Andres Manniste on Thu, 27 Nov 2008 18:24:52 +0100 (CET) |
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Re: <nettime> Report on Facebook desk democracy |
Thank you Ana, for your thoughtful response. I sent this one out as a "Hail Mary Pass”, followed by a "Whoops, did I really press the send button?" I tend to agree that Facebook can serve political purposes and does have a very real use as a platform for dialogue about events and so on. I think that what I was addressing was the problem with, for example, Avatars. The devil knows Latin as well, and these things can be manipulated, a traditional problem with direct democracy. We are in the middle of a Provincial election here, and I received an irate email signed by many prominent artists about how there were massive cuts coming to the arts in secondary schools. As it turned out, this hoax, composed four years earlier and identified as such, was simply re-released verbatim. Facebook can be manipulated in the same manner and I am actually interested in watching groups, real or imaginary, appear and vaporise. I tend to think that this represents the true nature of Facebook and so that is why I tend to make light of the entire social networking phenomenon. Because I teach this stuff, I am, of course, subscribed to practically all of them but it was the interface of Facebook that intrigued me the most. Where a personal website or a blog aesthetically resembles the originator and one can get a pretty good idea of who you are dealing with, the vanilla facade of Facebook conceals truth. You can create whatever persona you wish and any unique aspects of personality disappear in the standardized blue and white. I can certainly find many noble uses with social networking but I really do think that it will ultimately extinguish itself to be replaced by another idea; consequently I choose to have fun with it. I certainly think that there are creative means by which some people are working with social networks. The processor and the network together can be construed as a dynamic model of thought processes (Gabora, 2002). An idea that circulates on the network travels as a notion through a potential mind that is unique in that it encompasses the minds of others. Internet and network art expresses mental images, as they are experienced and through the processor, thinking itself can be explored taking shape as virtual memories and metaphors. On the network this circulation itself can become the work of art. I think that with this bit, I was rather addressing pretentiousness and the perpetuation of modernist hierarchies as opposed to truly exploring the ephemeral nature of social networking. The nice thing about network based art practices is that they need not fit institutional models. Liane Gabora http://www.vub.ac.be/CLEA/liane/papers/CandC/CandC.htm Andres Ana Peraica wrote: > Hi Andres, > > many of these people are just avatars : ) another thing which is > interesting is how it happens that the message account is blocked (it > happened to some people) <...> # 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