Zcom_simple

Hello,

Blogs are a familiar feature on the internet - where users post content in an accumulating manner, with comments, and search options, etc. They facilitate expression and exploration, and via attached comments, also debate and synthesis.


Reading and
Navigating Blogs

Our blogs are quite powerful. Each writer can post, as is typically the case. Sustainers who have the option can also post, however. All Blogs appear in the blog system, and sometimes also in content boxes the top page of ZNet - and always via the left menu of the top page - and can be found via searches, etc.

Commenting on blogs follows the blogs, attached at the bottom, and blog comments, like all others, are also visible in many places that show comments including in the forum system. In addition, the entire blog system gathers content for everyone - but one can look at the accumulating content in many ways.

  • For example one can look at one writer's efforts - so one is seeing what is effectively a blog system for that one writer, or Sustainer.
  • One can also look at the content by topic, seeing blogs that are tagged as being about a certain topic - or place, as well. Thus, when doing that, it is a blog system about a topic, or a place, with many contributors.
  • One can look at only writer blogs, or only sustainer blogs, as well.
  • One can look at blogs for particular Groups, too.

All this is easily done using the left menu. Searches allow even more variables and refinements.


Creating Blog Posts

If you are a Sustainer with permission, and are logged in, you will see a link in the left menu for you to post a blog - and you can use that to post one, and then tag it various ways (such as with a topic or place, or a group tag), and once you do, it is in the system with you as the author.

You can also use the console button to the left to post a blog - anytime and from anywhere in the site, as long as you are logged in.

Meanwhile, enjoy the blogs - and, by the way, if you are a Free Member or a Sustainer with a ZSpace page, of course you can put one or more content boxes on it, pulling blog links of any sort you may want to filter for, for example, by you or by your friends or by others - and by topic, about places, for groups, etc.

Blogs

1

Michael Albert's Blog

Web Address: http://www.zcommunications.org/zspace/malbert
Bio: Michael Albert is a founder and current member of the staff of Z Magazine as well as staff of Z Magazine`s web system: ZCom (www.zmag.org). Albert`s radicalization occurred during the 1960s. His po... (More)

All Albert Blogs

Facing Facebook... and the Internet

By Michael Albert at Jun 09, 2011


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A few weeks back I wrote a couple of pieces about Facebook, Tweeter, Google, and the internet generally. There was a flurry of reaction and discussion, but nothing overly sustained. This was not surprising given how many issues, personal responsibilities, and agendas already occupy all our waking hours, particularly we on the left, not only trying to live lives, but also change the world.

 

Still, I continue to feel the issues involved are really serious and many leftists are involved and even complicit, whether we consciously intend to be or not, by virtue of our choices both as internet users, and, for many of us, also creators and providers. So I have been meaning to write again - yet I too, buried under tasks, have not gotten to it. 

 

However, simplifying things, yesterday I received an email from a close friend, Stephen Shalom, conveying to my attention an article in a periodical called the New York Review of Books. The NYRB is a kind of "intellectual's" book review weekly, which, decades back, had a sincerely progressive tone and focus. They often run review essays, covering a few books that address one topic - and this email was pointing me to a review essay of three books on internet innovations.

Because I think many Z users around the world don't even have a chance of seeing the NYRB, and others, who do have proximity, are unlikely too, we are posting the piece on ZCom - despite its not being explicitly political - and I am going to also include it below to further the prospect people will see it. Because ZMI, Z's summer school on media and politics, begins today, all I can do is act as conduit. I hope others will address the implications - which, however, I think are pretty self evident.

The real issue is, what should we all do, as users and providers, in the face of what is becoming steadily more obvious. Should we deny or ignore the obvious not only dangers, but now horrible violations? Or should we point to them, explain them, understand them, and try to find ways people can navigate around them, or even develop alternatives that transcend the dangers?

Julian Assange pointed out not long ago that he thought Facebook and Google and so on were the most sophisticated spy tools at the disposal of state authorities. That is born out further by what follows. My own focus was on the way that using these tools - even ignoring motives of those controlling them - has harmful impact, and that too is further born out. Ditto for the extent to which they commercialize life and communication and invade and warp privacy on the road to profitable sale manipulation. Yet perhaps the most shocking news in what follows is not only further verification of the above ills, it is revelation that the Internet may well be becoming, horribly ironically and stealthily given how we all think of it, the most sophisticated tool out there - by a huge margin - for NARROWING the range of information and thought of users even as it continues to appear to be the opposite. 

TV and news papers and journals are abysmal enough. Could the internet actually be a more powerful tool for limiting the reach of our minds and feelings, even while we think the exact opposite is the the case?

 

See what you think.

The article is by Sue Halprin and called Mind Control and the Internet.

 

And, oh hell - I have to run for ZMI, so - while I was going to cut and paste only the most damning bits for here, commenting a bit as well - I just don't time. So, I will just put the whole article. Pkease read through it...the opening parts are not the heart of it, at least in my opinion.

