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The Art of Surviving in Simcities
A chapter that I wrote for the Walled Garden publication released in 2009 by
Virtueel Platform as a follow up of the 2008 Walled Garden conference in
Amsterdam. The book was edited by Annet Dekker en Annette Wolfsberger.
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Introduction
Used and abused by many, the notion of “2.0, 3.0, x.0″ is mostly jargon that
inherited its vagueness from a desire to inflate technological value and its
cultural impact. This is nothing but a commercial attempt to resuscitate the
dotcom era by promising a future of connected services and communication.
Unfortunately there is nothing new in terms of network infrastructure nor in
terms of how people have used the Internet to date. At most, another layer of
abstraction has been built on pre-existing technology, and some
interoperability has been added in terms of data exchange. It doesn’t matter
though, if all this vapour ends up either up in the clouds, or stuck in
condensation on some forgotten server. All of us are experiencing how the use
of the Internet and the growing dependence on computation has a serious impact
on our everyday lives. There is no need to pretend this is a side effect of new
web application trends and their social impact. On the contrary, the transition
phase we are experiencing now is rather simple to understand: humanity has
started its slow shift from total offline activity to complete online and
digitally assisted life.
The outcome of this transition is not yet set in stone, and there are many
conflicting visions on and different approaches to how we can project
ourselves, and how communication can survive, in those “simcities”: utopian
data and software network environments, nested in data centres’ towers.
MyLife 2.0, serving the megalithic black box
The 2.0 revolution never happened. Remembering how the whole concept has been
“sold” to the late adapters, or to the dotcom crash victims, the main idea was
to power companies of any size with augmented productivity tools focusing on
collaboration and wrapped in a fresh and sexy design, with a more personal
approach to communication. These tools would be used voluntarily and promoted
by employees on blogs and social networks. In fact this was merely an attempt
to port the “casual Friday” to the digital domain.
This obviously failed, just like all the other attempts to link personal life
and working life, because most people make a clear distinction between the two.
You cannot expect from someone who is already differentiating between private
and professional mail accounts to force-blog about his job in the same tone he
uses for his hobby web log. The direct consequence of this conflict made the
use of so called “Web 2.0 tools” the exclusive domain of dedicated hired
professionals and turned the whole promised revolution into the come back of
old-fashioned marketing.
This failure failed to stop the process, however, and perverted it even more
with a proliferation of “fake” blogs and “fake” profiles on various networks.
These were made to look amateur on purpose and their content was carefully
crafted in order to give a more human face to impersonal corporations or
political groups or merely to try to initiate a buzz around a new product.
Masturbation camps
Of course, the ever-growing success of social network platforms proves that
some elements of the face-lifted WWW are very successful. This is true until
you take a closer look at what they have to offer. Without a doubt the strong
point is to develop and extend social links on an idyllic playground that is
either completely generic or themed around a certain topic or hobby.
But these networks are illusions, they are virtual constructs in a centralised
black box. Not only do they not exist as a complex social mesh, they present
very limited serial features. These places are like dictatorial micro societies
that imply forced happiness and which ban any form of rebellion or
non-conformism towards the stalinist software to ensure there are no traces of
you left on the server database.
Some of these social networks are built around a service based on sorting,
comparing, distributing and plotting the data you generate by for instance
listening to digitally encoded music, by ordering books online, by rating films
you’ve seen in a theatre (or downloaded on a torrent), or any other hack and
hobby that can leave a digital trace. Aiming at providing a link between your
friends’ data and your own, such tools are in fact specifically efficient for
one thing: masturbation and exhibitionism. Very little use is made of the
social element of a network. This does not stop people spending their time
“pimping” their data and looking at themselves generating information and
virtual links that describe their ability to feed a system with information,
over and over again. The social aspect of a network is almost non-existent;
friends and other links are just treated as another statistic to look at
yourself.
Some will argue that there are forms of collective masturbation and
exhibitionism that do add value and bring new ways of exploring digital
information: folksonomies. This is true until a system reaches the point where
too many communities and cultural context are mixed together, rendering any
form of collective tagging incoherent. This cancer of metadata is called meta
noise, and simply brings to light the fact that data tagging is only meaningful
in the light of individual subjective interpretation. This might work well in
small groups that share a common culture and lingo, but it becomes irrelevant
when multiple communities work on the same platform.
I’m indexed in Google, therefore I exist
While new platforms are emerging all the time, pushing the limits of web
applications for the masses, some of the very few dotcom crash survivors are
managing to silently take over the world. A good example is the omnipresent
Google, which managed in just a few years to become the invisible proxy to the
WWW, and for many, literally became the Internet itself. Many of us are already
solely using this search engine to pull information from the Internet,
sometimes just typing chunks of URL in the search engine, instead of going to a
site directly. This form of voluntary blindness is moving us in to the
dangerous situation whereby we outsource the accessibility of the Internet to a
company that will take, again with the EULA implicitly accepted, any decision
on the way everything is filtered, listed or sorted when the engine is queried.
Here again we end up in a black box where the notion of distributed information
is very much centralised and moderated.
