Archive of All All All

Accelerationism

The Accelerationism Conference is taking place soon. For more background on the term, see this post by k-punk, Benjamin Noys’ post, and a longer post by splinttering bone ashes. Yet I have to ask the question:

Who is run over in accelerationism?

That we continue to hurtle our bodies in hunks of metal down roadways at extreme speeds with margins of inches is simply barbaric. And it will be accepted as such, someday. The erotic potentials notwithstanding, following Ballard. (But in my reading of his work, this is not something to be valorized.) If we want to see accelerationism of capital at work today, then we only have to look at China. (To pick one example of many.) Edward Burtynsky’s photographs and film, Manufactured Landscapes provide visual confirmation. And Coco Fusco’s performances and texts on the exploitation of latinas in maquiadoras provides a braking force to those who want to accelerate capital. Whose bodies are run over, left mutilated at the side of the road, as capital accelerates without control down the highway? As far as I can tell this is a subject that is not broached in the competing posts about desiring the acceleration of capital.

A sociologist should do a study about how so much of the work (at least that I read) comes from those in the UK. Is there something about the contemporary milieu of the UK, and of London in particular, that draws out these kinds of responses? What would this theory look like if it were situated from Detroit, New Orleans, Juarez, Chongqing, Mexico City, or elsewhere?

My interest in this comes from my reading of speculative realist thought, as it is so called, and my desire to engage with the libidinal aspects of Land, Lyotard, Irigary, D+G, and others. Yet I have a profound worry about any project that would seem to not ask the question “Who is run over?” from the start. And what happens to those who are not prepared for the coming acceleration?

These days I am examining the trope of noise, not only as it is thrown about (problematically, and not in the good sense of that word) within sound studies, but also in the expanded sense used by Michel Serres in Genesis. How is noise capitalized, how does it exceed its bounds within information theory, how does noise perturb capital? How does it create its own perturbation theory that can be harnessed (without complete control) to create productive dysfunctions? Would the thrown wrench that stops the machine, the pulled emergency cord be a better way to engage with the present acceleration of capital? This is one of the key questions for me at the moment. To understand how noise (and its ability, in a combinatory fashion, to call forth the sacred) can never be fully controlled, never fully divorced from the signal, but rather only guided, sent down other channels to recombine with the “signal” at some future point. What is this becoming-dysfunctional that guides the noisy other than the work of the Yes Men? We are beginning to see the cracks in this methodology, of course, which only means we need to lower ourselves into them to see where they lead. And perhaps inside are options that do not leave too many, unheard, on the side of the road.

scroogle may be no more

It’s a sad day; scroogle may be no more. The following text comes up when you try and make a query using scroogle. Looks like it might be time to be using tor on a regular basis…

“We regret to announce that our Google scraper may have to be permanently retired, thanks to a change at Google. It depends on whether Google is willing to restore the simple interface that we’ve been scraping since Scroogle started five years ago. Actually, we’ve been using that interface for scraping since Google-Watch.org began in 2002.

This interface (here’s a sample from years ago) was remarkably stable all that time. During those eight years there were only about five changes that required some programming adjustments. Also, this interface was available at every Google data center in exactly the same form, which allowed us to use 700 IP addresses for Google.

That interface was at www.google.com/ie but on May 10, 2010 they took it down and inserted a redirect to /toolbar/ie8/sidebar.html. It used to have a search box, and the results it showed were generic during that entire time. It didn’t show the snippets unless you moused-over the links it produced (they were there for our program, so that was okay), and it has never had any ads. Our impression was that these results were from Google’s basic algorithms, and that extra features and ads were added on top of these generic results. Three years ago Google launched “Universal Search,” which meant that they added results from other Google services on their pages. But this simple interface we were using was not affected at all.

Now that interface is gone. It is not possible to continue Scroogle unless we have a simple interface that is stable. Google’s main consumer-oriented interface that they want everyone to use is too complex, and changes too frequently, to make our scraping operation possible.