 

 

The New York Review of Books

 

 

Mind Control & the Internet

 

Sue Halpern

 

World Wide Mind: The Coming Integration of Humanity, Machines, and the Internet

by Michael Chorost                                        

Free Press, 242 pp., $26.00

 

The Filter Bubble: What the Internet Is Hiding from You

by Eli Pariser                                        

Penguin, 294 pp., $25.95

 

You Are Not a Gadget: A Manifesto

by Jaron Lanier                                        

Vintage, 240 pp., $15.00 (paper)

 

 

Early this April, when researchers at Washington University in St. Louis reported that a woman with a host of electrodes temporarily positioned over the speech center of her brain was able to move a computer cursor on a screen simply by thinking but not pronouncing certain sounds, it seemed like the Singularity­the long-standing science fiction dream of melding man and machine to create a better species­might have arrived. At Brown University around the same time, scientists successfully tested a different kind of brain–computer interface (BCI) called BrainGate, which allowed a paralyzed woman to move a cursor, again just by thinking. Meanwhile, at USC, a team of biomedical engineers announced that they had successfully used carbon nanotubes to build a functioning synapse­the junction at which signals pass from one nerve cell to another­which marked the first step in their long march to construct a synthetic brain. On the same campus, Dr. Theodore Berger, who has been on his own path to make a neural prosthetic for more than three decades, has begun to implant a device into rats that bypasses a damaged hippocampus in the brain and works in its place.

 

The hippocampus is crucial to memory formation, and Berger’s invention holds the promise of overcoming problems related to both normal memory loss that comes from aging and pathological memory loss associated with diseases like Alzheimer’s. Similarly, the work being done at Brown and Washington University suggests the possibility of restoring mobility to those who are paralyzed and giving voice to those who have been robbed by illness or injury of the ability to communicate. If this is the Singularity, it looks not just benign but beneficent.

 

Michael Chorost is a man who has benefited from a brain–computer interface, though the kind of BCI implanted in his head after he went deaf in 2001, a cochlear implant, was not inserted directly into his brain, but into each of his inner ears. The result, after a lifetime of first being hard of hearing and then shut in complete auditory solitude, as he recounted in his memoir, Rebuilt: How Becoming Part Computer Made Me More Human (2005), was dramatic and life-changing. As his new, oddly jejune book, World Wide Mind: The Coming Integration of Humanity, Machines, and the Internet, makes clear, he is now a cheerleader for the rest of us getting kitted out with our own, truly personal, in-brain computers. In Chorost’s ideal world, which he lays out with the unequivocal zeal of a convert, we will all be connected directly to the Internet via a neural implant, so that the Internet “would become seamlessly part of us, as natural and simple to use as our own hands.”

 

The debate between repair and enhancement is long-standing in medicine (and sports, and education, and genetics), though it gets louder and more complicated as technology advances. Typically, repair, like what those Brown,USC, and Washington University research teams are aiming to do for people who have suffered stroke, spinal cord and other injuries, neurodegeneration, dementia, or mental illness, is upheld as something good and necessary and worthy. Enhancement, on the other hand­as with performance drugs and stem cell line manipulation­is either reviled as a threat to our integrity and meaning as humans or conflated with repair until the distinction becomes meaningless. 1

 

Chorost bounces over this debate altogether. While the computer in his head was put there to fix a deficit, the fact that it is there at all is what seems to convince him that the rest of us should become cyborgs. His assumption­it would be too generous to call it an argument­is that if that worked for him, this will work for us. “My two implants make me irreversibly computational, a living example of the integration of humans and computers,” he writes. “So for me the thought of implanting something like a BlackBerry in my head is not so strange. It would not be so strange for a lot of people, I think.”

 

More than a quarter-century ago, a science writer named David Ritchie published a book that I’ve kept on my bookshelf as a reminder of what the post-1984 world was supposed to bring. Called The Binary Brain, it extolled “the synthesis of human and artificial intelligence” via something he called a “biochip.” “The possibilities are marvelous to contemplate,” he wrote.

 

You could plug into a computer’s memory banks almost as easily as you put on your shoes. Suddenly, your mind would be full of all the information stored in the computer. You could instantly make yourself an expert in anything from Spanish literature to particle physics…. With biochips to hold the data, all the information in the MIT and Harvard libraries might be stuffed into a volume no greater than that of a sandwich. All of Shakespeare in a BB-sized module…. You may see devices like this before this century ends.

 

“Remember,” he says gravely, “we are talking here about a technology that is just around the corner, if not here already. Biochips would lead to the development of all manner of man-machine combinations….”

 

Twenty-six years later, in the second decade of the new millennium, here is Chorost saying almost the same thing, and for the same reason: our brains are too limited to sufficiently apprehend the world. 2 “Some human attributes like IQappear to have risen in the twentieth century,” he writes, “but the rate of increase is much slower than technology’s. There is no Moore’s Law for human beings.” (Moore’s Law is the much-invoked thesis, now elevated to metaphor, that says that the number of components that can be placed on an integrated circuit doubles every two years.) Leaving aside the flawed equivalences­that information is knowledge and facts are intelligence­Chorost’s “transmog” dream is rooted in a naive, and common, misperception of the Internet search engine, particularly Google’s, which is how most Internet users navigate through the fourteen billion pages of the World Wide Web.

 

Most of us, I think it’s safe to say, do not give much thought to the algorithm that produces the results of a Google search. Ask a question, get an answer­it’s a straightforward transaction. It seems not much different from consulting an encyclopedia, or a library card catalog, or even an index in a book. Books, those other repositories of facts, information, and ideas, are the template by which we understand the Web, which is like a random, messy, ever-expanding volume of every big and little thing. A search is our way into and through the mess, and when it’s made by using Google, it’s relying on the Google algorithm, a patented and closely guarded piece of intellectual property that the company calls PageRank, composed of “500 million variables and 2 billion terms.”

 

Those large numbers are comforting. They suggest an impermeable defense against bias, a scientific objectivity that allows the right response to the query to bubble up from the stew of so much stuff. To an extent it’s a self-perpetuating system, since it uses popularity (the number of links) as a proxy for importance, so that the more a particular link is clicked on, the higher its PageRank, and the more likely it is to appear near the top of the search results. (This is why companies have not necessarily minded bad reviews of their products.) Chorost likens this to Hebbian learning­the notion that neurons that fire together, wire together, since a highly ranked page will garner more page views, thus strengthening its ranking. [In this way]pages that link together “think” together. If many people visit a page over and over again, its PageRank will become so high that it effectively becomes stored in the collective human/electronic long-term memory.

 

Even if this turns out to be true, the process is anything but unbiased.

 

A Google search­which Chorost would have us doing in our own technologically modified heads­”curates” the Internet. The algorithm is, in essence, an editor, pulling up what it deems important, based on someone else’s understanding of what is important. This has spawned a whole industry of search engine optimization (SEO) consultants who game the system by reconfiguring a website’s code, content, and keywords to move it up in the rankings. Companies have also been known to pay for links in order to push themselves higher up in the rankings, a practice that Google is against and sometimes cracks down on. Even so, results rise to the top of a search query because an invisible hand is shepherding them there.

 

It’s not just the large number of search variables, or the intervention of marketers, that shapes the information we’re shown by bringing certain pages to our attention while others fall far enough down in the rankings to be kept out of view. As Eli Pariser documents in his chilling book The Filter Bubble: What the Internet Is Hiding from You, since December 2009, Google has aimed to contour every search to fit the profile of the person making the query. (This contouring applies to all users of Google, though it takes effect only after the user has performed several searches, so that the results can be tailored to the user’s tastes.)

 

The search process, in other words, has become “personalized,” which is to say that instead of being universal, it is idiosyncratic and oddly peremptory. “Most of us assume that when we google a term, we all see the same results­the ones that the company’s famous Page Rank algorithm suggests are the most authoritative based on other page’s links,” Pariser observes. With personalized search, “now you get the result that Google’s algorithm suggests is best for you in particular­and someone else may see something entirely different. In other words, there is no standard Google anymore.” It’s as if we looked up the same topic in an encyclopedia and each found different entries­but of course we would not assume they were different since we’d be consulting what we thought to be a standard reference.

 

Among the many insidious consequences of this individualization is that by tailoring the information you receive to the algorithm’s perception of who you are, a perception that it constructs out of fifty-seven variables, Google directs you to material that is most likely to reinforce your own worldview, ideology, and assumptions. Pariser suggests, for example, that a search for proof about climate change will turn up different results for an environmental activist than it would for an oil company executive and, one assumes, a different result for a person whom the algorithm understands to be a Democrat than for one it supposes to be a Republican. (One need not declare a party affiliation per se­the algorithm will prise this out.) In this way, the Internet, which isn’t the press, but often functions like the press by disseminating news and information, begins to cut us off from dissenting opinion and conflicting points of view, all the while seeming to be neutral and objective and unencumbered by the kind of bias inherent in, and embraced by, say, the The Weekly Standard or The Nation.

 

Why this matters is captured in a study in the spring issue of Sociological Quarterly, which echoes Pariser’s concern that when ideology drives the dissemination of information, knowledge is compromised. The study, which examined attitudes toward global warming among Republicans and Democrats in the years between 2001 and 2010, found that in those nine years, as the scientific consensus on climate change coalesced and became nearly universal, the percentage of Republicans who said that the planet was beginning to warm dropped precipitously, from 49 percent to 29 percent. For Democrats, the percentage went up, from 60 percent to 70 percent. It was as if the groups were getting different messages about the science, and most likely they were. The consequence, as the study’s authors point out, was to stymie any real debate on public policy. This is Pariser’s point exactly, and his concern: that by having our own ideas bounce back at us, we inadvertently indoctrinate ourselves with our own ideas. “Democracy requires citizens to see things from one another’s point of view, but instead we’re more and more enclosed in our own bubbles,” he writes. “Democracy requires a reliance on shared facts; instead we’re being offered parallel but separate universes.”

 

It’s not difficult to see where this could lead­how easily anything with an agenda (a lobbying group, a political party, a corporation, a government) could flood the echo chamber with information central to its cause. (This, in fact, is what has happened, on the right, with climate change.) Who would know? Certainly not Michael Chorost, whose blind allegiance to Google­which he believes is the central part of the “nascent forebrain, hippocampus, and long-term declarative memory store” of the coming World Wide Mind­is matched by his stunning political naiveté. A government “that used the World Wide Mind for overt control would have to be more ominously totalitarian than any government in existence today (except perhaps North Korea),” he writes. “The push-pull dynamic of evolution tends to weed out totalitarian societies because they are, in the long run, inefficient and wasteful.” Contrast this to the words of the man who invented the World Wide Web, Sir Timothy Berners-Lee, writing not long ago in Scientific American:

 

The Web as we know it is being threatened…. Some of its most successful inhabitants have begun to chip away at its principles…. Governments­totalitarian and democratic alike­are monitoring people’s online habits, endangering important human rights.

 

One of the most significant changes in the Internet since the release in 1993 of the first graphical browser, Mosaic, which was built on the basis of Berners-Lee’s work, has been the quest to monetize it. In its inaugural days, the Web was a strange, eclectic collection of personal homepages, a kind of digital wall art that bypassed traditional gatekeepers, did not rely on mainstream media companies or corporate cash, and was not driven by commercial interests. The computer scientist and musician Jaron Lanier was there at the creation, and in his fierce, coruscating manifesto, You Are Not a Gadget , 3 remembers it like this:

 

The rise of the web was a rare instance when we learned new, positive information about human potential. Who would have guessed (at least at first) that millions of people would put so much effort into a project without the presence of advertising, commercial motive, threat of punishment, charismatic figures, identity politics, exploitation of the fear of death, or any of the other classic motivators of mankind. In vast numbers, people did something cooperatively, solely because it was a good idea, and it was beautiful.

 

But then commerce moved in, almost by accident, when Larry Page and Sergey Brin, the duo who started Google, reluctantly paired small ads with their masterful search engine as a way to fund it. It was not their intent, at first, to create the largest global advertising platform in the history of the world, or to move marketing strategy away from pushing products toward consumers to pulling individual consumers toward specific products and brands. But that is what happened. Write the word “blender” in an e-mail, and the next set of ads you’re likely to see will be for Waring and Oster. 4 Search for information on bipolar disease, and drug ads will pop up when you’re reading baseball scores. Use Google Translate to read an abstract of a journal article and an ad for Spanish translation software will appear when you are using an online English dictionary. (All this activity leads to a question that will not be rhetorical if Chorost’s World Wide Mind comes to fruition: Will our thoughts have corporate sponsors, too?)

 

Targeted ads (even when they are generated by what may have appeared to have been a private communication) may seem harmless enough­after all, if there is going to be advertising, isn’t it better if it is for products and services that might be useful? But to pull you into a transaction, companies believe they need to know not only your current interests, but what you have liked before, how old you are, your gender, where you live, how much education you have, and on and on. There are something like five hundred companies that are able to track every move you make on the Internet, mining the raw material of the Web and selling it to marketers. (“Stop calling yourself a user,” Lanier warns. “You are being used.”) That you are overweight, have diabetes, have missed a car payment or two, read historical novels, support Republicans, use a cordless power drill, shop at Costco, and spend a lot of time on airplanes is not only known to people other than yourself, it is of great monetary value to them as well. So, too, where you are and where you’ve been, as we recently learned when it was revealed that both Apple and Google have been tracking mobile phone and tablet users and storing that information as well.

 

Even reading devices like Amazon’s Kindle pay attention to what users are doing: highlight a passage in a Kindle book and the passage is sent back to Amazon. Clearly, the potential for privacy and other civil liberty abuses here is vast. While the FBI, for instance, needs a warrant to search your computer, Pariser writes that “if you use Yahoo or Gmail or Hotmail for your e-mail, you ‘lose your constitutional protections immediately,’ according to a lawyer for the Electronic Frontier Foundation.” At least one arrest has been made by law enforcement officers using Apple location data. And this past April, the Supreme Court heard arguments in Sorrell v. IMS Health, in which IMS Health, in challenging Vermont’s statutory restriction on the sale of patients’ prescription information to data-mining companies, argued that harvesting and selling medical records data is a First Amendment right. Clearly, data tracking and mining give new meaning to the words “computer monitor.”

 

In the commercial sphere, marketers are also looking beyond facts and bits of information, in order to determine not just what you have bought, but what kinds of pitches appealed to you when you did. Once they have compiled your “persuasion profile,” they will refine those targeted ads even further. And if marketing companies can do this, why not political candidates, the government, or companies that want to sway public opinion? “There are undoubtedly times and places and styles of argument that make us more susceptible to believe what we’re told,” Pariser observes.

 

One thing that we­the denizens of the Internet­have come to accept without much thought is that commerce is a really cool aspect of the Web’s shift into social networking. The very popular Foursquare, Loopt, and Groupon sites, for example, make shopping and branding the basis of the social encounter. People on Foursquare vie to become the “mayor” of bakeries and clothing stores by visiting them more than anyone else. They proudly display “badges” that they’ve “earned” by patronizing certain businesses, as if they were trophies celebrating excellence. Facebook users who click on the “like” button for a product may trigger the appearance of an ad for that product on the pages of their “friends.” Companies like Twitalyzer and Klout analyze data from Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn to determine who has the most influence online­these can be celebrities or ordinary people with significant followings­and sell that information to businesses that then entice the influencers to pitch their products or “evangelize their brand.” This, according to The Wall Street Journal, has “ignited a race among social-media junkies who, eager for perks and bragging rights, are working hard to game the system and boost their scores.” 5 As Lanier points out, “The only hope for social networking sites from a business point of view is for a magic formula to appear in which some method of violating privacy and dignity becomes acceptable.” That magic, it seems, is already in play.

 

The paradox of personalization and the self-expression promoted by the Internet through Twitter, Facebook, and even Chatroulette is that it simultaneously diminishes the value of personhood and individuality. Read the comments that accompany many blog posts and articles, and it is overwhelmingly evident that violating dignity­someone else’s and, therefore, one’s own­is a cheap and widely circulated currency. This is not only true for subjects that might ordinarily incite partisanship and passion, like sports or politics, but for pretty much anything. 6

 

The point of ad hominem attacks is to take a swipe at someone’s character, to undermine their integrity. Chorost suggests that the reason the Internet as we now know it does not foster the kind of empathy he sees coming in the Web of the future, when we will “feel people’s inner lives electronically,” is because it is not yet an integral part of our bodies, but Lanier’s explanation is more convincing. The “hive mind” created through our electronic connections necessarily obviates the individual­indeed, that’s what makes it a collective consciousness. Anonymity, which flourishes where there is no individual accountability, is one of its key features, and behind it, meanness, antipathy, and cruelty have a tendency to rush right in. As the sociologist Sherry Turkle observes:

 

Networked, we are together, but so lessened are our expectations of each other that we can feel utterly alone. And there is the risk that we come to see others as objects to be accessed­and only for the parts that we find useful, comforting, or amusing. 7

 

Here is Chorost describing the wonders of a neural-networked friendship:

 

Having brainlike computers would greatly simplify the process of extracting information from one brain and sending it to another. Suppose you have such a computer, and you’re connected with another person via the World Wide Mind…. You see a cat on the sidewalk in front of you. Your rig…sees activity in a large percentage of the neurons constituting your brain’s invariant representation of a cat. To let your friend know you’re seeing a cat, it sends three letters of information­CAT­to the other person’s implanted rig. That person’s rig activates her brain’s invariant representation of a cat, and she sees it. Or rather, to be more accurate, she sees a memory of a cat that is taken from her own neural circuitry….

 

Now, many important details would be missing. The cat’s breed, its color, its posture, what it’s doing, and so forth…. But it would convey a key piece of information: your friend would know that you are seeing a cat.

 

Of course, if you called or texted or e-mailed your friend, she would also know that you were seeing a cat, and she’d know what it looked like, and what it was doing, and that it was a significant enough event in your life that you were telling her about it. Do we want to know every time someone we know sees a cat?

 

It’s easy to make fun of this, just as it is easy to dismiss the Singularity as a silly science fiction fantasy, but that would be even sillier. Of course, one of the groups of people most drawn to science fiction are the engineers who write code and build robots and have, in less than a generation, changed the way we do research and medicine and read books and communicate with each other and pay the bills and on and on. (In a 2004 interview, Larry Page envisioned a future where one’s brain is “augmented” by Google, so that when you think of something, “your cell phone whispers the answer into your ear.”) As Lanier points out:

 

We [the engineers] make up extensions to your being, like remote eyes and ears (webcams and mobile phones) and expanded memory (the world of details you can search for online). These become the structures by which you connect to the world and other people…. We tinker with your philosophy by direct manipulation of your cognitive experience…. It takes only a tiny group of engineers to create technology that can shape the entire future of human experience with incredible speed.

 

Moore’s Law is predicted to hit a wall around 2015, when it will be impossible to squeeze more circuitry onto a silicon chip without it overheating. By then, though, computers may have switched over to magnetic random access memory, chips that operate with subatomic circuitry. One of the main creators of MRAM, Stuart Wolf, developed it at DARPA, the agency that invented ARPANET, the precursor to the Internet as we know it. A few years ago, in an interview with Fortune, Wolf, envisioning the future of computing, imagined that before too long we’ll be wearing a headband that feeds directly into the brain and lets us, among other things, talk without speaking, see around corners, and drive by thinking. 8

 

Another branch of DARPA is pouring millions of dollars into the development of a battlefield “thought helmet” that will let soldiers in the field communicate wordlessly by translating brain waves, which will be “read” by sensors embedded in the helmet and arrayed around the scalp, into audible radio messages. (One researcher called it a “radio without a microphone.”) 9 As early as 2000, Sony began work on a patented way to beam video games directly into the brain using ultrasound pulses to modify and create sensory images for an immersive, thoroughly inescapable gaming experience. 10 More recently, computer scientists at the Freie Universität in Berlin got a jump on Stuart Wolf’s vision of a car operated solely by thought. Using commercially available electroencephalogram (EEG) sensors to first decode the brain wave patterns for “right,” “left,” “brake,” and “accelerate,” they then were able to connect those sensors to a computer-controlled vehicle, so that a driver “was able to control the car with no problem­there was only a slight delay between the envisaged commands and the response of the car,” according to one of the lead researchers. 11

 

Moreover, a group at the University of Southampton in England has developed aBCI­a brain–computer interface­that enables people to communicate with each other brain to brain without thought or, as the developers call it, B2B, again with a kind of EEG cap that lets one person think of “left” (as represented by a zero) or “right” (represented by a one), send one of those digits to a second person, also wired with electrodes that are connected as well to a computer that receives the digit, and, once it is understood, allows the second person to flash the digit back to the sender by way of a light-emitting diode (LED), which is “read” by that person’s visual cortex. It’s not quite the soundless, wordless, almost thoughtless integration of our thoughts, B2B, but it’s a fourth or fifth step toward a future that is becoming increasingly visible.

 

Jaron Lanier is right: you are not a gadget­yet.

 

1.        1

 

For instance, if glasses are reparative, is Lasik surgery too? As William Saletan wrote years ago in Slate, is it still considered reparative when a famous golfer has surgery on his nearly perfect, but not quite perfect, eyesight so he can see the ball better? See "The Beam in Your Eye," Slate, April 18, 2005. 

 

2.        2

 

According to Ritchie:

 

There was a time not too long ago... when a mathematician could be expected to know, if not master completely, all the branches of math. Now our mathematical knowledge is expanding so fast that even an expert in mathematics...could reasonably expect to know only about 10 perfect of it all, at the very most. As long as we depend on the crude input systems of sight and hearing, and the limited storage capacity of our own natural brains, that 10 percent figure is likely to keep dropping.

 

 

3.        3

 

See also Zadie Smith's discussion of Lanier's book in these pages , "Generation Why?," November 25, 2010. 

 

4.        4

 

This is not a rhetorical example, as the following exchange on the website Garden Web from last February illustrates. A little over an hour after a woman writes about her thirty-five-year-old Oster blender, she posts on the site again. This time, instead of the subject line being "Re: Blenders," it is "Advertisements." "And then, like magic," the woman, who calls herself annie1992, writes, "look what appears at the top of my screen...." It is, not so magically, an ad for a blender. 

 

5.        5

 

See Jessica E. Vascellaro, "Wannabe Cool Kids Aim to Game the Web's New Social Scorekeepers," February 8, 2011. 

 

6.        6

 

Note the comments to this New York Times piece where the author, a doctor, mistakenly gave her dog ibuprofen and was writing about her mistake to warn others: Randi Hutter Epstein, "How the Doctor Almost Killed Her Dog," New York Times Well blog, January 20, 2011. 

 

7.        7

 

See Sherry Turkle, Alone Together: Why We Expect More from Technology and Less from Each Other (Basic Books, 2011), p. 154. 

 

8.        8

 

See Peter Schwartz and Rita Koselka, "Quantum Leap," Fortune , August 1, 2006. 

 

9.        9

 

Mark Thompson, "The Army's Totally Serious Mind-Control Project," Time , September 14, 2008. 

 

10.     10

 

See Brian Osborne, "Sony May One Day Beam Sensory Data into Your Brain," Geek.com, April 5, 2005. 

 

11.     11

 

See "Scientists Steer Car with the Power of Thought," fu-berlin.de, February 17, 2011. 

Z

Independent article

By George, Justin at Jun 25, 2011 14:17 PM

I read this article today and while it does not directly comment on the issues of the blog, I think it touches upon some of the overall concerns while it discusses the importance of books in todays world-

http://www.independent.co.uk/opinion/commentators/johann-hari/johann-hari-how-to-survive-the-age-of-distraction-2301851.html

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Re: Independent article

By Albert, Michael at Jun 25, 2011 14:48 PM

I agree Justin - it is right on target, albeit incomplete.

And what he says about ebook readers exaccerbating things if they are able to do many functions and not just books is dead right too. I make very good use of an ipad - keeping me connecting and able to actually see what I am doing, with no hassle, great elegance and efficiency, etc. etc. etc.

But the pull of the other, when I open the ipad to read a book, is much much stronger than the pull was with a kindle... almost inescapable...literally compulsize - and I know what is going on. How much worse for a person who is functioning more oblivious to the trends and pressures...

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108

The Dangers of Technophobia

By Earp, Charley at Jun 17, 2011 03:56 AM

I don't find any of the new technologies fearful. Maybe I'm naive. Wikileaks wouldn't have been possible without the internet. I was born in 1963 and until Left OnLife circa 1995, I had to struggle to get any real progressive media. Now I have a fountain of it every minute of every day.

I honestly believe that the internet makes us better connected as activists. Society's institutions keep us divided and silent. The internet is where we can finally talk to each other even while we're in our private living spaces. On facebook I have a steady stream of conversations with both my leftist friends and more conservative ones. We talk politics and sometimes minds are changed. I find this tremondously positive.

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Re: The Dangers of Technophobia

By Albert, Michael at Jun 17, 2011 13:41 PM

Charley,

What positive use can be made of these technologies in specific situations by activists and other users? What uses are made of these technologies by not users but owners and, for that matter other powerful actors including governments? And what are the impacts of the uses, both the productive uses, and other less productive uses or even counter productive ones?

What you report is that you personally experience some benefits and see some for others on the left, as well. Fair enough, but how does that address anything at all in the essay, which suggests and is about other effects. Let's say, being pretty generous, I think, that each day 1 million people make good socially constructive and activist leftist use of Facebook. What about the other now roughly 599 million folks? And what about the ancillary effects even on the first 1 million? And what about the not network aspects?

The New York Times, say, is a media institution. I think you would agree that on balance its effects are incredibly grotesque. You and I sometimes benefit. however, from relating to it. The latter observation does not even address the former one much less rebut it. Or take what would likely be more controversial. The American public school system, has, on balance, incredibly harmful system preserving effects, essentially taking incoming young people and molding them to endure boredom and take orders, mostly, or run the show - for about a fifth - being sure, as well, that all of them don't know things contrary to their playing their appointed system maintaining roles. Still, of course, many get some positive gains from schooling - particularly compared to if they had no school at all. Again...the latter observation is pretty much irrelevant to the former one...

For some reason that I don't quite understand, many many leftists seem to think that if they do some good things with Facebook, say, it means Facebook is largely good for the left and even for society. It could be, but it might not be, and to know entails looking not just at the positive things a few do - but at all the things leftists and also other people do, and the full range of effects on people and on society of all those users doing all those things...

Folks should have no trouble realizing that Facebook, Tweeter, Google, et. al. are massive and sometimes incredibly massive concentrations of economic and political power under control of corporate and political elites, highly commercialized and highly embedded in and reproductive of the requisites of the world all around us. This doesn't mean we can't do anything worthwhile or get anything worthwhile from them - we can. Like we can from a public school, a bank, or the New York Times. But to celebrate them, as many do, largely uncritically, I find strange. Worse, it tends to prevent, I think, people from trying to tease out an understanding of what is worthy and desirable, and what it unworthy, undesirable, or even horrendous - and then trying to produce our own social networking and internet using that has our values and not the mainstream system's at its operational core, as well as in conveyed substance. 


 

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Re: Re: The Dangers of Technophobia

By Earp, Charley at Jun 30, 2011 07:06 AM

I've been a paying sustainer for years, so trust me when I say I support your work. However, I do consider dropping it. as I come here pretty rarely. The lack of an email feed is the main reason for that. I subscribe to truthout, huffpost, portside, NYT, alternet, etc. for free and they send me an email everyday (sometimes several a day) and that leads me to their sites.