Full body search before entrance
A probably equally important aspect of these black box network applications is
the ability to pull from, and push information to databases. This feature is
often presented as an argument for the openness and so called networking
ability of these platforms. In fact, what is provided are digital customs for
the data (the API) and a digital passport for its owner (an ID or key). This
freedom of data is in fact very well controlled and authorises access on an
individual basis. The same way a profile might be banned and erased from one of
these simcities, access to the data can be completely denied or manipulated.
Further more, the so called interoperability supposedly brought by various
projects, in an attempt to bridge together several web platforms, will just
limit the distributed nature of the network even further by promoting a unique
database of profiles and identities as a main control.
Data mon amour
These black boxes did not arrive from nowhere. If they are successful today it
can only mean that they serve a purpose for most users. It seems that, beyond
the slick design and clever marketing of the online “panem et circenses”
platforms, we are permanently high on digital data. It has such a prolific
nature that we don’t need much to generate it and its mere existence calls for
even more digital data creation, in the form of annotations, metadata,
discussions and documentation. As a consequence any new gimmick that produces,
interprets, filters or processes it is seen as a welcome new fix. For example,
productivity fetishists fight to avoid declaring e-mail bankruptcy and, as
methodology junkies, they will try the latest workflow trends just like anyone
desperate to lose weight will try any new diet.
In fact it takes an incredible amount of energy to get things done, inform
yourself, communicate with others and at the same time keep the ball rolling
when most of your professional activity relies on permanent connectivity. The
issue of coping with an overkill of data is an important factor when it comes
to choosing between handling the data in your own way or agreeing to the terms
of third party services.
Buffer overflow
The problem is that there is too much information to deal with and it is almost
embarrassing to see that all of us tend to carry an increasing amount of
backup, archives and other collections of primarily obsolete data that is
impossible to sort.
Complete outsourcing is becoming more and more popular as it is increasingly
difficult to manually handle these huge amounts of personal data. Storing it
requires not only hardware and infrastructure but also maintenance and care
that not all of us can afford or have time for.
From the computing and storage perspective, network applications become a
service that is completely invisible in a similar way to how we receive gas and
electricity. In the end we just need storage, and how we get it of little
interest, just like we expect to get electricity from the wall socket without
caring about its origin. Cloud storage and cloud computing relies on the fact
that most people now consider computer services just like other mass
distributed commercial commodities. This does not call for reflection on what
is digital data today and how we should handle it, it is merely a lazy
shortcut. Behind the buzzwords and hype there is no magic, just a combination
of utility computing and platform-as-service, both powered by classic shared
and virtual servers.
The expansion and popularity of cloud services is starting to shape and modify
technology. Servers, which have so far been the main way of distributing and
processing digital information over a network, are bound to disappear in favour
of highly dense and compact computing hardware in data centres. This generates
positive feedback that already has a major effect on mainstream computers that
are most likely to end up as simple terminals for a remote operating system
relying on various cloud services.
Such mainstream computers already surround us. Branded as mobile computing,
these machines rely on web applications. Alternative software specifications
are more and more geared towards seamless integration of web services within a
desktop, while enriching multimedia features at the same time, turning the
browser into the new operating system.
Collapsing towers
While we are very much aware of social, ecological, and political issues
relating to our everyday lives, it appears that we are totally ignorant of the
risks of letting companies decide for us what the future of networks and
digital data might be.
For example, the black box system leaves us completely dependant on a certain
vendor product. The spreading of FLOSS [Free/Libre and Open Source Software]
ideas and mindset has been particularly successful to demonstrate, amongst
other things, that closed, proprietary systems not only enslave the user to a
certain technology, but are also completely unreliable in the long term. This
is illustrated particularly well by those platforms that can decide from one
moment to the next to change features or just cease to exist. If your work and
income rely on such a platform you might need to think twice about the
implications.
Also, the Internet is not a fast-food service and has more to offer than a
template culture. Creativity is an essential part of resistance. From the DIY
autonomic or global automatisation perspective, network autonomy is always
possible and increasingly easier, even when it comes to web applications or
cloud services: if you own it, you can control it. These kinds of efforts, and
access to technology are the living proof that there are many possibilities for
small groups of people to form different types of collaboration from
mutualistic and parasitic, to commensal forms of symbiosis with other network
nodes, and to create an alternative cloud in order to provide a more horizontal
access to the network and what it has to offer in terms of self organisation
and distributivity.
We should always keep in mind that in these simcities, data is the fuel that
powers the network. There is no such thing as a free lunch, and when you use
“free” services, be it for private or professional reasons, the toll to pay is
the data you feed the system, which is, for the majority of us, personal
information. From that perspective, privacy is not a thing of the past, on the
contrary, it is the new currency.
Finally, Internet architecture became a mirror of the way civilisation is
evolving, building on top of previous technologies and knowledge. We constantly
live at the surface of things. Although it could be argued that everything in
software is a metaphor, we tend to interpret it as an objective reality, which
in turn can only contribute to hiding the true nature of the Internet and
computing. The risk here is to lose contact with the physical layer by building
higher and higher towers of biased interconnections without understanding their
foundations and origins. In doing so we fail to understand that transmitting
information is different from communication, letting software be the only real
inhabitant of this ever expanding territory.