Brian Holmes on Thu, 16 Jun 2011 02:30:08 +0200 (CEST) |
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Re: <nettime> Eli Pariser: The Filter Bubble |
On 06/13/2011 01:13 PM, nettime's avid reader wrote: >If "code is law", as Creative Commons founder Larry Lessig declared, it's >important to understand what the new lawmakers are trying to do. We need to >understand what the programmers at Google and Facebook believe in. We need >to understand the economic and social forces that are driving >personalisation, some of which are inevitable and some of which are not. >And we need to understand what all this means for our politics, our culture >and our future. > >Adapted from The Filter Bubble by Eli Pariser. The Avid Reader has made a good pick. This article -- and the book behind it -- vindicates the most interesting thread of "immanent net critique" that's been practiced here over the last five or six years. Essentially it's about what Oscar Gandy long ago called _The Panoptic Sort_: a process of social segmentation based on the statistical analysis of past behaviors, in order to predict the probability of future ones, and profit on it. That's also the subject of a text I posted here: http://brianholmes.wordpress.com/2007/09/09/future-map What struck me in the Pariser article was the remark on the absurdity implied in pushing the "like" button for an article on genocide in Darfur. How to maintain the "taste" for critique in a world where everyone's perception is algorithmically tailored to fit their consuming propensities? Or -- more perversely, in a way that many readers here will instantly recognize -- how to keep that paradoxical "taste" from itself declining into a statistically sorted consuming pleasure? The problem is that the bubble of engineered satisfaction diminishes the opportunities to generate social solidarity (a more fundamental notion than self-interested "bridging capital"). At the same time, the filter bubble also blinds individuals to the rising incidence of state and corporate repression and the continuing deterioration of living environments, whether natural, urban, economic or semiotic. Even more: deliberate efforts of selective suppression are made to safeguard this convenient blindness. At the extreme, which is nonetheless real, the model of targeted assassination becomes the uncanny mirror of the panoptic sort. These issues are central to the kinds of personality structures that we now develop, as the very basis on which a public life can, or can not, come into being. Such was the conclusion of Future Map: "Our society???s obsession with controlling the future ??? and insuring accumulation ??? has at least two consequences. The first is the organization of a consumer environment for the immediate satisfaction of anticipated desires, with the effect of eliminating desire as such. In its place comes an atmosphere of suspended disbelief where entire populations move zombie-like and intellectually silent beneath exaggerated images of their unconscious drives. The second consequence, which we have seen with such violence in recent years, is the simple removal of those who might conceivably trouble this tranquilized landscape with any kind of disturbing presence or speech. What remains in the field of public politics is dampened voice, dulled curiosity and insignificant critique..." The question is not only one of "understanding" the forms of cultural change and the technical and economic laws that underlie them. It's also one of finding practices that can counter those forms, that can reshape both objective social relations and the intimate personality structures which depend upon them. Art is important for this. But art is not enough. If cultural critique has any meaning or mission today, it would be to bring an awareness of these deep issues to the social movements that are now arising, throughout the world, in the face of the recent breakdowns of globalized neurocapitalism. # 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