I wish FB was non-profit and run like a Parecon, but it isn't. Yet, it fills a powerful spot in my social life. I have over 600 FB friends, most of whom I do actually know, many going back to childhood. I reconnected with my best man after losing touch over 20 years ago. No left-wing site is ever going to do stuff like that. I stay in touch daily with my mother, sister, brother, cousins, my adult daughter, members of my Quaker meeting, my socialist organization, etc. I never did that when I just had email.

Get rid of the ads and data mining, sure, I'd love it, but I am not going back to the way things used to be.

Social networking has actually gotten me out of the house more often, because I now get daily invites from leftists to attend forums or go on demos, from conservatives in my family to pray for disaster victims, news of all kinds left to right, have up to three scrabble games going all the time, share pictures, work on projects, occasionally blog, post from my actual blog which draws new readers when I get reposted by friends to their friends,

This comment page doesn't even have an email tracker, so I didn't realize you'd responded. Hell, a twitter feed alone would bring me here more often.

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Re: Re: Re: The Dangers of Technophobia

By Earp, Charley at Jun 30, 2011 07:26 AM

After posting this comment, I went back to Z's RSS feed page and figured out how to set it up so I should now start getting emails from Z. Maybe this will turn my attitude around. However, alternet, for example, has an email notification set up that is much more intuitive than Z. http://www.alternet.org/newsletter/subscribe/

T
he point remains, my non-leftist friends, and most of my leftist friends, will never set up a Z account. My leftist friends (a minority of my total friends) may visit for news and register, but to stay in touch with them via Z is unlikely, when most of them have FB accounts and we interact there.

I'd say FB is a necessary evil, until the Revolution.

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Re: Re: Re: Re: The Dangers of Technophobia

By Albert, Michael at Jun 30, 2011 11:34 AM

ZSocial will take care of all of your ease of use issues - perfectly reasonable concerns, which, however, should never trump assessment of quality of information. 

As far as your non leftist friends - well, isn't the point that over time they will become leftist? One hopes so, but of course I understand that in the meantime you need non left mechanisms to engage with them. Sure. Just like we need banks to harbor our assets, and so on. 

As to whether your left friends will switch their left interactions, though not all their interactions, from FB - which uses the information they post to profit and spy - to a left mechanism, say ZSocial, or some other, if ZSocial proves inadequate - you may be right. Maybe they won't. On the other hand, maybe they will, if, once you see ZSocial, and if you like it, and if you agree it will make it easy and will even enhance  your communicating with, and even just socializing with, your left friends, you advocate for it. 

We will see.

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Re: Re: Re: The Dangers of Technophobia

By Albert, Michael at Jun 30, 2011 11:28 AM

Charley, 

I suspect we may be headed into circles on some of these matters.

But I will respond point by point...briefly...

You mention "The lack of an email feed" and say that its presence on various other sites" is the main reason you subscribe to them.

Two replies. First, we actually do have email feeds - quite extensive, too. I got a notice of this comment in my email, for example, within moments of your writing it. And you can get RSS feeds of content, as well, filtered however you might like. Check your account page - my guess is you may have turned off email. Or perhaps your account has an old email address?

But the idea that what you read will be a function of who sends it to you, is actually a part of the kind of dynamics I have been discussing. 

You say, but it feels like almost something in passing, that you "wish FB was non-profit and run like a Parecon, but it isn't." Correct. Instead it is a disgusting center of corporate power deeply embedded in commercial sales and profit making, on the one hand, and ideological manipulations and even spying, on the other hand. It doesn't mean you or I or others can't at times get some benefit from relating to it - like we get from relating to other criminal institutions - say the NY Times - but nor should it be skipped over as if secondary.

You say "it fills a powerful spot in my social life." So does a bank or a newspaper, or an employer for whom you may be a wage slave. This doesn't mean these structures should be deemed positive, nor does it mean one should entirely avoid them. But, it does mean, if we can, we ought to create alternatives.

You say, "I have over 600 FB friends, most of whom I do actually know, many going back to childhood. I reconnected with my best man after losing touch over 20 years ago. No left-wing site is ever going to do stuff like that. I stay in touch daily with my mother, sister, brother, cousins, my adult daughter, members of my Quaker meeting, my socialist organization, etc. I never did that when I just had email."

Well, when we are much much larger, the issue is, will a left site and movements do that for people too - but better - without spying, without commercial exploitation, and without an ethos and structure that tends to produce nuggets of exchange, not deeper communication? Social is coming. If we do a good job with it, there will be no reason it can't provide social networking for leftists - and then, at least for a time, reaching non leftists is what one goes to FB for.

You say, "Get rid of the ads and data mining, sure, I'd love it, but I am not going back to the way things used to be."

And why is this your reaction to what I wrote? If I write banks suck, you will have no such reaction, I bet. What is the difference, I wonder. 

I am curious about something. You say you have 600 friends on FB. Okay, what does it mean? To write a ten minute communication with each one would require a total of 6000 minutes. That mean 100 hours. Even if you just did that once a month, it would mean 25 hours a week. There is a sense in which, I think, minimal communications - nugget like - is crowding out, over time, more meaningful and sustained communications. That isn't intrinsic to social networking - I hope. Maybe ZSocial can avoid that problem - we are going to try.

