carlo von lynX on Sun, 27 Jan 2019 17:51:32 +0100 (CET) |
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Re: <nettime> John Naughton on Shoshana Zuboff: 'The goal is to automate us': welcome to the age of surveillance capitalism |
Thanks for articulating your doubts, this is going to be interesting to dig into. On 01/27/19 09:48, Patrice Riemens wrote: > James is right, I think, in believing Carlo's argument does not account > for the rapid, 'liquid' change advertising, and the current economic > dispensation in general has undergone at an ever increasing speed over > the last decade. Well I think a prohibition of individualised advertising would decelerate this speed. On 2019-01-27 08:31, James Wallbank wrote: >> I'd suggest that your response doesn't acknowledge the fluidity and >> adaptability of capitalism, which is just one framework to manifest a >> desire to gain advantage and control. If you ban targeted advertising, >> that doesn't mean that advertisers will go back to "regular" >> advertising. What else should they do if what they were doing is illegal? >> It means that advertising will morph into a different and almost >> unidentifiable practice. Remember that I don't promote forbidding something. I promote re-engineering the Net in such a way that it is no longer technically possible to do this. This includes considering measures like abolishing HTTP or at least relevant parts of it. So what you describe would not only be criminal in the future, it would also not work most of the time. >> In fact, it already is. We see that >> advertisers mobilise social media "influencers", and we may sense (I Social media bots aren't technically possible in the new scenario I am promoting. You need to know real people to be able to enter their social network and you put your own reputation at risk if you try to abuse their trust or introduce bots. >> certainly do) that supposedly "public service broadcasting" has been >> subverted. Imagine a circumstance in which the people who were >> advertisers are invisibly infiltrating every part of life, with >> techniques that may be impossible to distinguish from other cultural >> activity. Neither would it be legal, nor technically easy - so I consider it a theoretical scenario which is a lot less evil than the current situation by which the Net is progressing towards being more harm than good for human society. >> An advertiser can intervene at any part of the communication process. >> For example: >> >> * If they're blocked from putting product placements into films, they >> can write films themselves. That is not within the debate as it is not about targeted manipulation. Product placement is "mostly harmless" since there can be a public debate about it. >> * If they can't get media channels to feature their planted messages, >> they can produce their own channels. As they have always done, with the mixed results they get, and under scrutiny of public debate. Thus, this is also not a scenario that I am addressing. It's not a new problem. >> * New foods, new fashions, new music, new rumours, new words, all can >> be engineered to render recipients (who become participants) more >> suggestible and more aligned with a particular way of thinking. Nothing new unless these messages are not aimed at specific individuals in the knowledge of their specific mental weaknesses. >> Some global producers are now so pervasive that they don't really need >> to advertise ANY SPECIFIC PRODUCT. The message "Got a problem? Buy >> something!" is enough to be to their advantage. Yes, I am not a fan of brand marketing either, but it is a wholly different issue and it has been around for a century or so. >> The key resistant mechanisms are education and critical thinking. In >> other words, for each individual to get smarter, to be more able to >> evaluate influences, and to gain greater agency over their own life. No, that is a very popular fallacy. Education CAN NOT COMPENSATE for targeted scanning of psychological limitations. Humans will always be imperfect and as soon as somebody is allowed to leverage that, there is no education on earth that can compensate. So this is a recipe guaranteed for failure. >> Of course, the mechanism of education itself is under >> information-attack - education is replaced by training, information >> replaced by disinformation, history is replaced with propaganda, truth >> is replaced by faith. True, but it is orthogonal to the issue of powning individuals psychologically. A friend of mine made this comparison: Attacking the brains of individuals is like doing a celebral DDoS on each and every susceptible individual in society, independently, without any evidence, without any public control. It can in no way be compared to any mechanism of manipulation seen in the past of human society. >> Resisting the mechanisms of surveillance capitalism on an individual >> level is completely feasible. There are numerous tactics to generate >> digital disinformation that disguises an individual's tracks. However, >> these may be pointless - not only do they expend energy, they also >> don't intervene at the contextual scale. Also you're clutching at straws here. Just because the system of psychological manipulation isn't perfect yet (it's only ten years old and depends on AI which is only starting to function), it is quite naive to expect this not to win the race against education and "disguises" in the long run. If we don't regulate the power of AI applied against us, the human species will lose against AI. Your bets on human intelligence vs AI are too much a risk we can take. >> I have to say, I'm hopeful, but not optimistic. Unless a critical mass >> of individuals do manage to get smarter, we may be living in an age in >> which the very notion of individual, autonomous human consciousness is >> coming to an end. Each of us may be increasingly absorbed into a >> collective cultural/media matrix in which independent thought is >> simply not a thing. Welcome to the hive. I can't think of any case in human history where a massive improve- ment has come by a change in behaviour of each damn individual rather than by the introduction of new rules from some smart people who figured out how things were going wrong and managed to grab the power. > > > On 01/27/19 09:48, Patrice Riemens wrote: > can only be achieved at the > individual level. Think of 'there is war, but nobody goes there'. Cute, but when has it ever worked? If the lords of war decide to go to war, we will pick you up to be in the front line. No questions asked. > I would add the observation that a still minute, but ever > increasing number of people are switching to a different lifestyle, If they can't leverage a change in policy, this will have no effect for society as a whole. If policy is decided by 42 persons rather than a democratic society, good luck with getting your ideas through to those 42 suckers who run the planet. Sometimes I wonder if this "change from below/individual action" ideology, promoted without the least factual proof of ever achieving anything, is actually being induced into anarchist heads by spin doctors from above, knowing that it will keep them from doing what could actually put their power at risk: engage in democracy. > yet there is a chance that something good will come about if, again, > manipulated, unnatural individualism can be reverted into solidarity, > mutual aid, and peer support. Yet another French concept/discipline we > might well embrace: the 'entraidologie' (the theory of mutual > assistance). And of course, more DIYT (Do It Yourself, Together) instead > of relying on outside, big business sources! Yes, ideology. Ideology to me is when ideas are persistently promoted although they have no foundation in scientific or historical facts. Good sounding stuff that keeps people from actually taking their butts to the their streets and save what's left of that thing our ancestors fought so hard to achieve: democracy. But wait, ideology can go much further: On 01/25/19 21:29, mp wrote: > regulation is leftist, a handle on liberal markets created by > social-democrats, a leftist faction Wow, now THIS is a statement which is completely fact-free.. just total propaganda. > democracy is a liberal distraction from the power of markets. Democracy is the only legitimate tool we have to regulate how humans interact (which includes markets). Your ideological axioms of thinking are entirely fallacious which makes me wonder if there's any possibility to have a constructive discourse with you if anything you say will build upon ideological false grounds. -- http://youbroketheinternet.org http://secushare.org Please use the attached PGP key for an encrypted reply, if you can. # 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 # @nettime_bot tweets mail w/ sender unless #ANON is in Subject: