art and technology." (See LDR Vol. 9, No. 8, August 2001) Among other things, the book provides a historical record that catalogues the changing perceptions of the emergence of digital technology as a popular medium. Seventeen years ago, for example, Gene Youngblood reminded us that the computer translates the continuous phenomena of the world into discrete units. At the same time, Peter Weibel pointed out that whereas the analogical follows principles of similarity, congruency and continuity, the digital uses the smallest discontinuous, non- homogeneous elements. Five years later Roy Ascott, with characteristic visionary insight, appealed for a restoration of the metaphor to the agenda in order that the undivided whole could once again be regained. It was a call that Nick Herbert responded to a year later in a lucid and accessible account of quantum physics, concluding with some irony that holistic physics really would erase the distinction between subject and object and there would be a real danger of getting lost in space. Facing the Future's history lesson ends in 1998 with Friedrich Kittler's confirmation that in the realms of electronic warfare we resisted this danger since copying a "hostile CPU is easier, cheaper, and therefore more likely to proliferate than copying a hostile phase radar." This is not merely the carry- through of old technology into the new (as, for example, film and video), but a return to the ideal of the analogue. According to Kittler's analysis of warfare, in less than a decade digital media recovered the relevance of the principles of similarity, congruency and continuity. This apparent persistence of the analogue invites us to consider that the morphological resemblance between pre- and post-digital modes of expression (or industrial and enlightenment, for that matter) could be significant symptoms of the hesitance of users to abandon "felt" experience in favor of the =E9clat of >seductive technologies of description.
|
|
|
|
At the distance that Ars Electronica: Facing the Future allows us, it becomes apparent that empowered users negotiating with digital media have found themselves engaged in this recurring cycle, in which the idealization of representation is in conflict with the dominant technology, which disavows daily experience as an undifferentiated circulation of metaphors for desire and resistance. As much was at stake in the pre-cinematic age, when Jules Etienne Marey, for example, inquiring into the nature of movement, regarded the new techniques of chronophotography as inferior to graphic methods using smoked drums and scribes attached to pneumatic sensors. Photo-technology used shutters that insisted upon the moment as a finite duration and consequently ruptured the flow of movement as experienced in a flux of time. The pseudo- guarantees of objectivity that this scientifically acceptable idealization could offer, however, outweighed the deficits, and the representation of movement as an incremental sequence in a small finite and discontinuous moment became an acceptable norm to the extent that the subject was indeed collapsed into the object and temporarily "lost in space." However, whereas chronophotography chained vision to the materiality of the body, in the post-chronophotographic analogue the principles of similarity, congruency and continuity found new life in the cinema of narrative integration (the movies) which rescued the subject in a seamless reality of the infinitely malleable virtual bodies, for whom the eye was transcendent.
|
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|
|
The intellectual project of Ars Electronica, Facing the Future leaves little doubt that the digital revolution was, from its technological and conceptual inception, always destined to be the postdigital in which similarity, congruence and continuity found new applications. At stake in the postdigital analogue however, is more than the recovery of the subject: it is nothing less than the question of whose vision of paradise prevails. The postdigital analogue points to a version of paradise that is not a finite discontinuous place or a non-homogeneous moment of time, not Eden in a nostalgic future, but a thick membrane in which local conditions, desire and resistance are constantly stabilized to form a whole identity. Where the digital proposes the perfect finite conditions for a perfect existence regardless of matter (as for example in the human genome project), in the postdigital analogue (as for example in the ironies of genetic and wet biological art) human consciousness is regarded as almost infinitely malleable, able to shape its identity in response to local and technological conditions and aware all the time of the range of possibilities not yet developed, both digital and analogue.</content>
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</mail>
|
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</mails>
|
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</chapter> |