jaromil on Wed, 23 Sep 2009 12:41:33 +0200 (CEST) |
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Re: <nettime> Has Facebook superseded Nettime? |
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 re all, On Mon, Sep 21, 2009 at 10:58:08PM +0200, Florian Cramer wrote: > What is the solution? Is something like Facebook needed, but as a > decentralized, non-data-minable, user-owned system? it's kind of funny now to report here, when about a year ago i didn't even knew FaceBook until you show me the abyss :) and while you removed yourself from it, I've kept exploring its meanders and forcing my way through this "new mainstream" communication platform, something hackers are called to be proficient at. so hereby a dweller's opinion on FB (and specifically FB, not just social networking in general), from the point of view of an Internet native (and hacker, FWIW). IRL Facebook has grown out of a venture capital with a simple concept on usability and a huge momentum in exploitation of browsers by web 2.0 trends, arguably an inane vision of horror for digital architects and apparently a good investment even for governmental agencies: some people in dream even to attribute FB with some authority in authenticating citizens. Plus let's not ignore that the platform, as already demonstrated by Second Life experiments, has a remarkable potential for commerce. Followed by huge mega-corporations investments, FB realized a new networked space in parallel with other efforts as Orkut and Friendster - - I'll be willingly omitting those because similar, as well nation-wide social networking web-platforms (SNWP) here, as Hyves in the Netherlands or StudiVZ in Germany or RenRen in China, for instance. This initial triad of big choices (FB, Orkut and Friendster) realised the biggest trans-national and trans-thematic SNWPs, roughly summarized by a continental subdivision: Facebook for English speaking North-America and Europe, Orkut for South America and Friendster for Asia. This representation is meant to be mostly inspirational, documenting the presence of a demography, rather than detailing it, please refer to this table for completeness: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_social_networking_websites Given this (still very limited) background scenario IRL, I'll share a quick analysis on their network presence. First the answer to your question; there is no way FB can substitute a place for discussion like Nettime, nor a knowledge resource like Usenet. If smart enough, it might still include them (will the use of Nettime in FB, omitting ads, be considered commercial?) making them reachable (incorporated in a frame, as it's done for all redirected content) within its stupid-proof infrastructure, but arguably it shouldn't give access to them: imagine how such a flood of interaction would break "intellectual ecosystems" as ours... it would be a loss-loss situation for all. As the hype will be over, the function of FB will be that of an agile interaction platform for comments and link exchange, a function for which Google is still planning its "Wave" platform, which can actually change the scenario and win some sympathy considering is based on open protocols as XMPP (Jabber) and it might offer a distributed architecture as it has been for good old SMTP. FB is a quick way to exchange contacts with new and old friends, a superficial way to investigate people, a possible platform for micro-commerce, etc. etc. Besides that, it is a popular public relation platform for online-pop artists, but as such will be arguably not so prestigious, lacking the original touch and mystery that artists require to be really successful (this might open another chapter for this inquiry: how social networks will change the world of art, but let's leave that for another time). So I'm arguing that the volume of interaction and the demographic composition of bulletin board systems, newsgroups and mailing-lists won't be changed by FB (nor any other SNWP) because their inherent peculiarities, from a technical and human-machine interface as well a more intellectual and aesthetic POV. What can arguably happen is that, as a reproduction of dynamics already seen within the evolution between the aforementioned communication platforms, new generations of netizens will actually ignore the past and join the convenience of newer usable systems, without realising so easily how such a choice implies a different quality in online exchanges, as well different demographic contexts. In front of all this I believe "media theorists and practitioners", as well hackers, cannot snob the growth of SNWPs: they are extremely interesting network implementations, even if based on the fundamental error of using a web browser as an operating system. In fact this latter point, this *disastrous* dynamic of web 2.0, is the real problem we should be addressing and we should really fear, closely connected to the fact SNWPs are all centralised architectures: relying on obsolete and inefficient browsing technologies regulated by a weak and dumb (to say the least) governance as W3C, heading towards scalability problems that will eventually impact the world in terms of carbon footprint, if we really want to fly high on the issue now and touch the server-hosting aspect. Back to earth, there are still many more things to be said, at least regarding surveillance and censorship, as well new economic opportunities. Leaving the latter for a deeper formulation (to which I'd be happy to contribute, if not alone, for a publication) let me spend a few more works on the first two. Surveillance of FB is really happening and, given the nature of the platform and its large base, it reaches probably a wider sample of people, as well deeper in the subjective minds (and actions, in some instances) than any other networking platform we have experienced before, with the still standing exception of mobile phones. But this is also nothing new: investigators have always had the opportunity to monitor people's lives on the phone and on Internet (on any media platform offering interaction in fact), those that are backed by State authorities or hacker super-powers have always had the opportunity to peak into "average" people's digital privacy (assuming cryptography isn't yet an average practice), so SNWP can just represent another chapter into the next publication of ETSI SEC lawful interception dossier by Interpol - *just another chapter*. So the rise of SNWP is just improving a tendency we should be aware of since long time, nothing to go mad about anyway. After all, what this is really implying on the wider picture is that there is a trade-off between popularity and privacy: while controversy and rebellion is ïïïïïïï in pop-culture (just think of Madonna's career as a pop singer for a quick reference) surveillance is a natural condition and censorship is the risk for those who live on the bleeding edge. Now we come to censorship (intended in the wider sense, from an online post to body imprisonment): it is important to note that censorship is not enforced by SNWPs exception made for commercial competition between themselves. External corporate and state powers are those who have interest to enforce a policy on them and this can arguably become a business model for supra-national SNWPs in future. OTOH FB will actually censor *automatically* every link to any other SNWP, to avoid the organic propagation of competitors within its own infrastructure. Presumably other SNWPs are doing the same. This is now quite fascinating: SNWP are such fluid giants and have such a big media potential that their weakest spot is within themselves, they could be flipped like a glove by the injection and propagation of a new trend. They will actually facilitate any other Exodus (meaning people staying in contact across boundaries move more, mentally and physically), with exception with the movement that will let them loose their virtual citizens and "biopolitical value". As such, SNWPs are configuring themselves as way smarter organisms than nation-states and their antiquate tax systems. To conclude with this torrent of thoughts (and please bare with the contorted prose of this mail, but I really have no time to proof-read it now) let me state that FB and more in general larger SNWPs aren't contained by the Internet, which cannot be seen anymore as a base infrastructure, but are in fact generating bigger networks, providing interaction to larger user-bases and ultimately hiding the lower layer of their networking protocols in the cryptic hashes found in their web URLs, resulting in secret (yet simple) algorithms that let them expand the Internet as a fractal and still hold the unique possibility to crawl its nodes, establish an heuristic monopoly on the network they create. ciao - -- jaromil, dyne.org developer, http://jaromil.dyne.org GPG: 779F E8B5 47C7 3A89 4112 64D0 7B64 3184 B534 0B5E -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.9 (GNU/Linux) iEYEARECAAYFAkq5680ACgkQe2QxhLU0C17wZACg0z/5ZjZ3//IR7GHWJGiUFp9w ryMAn0vyPF1gfYtDpKUZW3pptBrts12E =bOLo -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- # 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