Patrice Riemens on Sun, 10 May 2009 13:48:46 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> Ippolita Collective: The Dark Face of Google (Afterthought 2008) |
NB this book and translation are published under Creative Commons license 2.0 (Attribution, Non Commercial, Share Alike). Commercial distribution requires the authorisation of the copyright holders: Ippolita Collective and Feltrinelli Editore, Milano (.it) Ippolita Collective: The Dark Side of Google (concluded) Afterthought for the French Edition, 2008 Today Google's domination appears to spread further and further in, and over the digital world(s). Hence the analysis and the [perspectives] we engaged with when we started our research in 2005 are {in our view} more timely than ever. The bright face of Google is becoming dimmer as fast as its hidden face grows visibly darker. Thus, it has become more urgent than ever today to go beyond the hype running after each and every 'scoop' that is the latest technological innovation. We must on the contrary take a pause and allow for the time necessary to elaborate a critical discourse. This book's gambit was to propose an approach for in-depth reflection without constantly following Google's most recent innovation. Nevertheless we are not unhappy to see that many a hypothesis we formulated in this book has actually come about in reality, and this is especially true of the profiling taking place along {the users'} search activities. Google's homepage has become more complex {in the meanwhile} as services are now directly accessible. And as a search is processed the mechanisms behind profiling, such as become manifest in the {search} page's margins, appear to have become visibly more refined and invasive. The Google-mobile [telephony] convergence discussed and anticipated in chapter 5 has become a reality with the spectacularly stage-managed launch of Android, a system that grafts itself onto hand-held appliances (GSMs, Palm Pilots, Smartphones, etc.), and which is of course totally Linux/ Open Source-based. Android is being developed by the Open Handset Alliance, a platform of mobile operators, chips manufacturers, mobile appliances producers, software developers, and various other commercial players. It is a consortium of scores of ITC heavy-weights, ranging from Intel to Motorola and from Samsung to eBay. Google has also launched a competition offering serious prize money for the best Android-based applications development proposals. Award winning proposals (selected by a Google internal committee), will be earmarked for trophies and funding to the tune of a cool US Dollars one crore [see chapter 1]. Google thereby confirms its evolution towards a software-centered enterprise: its much-awaited GPhone therefore will not be the next technological object, but, literally, an 'android', that is a mean to make use either of already existing tools, or to invent the ones of tomorrow. One should note furthermore that in the best traditions of 'free' resources entitlement, the Android license will make it possible for Google to avail of the contributions of coders the world over - for free. And then to resell the package obtained from their labor for money - and all this perfectly legit. This as Google has chosen for the Apache license 2, which is much less far-reaching than GPL as regards the upholding of 'free'. And Android represents only the latest move in Mountain View's strategy to 'pacmanize' the world of F/OSS. Today, Google's Open Source projects are no longer hosted on the sourceforge.net site: they are on Google's own server, code.google. com , for enhanced visibility, better services - and closer control. So once again, accumulation is King. (END of the Book - minus the notes) -------------------------- Translated by Patrice Riemens This translation project has been supported and facilitated by: The Center for Internet and Society, Bangalore (http://cis-india.org) The Tactical Technology Collective, Bangalore Office (http://www.tacticaltech.org) Visthar, Dodda Gubbi post, Kothanyur-Bangalore (till March 31st, 2009) (http://www.visthar.org) The Meyberg-Acosta Household, Pune (April 2-11, 2009) The Bawa-Jonnalagadda Household, Bangalore (April 12-18, 2009) The Haskel-Huley (London), Bunting (Bristol), Zingas (Glastonbury), and Bezembinder (Groningen) Households (April 19 - May 10, 2009) # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: http://mail.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org