When you say, "Social networking has actually gotten me out of the house more often, because I now get daily invites from leftists to attend forums or go on demos, from conservatives in my family to pray for disaster victims, news of all kinds left to right, have up to three scrabble games going all the time, share pictures, work on projects, occasionally blog, post from my actual blog which draws new readers when I get reposted by friends to their friends" can you see that you are responding to structural discussion of a gigantic corporation that has 700 million users, with a description of your personal choices - and that that is not a whole lot different from responding to a critique of Bank of America with a description of a nice teller who helped you out? You are not wrong about you - but you aren't actually even addressing the larger issues. 

And this is, in once sense, the problem. In a horrible context that robs and wrecks social ties, curtails information flow, and so on - the internet and social networking provide very valuable benefits. Trust me - I know that. How could I not, as I sit and type, with my work entirely online? But that doesn't alter that it also has profound implications - including, perhaps, maintaining or even aggravating the problems that limit us so dramatically throughout our lives. 

So the question isn't FB or not. The question is, can we do better than FB for left needs, while not enduring its oversight, spying, and selling...at least for anything other than what we can't accomplish for ourselves. It is quite like asking, can we have really good information sites and print and video, etc., and use the NYT only for what we must?

And you end with, "This comment page doesn't even have an email tracker, so I didn't realize you'd responded. Hell, a twitter feed alone would bring me here more often."

Actually, it does have an email tracker, as noted at the outset. And, I have to tell you honestly, needing a twitter feed to go to a place that has - if it does - information and analysis and vision you really want - is strange and quite an achievement - quite a scary achievement, of twitter, and FB. 

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Me

New fronts in an old class war

By Hamm, Keith at Jun 14, 2011 20:20 PM

 
As with any new technology that promises much, we must fight to bring it under our own control. The ruling elites are not simply going to give it away for free. Whether that technology is agriculture that has been dominated for millennium by inherited privilege, industrial production controlled almost exclusively by capitalists and coordinators, and now the internet and the coming merger of humans and machines. Is it truly a surprise when things with so much potential for good are corrupted by exploitative corporations and controlling governments? Is this not he same story we on the left have always told?

In this constant struggle against those who would control our lives and profit off of everything we do we must be constantly vigilant. We must constantly strive to, as Michael wrote, “to find ways people can navigate around them, or even develop alternatives that transcend the dangers.”

As to the question, “Could the internet actually be a more powerful tool [than TV, newspapers, and journals] for limiting the reach of our minds and feelings, even while we think the exact opposite is the the case?” The internet, like TV, newspapers, and journals, are the creation of governments or corporations. Already it has been completely possible to live in a walled garden of information, carefully cultivated by these purveyors of “news” to reinforce already held beliefs--even without leaving print media. People already consume a cultivated set of ideas and must already seek out alternatives if we want to know what is actually happening. Is this not the same critique of media the left has always had? Yet, it still rings true.

So no, the internet will probably be no more powerful a tool of misinformation and control than medias of the past. Will it be the panacea of hope and freedom we all hoped it would be? No, it will not be that either. Just as with past technological developments it will be something else, something indeed very powerful that can be used against us, but also something we can use as well. But be ever vigilant and thoughtful, always question, and above all work to shape technology for our own uses rather than theirs.

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Obama

Flying Cars?

By Osama, Barack at Jun 13, 2011 22:33 PM

Interesting article with a lot of important issues and it also raises a number of important ethical concerns.  The conclusion seems to be positive for the time being but the stark examples of the coming technology are nothing new.  We still live with the threat of nuclear annihilation or annihilation from environmental destruction that seems to have shown up in Massachusetts in the form of a tornado.  In more abstract terms I tend to side with the Buddhists that the greater reality encompasses us and whether we implant a microchip or transcend our bodies into the ether we are still part of this greater reality and whether what we have evolved to is important in the greater context of the universe is well yet to be seen.  But being sympathetic to the humanistic ideals of the left we must point out the dangers of these developments.

I don’t think that we should expect anything definite from these technological developments because they are not linear; we were promised flying cars and on and on but the production of magical devices by sorcerers, I mean Engineers and Scientists, are still constrained by market economics and pseudo capitalism-like-“economics.”  A scientist in a particular field can only speak from that field’s perspective and in the narrow confines of a field anything is possible but when constraints of how well we understand what nature has done really well we fall short of mimicking its beauty. 

Most Engineers are fascinated by nature but their allegiance isn’t to a higher order of maintaining balance but to deliver quickly what the market requires.  And as far as I’m concerned the market is like cancer, its concern is to subvert all the resources to build a giant tumor, an economic bubble or to line the pockets of a-holes like Bill Gates at the cost of killing the very organism that gives it life; yah it’s a tumor.  The extraction of ideas from nature is superficial and like an old crutch compared to bones, muscles, and elegant motor skills which take into account the environmental complexities that the cost-effective analysis of making a gadget cannot.  So before we start increasing our memories into a hive mind let’s be clear that the human body is more efficient than an ICE vehicle, more bang for your buck with emissions that we can smell and at least laugh at.  I can just imagine what will happen when the hive-mind network goes down how many technicians is it going to take to put the hive back together, will we have to be on-call 24/7 or the chip will just wake me up and say report to sector 9 we have power outage.

The cumulative knowledge will not survive the constraints of the physical realities; is Google going to survive when we run out of oil or will they run their data farms on bio-diesel.  When the scrolls were burned at Alexandria a lot of ideas were lost, but would the trajectory of the sociological organism be any different?  When books give way to age and wither can we not create new knowledge, a new culture?  If some part of our nature refuses to be shackled by facebook then at least it will rear its head in the form of resistance and we’ll know it was an oopsie to implant chips in the brain.

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