Patrice Riemens on Wed, 26 Feb 2014 23:46:00 +0100 (CET) |
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<nettime> Ippolita Collective, In the Facebook Aquarium, Part One, Section 6, |
Part One, Section 6, # 1. Public and Private, Ontology and Identity Is what is private also public? According to Facebook, everything private should tend towards becoming as public as possible. Public meaning of course managed by, published on, and made available through Facebook, a private enterprise. But the social networks to which an individual belong are not the same as her or his 'behavioural networks' (that of people sHe meets often, without them being 'friends', like parents, ofsprings, siblings, neighbours, etc. They do not correspond either with his/her on-line networks. Danah Boyd's writings in the matter are particularly clear [25]. The fundamental issue always remains the same: that of the personal ontology being created within a collective context. This is how Mark Zuckerberg thinks about it: "You have one identity," he emphasized three times in a single interview with David Kirkpatrick in his book, 'The Facebook Effect.' "The days of you having a different image for your work friends or co-workers and for the other people you know are probably coming to an end pretty quickly." He adds: "Having two identities for yourself is an example of a lack of integrity." [26] We at Ippolita have always taken as a premise that identity is the place of difference, and this for biological, psychological, and cultural reasons we have already expounded [27]. With his moralism, Zuckergerg gives the impression he is about to cleave through the Gordian knot of mendacity, by asserting the necessity to have one identity, and one only, clear, and precise, so as not to lie to oneself and to others. Zuckerberg would like us to believe that he aims to reconstitute our identities, shattered in thousands fragments in our relentlessly competitive modern lives, and that he wants to give us back our lost (mythical) integrity. So he pushes us to elaborate a personal profile, reconciling, as in a succesful advertisement of ourselves: a hard working, hard playing personna, an affectionate familly man/woman, a luscious sexual subject, a spiritual and friendly me, a social and charitable character, and so forth. Facebok as the byword for specialised mass self-marketing. Abolishing identity is admittedly impossible. Just as it is impossible to abolish power. And we may be glad about that: it is what makes evolution, change, and communication possible. Identity needs to be managed, multiplied, altered, re-created - just like power needs to be. To communicate means to talk-write from out a specific place, that is to assume an identity, or to built up a knowledge-power. Writing is based on language, which is based on identity, which in its turn is based on power. Whichever are the means we use in order to communicate, we are already entangled in the negotiation of identities, both personal and collective. But social life, as practised today, flawed and pefectible as it may be, implies the possibility to circulate, at will, different versions of ourselves, resulting in different identities for others to repercuss, leading us to adjust ourselves to new social relationships. We are not 'the same person' to each and everyone. So the question is not about being able to access various level of depths within a single individual profile, but to be really different according to the prevailing situation. Despite this apparent incoherence, this is abolutely necessary and positive for us, in order to be in accordance with our own integrety. As we shall see later on in detail, it is important to spread out the knowledge-power, by strengthening the bonds with our loved ones, by establishing connexions where there were none before, by cutting off the dead wood. What definitely should not be done is to solidify the knowledge-power into a static identity by accumulating data whose association leads to a segmentation that is only commercially relevant, and has the personalisation of advertisements for sole purpose. In daily (real) life, we do not behave the same way in the presence of our parents as we do when we are with our children. We don't talk with our children about our prefessional problems, unless we want, for some reason, to make them feel they bear some responsability for them. And if we would talk about the same with our friends, we still would do that in a different manner. We are not going to parties together with our parents, and certainly not with the postman, even though we (used to -transl.) see him every morning. We don't have sex with our boss either (or at least, not everybody does). So why should sHe be our 'friend' on Facebook, for Chrissake, or, worse still, share the information which we reserve to our partner? Yet, the affection that bonds us to the members of our own family is no less the affection we feel towards our friends. And we spend most probably more time at work than enjoying our love life. This is simply because we have are faced with different types of relationships, within different social networks, each demanding a different identity. (to be continued) [25] For a scholarly presentation, see Danah M. Boyd & Nicole B. Harison, Social Network Sites: Definition, History, and Scholarship, Journal of Computer-Mediated Communications, (13), 1, October 2008, pp 210-30. The site http://www.zephoria.org is also worth a visit. [26] See David Kirckpatrick, The Facebook Effect, Simon & Schuster, 2009 also: http://www.michaelzimmer.org/2010/05/14/facebooks-zuckerberg-having-two-identities-for-yourself-is-an-example-of-a-lack-of-integrity/ [27] For a radical appraoch on identity as place of difference, see Rosi Braidotti: Metamorphoses: Towards a Materialist Theory of Becoming, Cambridge: Polity Press, 2002. ----------------------------- Translated by Patrice Riemens This translation project is supported and facilitated by: The Institute of Network Cultures, Amsterdam University of Applied Sciences (http://networkcultures.org/wpmu/portal/) The Antenna Foundation, Nijmegen (http://www.antenna.nl - Dutch site) (http://www.antenna.nl/indexeng.html - english site under construction) Casa Nostra, Vogogna-Ossola, Italy # 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://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org