Ian Dickson on Tue, 2 Mar 2004 13:45:36 +0100 (CET) |
[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
Re: <nettime> The State of Networking (with Florian Schneider) |
In message <200402290931.i1T9VA629356@bbs.thing.net>, geert lovink <geert@xs4all.nl> writes >Notes on the State of Networking > >By Geert Lovink and Florian Schneider > Very nice, but I'd raise a number of points. Firstly, in the context of changing the world, IT is infrastructure, and Networks are personal. I will say nothing about the spread of IT infrastructure, except to note that I think it is generally a good idea. It is after all very difficult to argue that swapping 1 call center job in the UK for 5 jobs and 200 people supported in India is not a Net Gain to human happiness, for all that one person loses. 1) Networks are always limited by the psychological ability of a person to take part in them. This is because Networks are personal relationships, and whether face to face, by phone, or by Net is irrelevant. What technology does allow is for each person to be part of the Networks that matter most to them, not bounded by physical location or time delay. Looked at in this light the only thing that technology can provide is to attempt to deliver to each person that which interests them. A key aspect of this is to increase the manageable size of Networks, from a few hundred to several thousand, but even in my dreams I don't see them being more than 5-10 strong IF you allow that each Network member can be directly involved in driving the Network. (This is very different to organisational numbers, where a small Network "represents" a much larger body of "supporters". Eg GreenPeace, most political parties and campaign groups). IMO many of the issues highlighted by the authors simply highlight the fact that large and purposeful Networks don't just happen, they have to be driven/developed/managed by one/a few leading individuals, at least until a critical mass of self sustaining communication is reached. Enough on that, but if anyone wants more, I'll elaborate - it's my professional field. 2) Networks are by definition in group / out group. Those in the Network are the In Group, and the rest of the world is the Out Group. This instantly implies that a Network cannot function for the common good, only (at best) for what it thinks is the common good. And of course maybe not even that - pure self interest is not unknown. 3) Most Networks have no purpose. They are friendship Networks. But of those that do, the most common purpose of political importance is that the Network wishes to change the world in ways that suit them. Ie they seek power. (If not the levers of power, at least influence over those that wield them). 4) As soon as you have power seeking Networks you have to abandon all "niceness" about how the world will be more open etc etc as this will only happen if the power seeking Networks themselves WANT to make that happen. I am sure that any modern terrorist organisation worth it's salt is deftly using all the technologies available to the modern power seeking Network. 5) When you move to discussions re copyright etc you are moving to fight between opposing Networks, so the outcome of that will be consequential on which side builds the most effective power seeking networks. RIAA is a Network. (Incidentally, there is nothing to prevent creative people boycotting the entire publishing industry, except perhaps a belief that all those who clamour for their work might not value it enough to put bread on the table. I have an interesting take on this at:- http://www.iandickson.com/cheqtrack.html Although written re music industry (where some UK indie types are intrigued) it could be used more widely, and certainly bats any o the normal suspects - please give it away, and "let's have compulsory licensing system") 6) Conclusions The methods by which power will be sought and achieved will be changed by the development of Network enabling technologies, but these new technologies say nothing about the world that those power seeking networks will create. But it does mean that for those who want to change the world, and have the ability to develop and rive a Network, the fact that the present incumbents haven't grasped it, gives you an opportunity. IMO Networking could be used by campaign groups to even greater effect than the Environmental lobby used the media between 1970-2000. > >Instead of endlessly deconstructing the 'New Economy meets NGOs' agendas, >we believe it the task of the next media activists to investigate the >limits of networking in order to be in a better position to overcome those >boundaries. This era is blinded by the light. As technologies are still an >expanding universe it is hard to see its limits, to recognize its damages, >without falling back into technophobia and cultural pessimism. Wise words:-) In Network building it is Execution that counts, and that requires understanding the psychological limitations of the technology. For example - mailing lists can be used, by members, out of the box. But they don't scale. People who don't realise that, and try and do much with the wrong tech, fail. More sophisticated solutions will allow the building of larger, stronger, networks, but require more effort on the part of the Network leaders and the early members. Which can make it harder to get going. But hey, nothing important is easy:-) > > -- Ian Dickson 01452 862637 # 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: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net