Patrice Riemens on Fri, 8 Aug 2014 18:28:20 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> Ippolita Collective, In the Facebook Aquarium, |
Ippolita Collective, In the Facebook Aquarium Part III The Freedoms of the Net On counter-moves and survival skills (section 3, concluded) Technophile luddists have a rather more schizophrenic attitude. They very much like the ease and opportunities offered by technological gadgets, especially those that bring them in contact with others. But they take zero interest in the way these sociality tools actually work. They make no effort to understand, self-manage or tweak these technologies, since it is so much easier and less cumbersome to outsource these issues. They trust experts entirely and call them up as soon as they encounter a problem. Their careless behaviour contributes to the emergence of technocracy. Which does not prevent them to fulminate that they understand zilch about these diabolical devices, and to viciously attack the experts/high priests when they realise that nobody is going to manage their instruments free of charge, that freedom costs more than dependency, and that even experts are not able to solve their problems once and for all. The most common practice is to deliberately, consciously take the side of technocracy and to take the one-way road to delegation dependency. It is natural, when bombarded with contradictory messages, and losing one's bearings in the information chaos, to think that the issues are so massive as to be irresolvable in an autonomous (self-managed) way. The Net is global (by nature) and digital technologies are more invasive than most. The digital gloss covering everything makes one believe that the problem is universal. To autonomously (self-) manage the skills required is too dangerous, techno-enthusiasts (will) say, because human beings are by nature selfish and greedy, ready to go at each other's throat. Thomas Hobbes' famous dictum, that man is a wolf to his fellow man is their motto. For the good of all, it is better to delegate to some competent person, so as to bypass the idiosyncrasies. Technology worshippers believe that it is necessary to set-up institutions and organizations responsible for addressing these technological issues, and this preferably at the global scale. This should vouch for the upholding of citizens' liberties and rights, and of course, also uphold an adequate level of consumption. Technocracy is inherently scientist and it is difficult to go against it without being accused of obscurantism, hatred of progress, or of simple naivety. Technocrats wish for an all-round regulation of the Web. They believe that setting up controlling measures is the best way to achieve this: they are hence in favor of the extension of the panoptic model. Within the Matrix, users live under the guidance of experts forming the disembodied Great Collective Intelligence, an assembly of total knowledge, sort of fantasy replica of Theilard de Chardin's 'noosphere' [18]. Technocratic extremism finds its full realization in post-humanist transhumanism; but even the moderates clamouring for a global regulation of the Web actually contribute to the advancement of radical transparency and global profiling projects. The assumption underpinning the technocratic position is that technologies are inherently good, not evil, and they are the outcome of objective and selfless scientific research. Machines do not lie because they cannot, and anyway they have no interest in doing so. It might be the case, but let us not forget that machines are programmed by humans, for whom a lot of personal interests are at stake, and who are perfectly able to lie, including to themselves. Technocracy is based on the delegation of technological knowledge power to others. In the absence of mechanisms of shared delegation, hierarchies have a tendency to gel into authoritarian structures and to lose any awareness of their historic background, the outcome of compacts and social covenants. There is quite a difference between the acknowledgement of someone's authority as a more competent person in a precise domain, giving this person a collectively agreed upon mandate, which is verified regularly and is at all times revocable, and to blindly trust the supremacy of a technocrat. (In which case) The experts-priests' power becomes unassailable and unquestionable: it will always be presented as redeeming, and this often in millenarian tonalities: if you do not choose the right technician, you are lost (my son) [19]. The IT expert is, even more than a medical doctor, today's shaman: will my computer recover from its virus infection? Is there any hope for the data I lost? Will I ever find that file back, gone as by bewitchment? There must exist some magic formula, some working exorcism, even if it is of a (very) obscure kind. The expert authority leads to the paradoxical situation in which every action becomes a request to the (principle of an) external authority, and, by the same token, a statement of self-disparagement. First one has to confess to one's ignorance and cluelessness, make amend for past errors and humbly ask for assistance, but then only to discover that experts are not at all custodians of an objective knowledge. It then happens that disappointed techno-enthusiasts morph into technophile luddists. Technolatry is the inevitable consequence of technocracy. Technology is transformed into an /idolon/, (the divinity) Moloch needs to be worshipped. Confidence turns into faith, and into the belief that there exist thaumaturgic (wonder) solutions that will solve social problems. One expects technical solutions to a whole range of problems like pollution, climate change and global warming, hunger, etc. and new, daring mythologies are being devised: green fuels, clean technologies, genetically modified crops, and further quick fix, painless solutions: magic almost. Like all hegemonic apparatuses, technocracies defuse critical approaches as they demand blind collaboration from people of whom they pretend that they 'as a matter of course' come together as a recognizable group, a social chain without apparent begin or end. Everything is connected because everybody is concerned, there is no way one could decide to stay out. All consumptive gestures, and especially those inspired by techno-enthusiasm are as many tributes to technocracy. They confirm that there is no alternative to the present dispensation, since the latest gadget put on the market and extolled by the advertisement agitprop as the magic key to happiness is immediately snatched up by avid consumers. Personal(ly induced) desire has been evicted: what remains has been prompted by publicity and as the level of individual competences drop, they narrow down to a ferocious proficiency to ferret out the sharpest deal. As it makes the individual ever more transparent, technical mediation progresses in an increasingly opaque way, rendering the elaboration of knowledge power totally impervious to inquiry. Technocratic society is an assemblage of mega-machines, in which nobody is responsible, but where everybody is a (tiny) element of the spiral of the global mechanism ? was it only as consumer. The top of the hierarchy is just as elusive as its bottom, and to bail out of the system is simply a no-goer [20]. Peter Sloterdijk affirms in one of his articles that (what he calls) anthropotechnic humanism is in crisis [21]. The project to breed-and-train citizens by way of (public) education has collapsed, mass literacy drives might as well be replaced by eugenic fabrication of a more adjusted race. No need for this to resort to genetic engineering: the social variant amply suffice. We have already seen how the use of invasive social technologies leads to automated forms of obedience which are then portrayed as necessary and beneficial. Regarding this process, one can easily detect the anthropotechnique of Facebook. This way, the biopolitic control of both bodies and minds is decentralised as much as possible towards the individual, who becomes answerable for her/his own subjugation to technologies. The transparent individual already lives outside of her/himself, bathing in her/his technological sphere, and has no longer any secrets, shadowy side, or a place to hide. sHe increasingly loose confidence in her/his autonomy because sHe has become less competent, and throws the towel in the face of the extent of the Net that has grown beyond understanding: no way sHe thinks she can make things work, which do not work very well anyway. Finance is a good illustration of this (particular) mechanism: at the same time one mouse-click away for the hobby-investor and representing an out-of-control power, apt at scuttling complete economic and social formations, playball of an uncontrollable volatility. Technocracies are portrayed as the rational solution to all these problems, but in fact they are the most achieved illustration of the irrationality of dominant power. The anthropocentrist background (that surrounds us) has blinded us into believing in a rational intentionality present behind every event, and it becomes thus obvious to see a correlation between the uncontrollable power of technology and natural forces, something made near-explicit in everyday language, with terms like 'financial tsunami', information deluge, innovation waves, etc. Merging technology with nature begets attitudes bordering on mysticism and produces absurd roller coasters between will to power and desire to rebel. The perfect individual within a global technocratic regime is willy and apathetic. Obedient to the rules decreed and by her/his enthusiastic, naysayer, or passive attitude, sHe forces potential rebels to conform. Such individual is neither a charismatic leader nor an exceptional figure, but a supporter of technical banality, (with other words) a little Eichmann of contemporary techno-totalitarianism. In Leweis Mumford words: "In every country there are now countless Eichmanns in administrative offices, in business corporations, in universities, in laboratories, in the armed forces: orderly, obedient people, ready to carry out any officially sanctioned fantasy, however dehumanized and debased." [22] (to be continued) Next time: Beyond empty nodes: autonomous individuals and organised networks (section 4) ............................. [18] Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, Jesuit priest, geologist and paleontologist: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pierre_Teilhard_de_Chardin , uses the term noosphere to describe the stage of human evolution wherein earth will be enshrouded in a film of interconnected thought, which in turn will happen shortly before the advent of Cosmic Christ, or Omega Point. [aka 'the singularity' -transl]. Teilhard de Chardin's future- and technologist mysticism has exercised great influence on transhumanist movements. The Roman Catholic hierarchy were initially opposed to Teilhard de Chardin, who was subsequently rehabilitated by Pope Benedict XVI (formerly Jozeph Cardinal Ratzinger), who in a vesper homily at the Aosta cathedral on July 24, 2009 said that "St Paul's vision is the great vision that was also shared by Teilhard de Chardin: in the end we shall have a truly cosmic liturgy, and Cosmos shall become a living Host" Eric S. Raymond also feels at home in the noosphere and believes hackers are simply colonizing it. Cf his essay /'Homesteading the Noosphere'/: http://www.catb.org/esr/writings/homesteading/homesteading/ The spiritual noosphere is the radiant future convergence point of the Roman Catholic Church and the anarcho-capitalists. [19] We have seen a fine example of this taking place in Italy with the phrase "a technical government", which describes the government that was formed in November 2011, and made up of experts not coming from politics and entrusted with the task to save the country. [20] One can conveniently apply the criticism of techno-bureaucracies to the domination by the IT sphere, which Donna Harraway denounces in "A Cyborg Manifesto, Science, Technology, and Socialist-Feminism in the late Twentieth Century" in /simians, Cyborgs, and Women: the Reinvention of Nature/ New York, Routledge , 1991, pp 161, (also readable at: http://www.egs.edu/faculty/donna-haraway/articles/donna-haraway-a-cyborg-manifesto/ ) Aggregative hierarchic systems have a tendency to develop coercive social formats, whatever the epoch. The personal competences required to function in such systems are inversely proportional to technical skills. See the analysis of the Soviet power system by Cornelius Castoriadis in 'La Societe bureaucratique', Paris, Bourgois, 1990. [Apparently large excerpts can be found in Castoriadis, Cornelius. The Castoriadis Reader. Trans. and Ed. David Ames Curtis. New York: Blackwell Publishing, 1997. -transl] [21] Peter Sloterdijk, Rules for the Human Zoo: a response [to Heidegger] to the Letter on Humanism (also known as the Elmauer Rede)(translated by Mary Varney Rorty), Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, (2009) volume 27, pp 12-28: http://www.envplan.com/abstract.cgi?id=dst3 [22] Lewis Mumford (1970). The Pentagon of Power: The Myth of the Machine, Vol. II. New York City: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich. p. 279 ----------------------------- 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