Molly Hankwitz on Sat, 6 Jul 2013 03:02:38 +0200 (CEST) |
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Re: <nettime> Suzanne Moore: When states monitored their citizens we used to |
Thank you for posting this article. Truly, deplorably, many hundreds of thousands, if not millions of American citizens go to sleep at night believing that it is perfectly 'ok' for their email and phone calls to be 'read' and 'monitored' because its an issue of national security. Since 911, supposedly the "new ages of security" they have willfully agreed to this in order for agents to rout out possible attacks on the US. Since history is a sieve here, not too many may remember eras when spying was normalized through land telephones, satellite dishes, and covert operations too analogue to seem pervasive. These folks willingly give themselves over to such "transparency" because they feel they dont' have anything to hide. They love their country, are happy to fight its wars, and don't mind being seamlessly connected to that idea and all it stands for. Their liberty is the liberty of the US government, to protect itself from intrusion and criticism; to rout out evildoers, and generate lies. These are the Teflon strategies with which the US government has protected its innocence before as 'democratic leader' and 'superpower'. What the author gets at regarding blurring of boundaries between market research associations and spying and government information gathering points to what has sneaked up upon us. It was a ferocious anti-globalization movement that challenged borders and corporate power vis a vis use of the Internet for its ability to equalize power relations. Now we are coming to grips with the new "virtual" geographies that corporate power has managed to congloberate through its development and use of the Internet. I wondered in an interview on David Cox's blog about why it was that Facebook - and we have all wondered about this from time to time - what was it about that domesticating set of practices, "poking" and "linking" and uploading photos and videos so easily, that made us suspicious. All that for free? There had to be a catch. It felt almost decadent to get so much comfort from so little. The military-industrial-advertising-entertainment-surveillance complex manufacturing ads on Facebook to Googles, and Twitter's and LInked in involvement as widespread, dispersed, decentralized "entities" on the networks providing information to PRISM. These companies are as large as the small European countries they help to spy on and their populations are multicultural and boundary-less. It's a new era of globalizing economy. Unfortunately "universal" like those weird dudes from World on Wings ? at end of Things to Come - flying around and trying to dominate. Lev Manovich's tiny moving camera concept - applied to Google Earth as the empowering tool of a miniaturized total domination. eek On Thu, Jul 4, 2013 at 8:57 PM, Patrice Riemens <patrice@xs4all.nl> wrote: > original to: > > http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2013/jul/03/when-states-monitored-citizens-call-them-authoritarian > > > When states monitored their citizens we used to call them authoritarian. > Now we think this is what keeps us safe <...> -- molly hankwitz, phd:::artist:::curator:::writer training coordinator:::community technology network:::btop project www.ctnbayarea.org www.sfbtop.org # 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