Over the next few days we will attempt to contact Google and determine whether the old interface is gone as a matter of policy at Google, or if they simply have it hidden somewhere and will tell us where it is so that we can continue to use it.

Thank you for your support during these past five years. Check back in a week or so; if we don’t hear from Google by next week, I think we can all assume that Google would rather have no Scroogle, and no privacy for searchers, at all. “

Nick Land on finance capital...in 1993

While I cannot get on board the embracing of Thanatos and the acceleration of the deterritorialization of capital, Nick Land’s comments—from 1993—are eerily prescient. And this is on the heels of a day where a trading glitch wrecked havoc in the spectre of numbers changing in the memory banks of corporate computers.

The obsolete psychological category of ‘greed’ privatizes and moralizes addiction, as if the profit-seeking tropism of a transnational capitalism propagating itself through epidemic consumerism were intelligible in terms of personal subjective traits. Wanting more is the index of interlock with cyberpositive machinic processes, and not the expression of private idiosyncrasy. What could be more impersonal — disinterested — than a haut bourgeois capital expansion servo-mechanism striving to double $10 billion? And even these creatures are disappearing into silicon viro-finance automatisms, where massively distributed and anonymized human ownership has become as vacuously nominal as democratic sovereignty (478).

This is because what appears to humanity as the history of capitalism is an invasion from the future by an artificial intelligent space that must assemble itself entirely from its enemy’s resources. Digitocommodification is the index of a cyberpositively escalating technovirus, of the planetary technocapital singularity: a self-organizing insidious traumatism, virtually guiding the entire biological desiring-complex towards post-carbon replicator usurpation.

The reality principle tends to a consummation as the price system:a convergence of mathematico-scientific and monetary quantization, ortechnical and economic implementability. This is not a matter of anunknown quantity, but of a quantity that operates as a place-holder for the unknown, introducing the future as an abstract magnitude. Capital propagates virally in so far as money communicates addiction, replicating itself through host organisms whose boundaries it breaches, and whose desires it reprograms. It incrementally virtualizes production; demetallizing money in the direction of credit finance, and disactualizing productive force along the scale of machinic intelligence quotient. The dehumanizing convergence of these tendencies zeroes upon an integrated and automatized cyberpositive techno-economic intelligence at war with the macropod (479).

Land, N. “Machinic desire”. Textural Practice, 1993, 7, 471-482

Experiencing the remnants of the Cybernetic Culture Research Unit

I’ve known little about the Cybernetic Culture Research Unit (CCRU) for a while. The CCRU comes up as an aside, usually linked to the Proper Names of Nick Land, Sadie Plant, Matthew Fuller, Kode 9, Kodwo Eshun, and Mark Fisher, who has posted an historical article on the unit. Unfortunately the group website, http://ccru.net, doesn’t respond to requests anymore, and their wikipedia page was just deleted by overzealous editors (how can something like this not be relevant or important if you have wikipedia pages for a number of these same people?) Their work seems to be carried on in the Collapse journal, whose publisher is also releasing an anthology of Land’s writings this year. The importance of sound and music to their work is what I am most interested in at the moment (besides their jubilant merging of theory and fiction); see Fisher’s link for more details. I wish there were more written about the CCRU, but perhaps that is part of why it is so interesting…an organizational form specific to their moment in time that can serve as a reminder of possibility in these times of the closure of philosophy departments.

Screw Google with Scroogle

According to Eric Schmidt, all of our lives should be public because we shouldn’t be doing things that we don’t want others to know. And, thus, concerns over such lefty ideas as “privacy” are misguided: “If you have something that you don’t want anyone to know, maybe you shouldn’t be doing it in the first place.”

This is why you should use Scroogle, a service for securely disguising your search queries to Google to prevent tracking of your activities. You can easily change the default search provider in Firefox to Scroogle on this site.

Eroticism and engineering

The field of engineering, the apparent epitome of cool rationality, is shot through with passion and excitement. An intricately shaped erotic expression finds its most creative outlet in the design of technology. The contemporary images of eroticism and of machines and systems reflect the imagination of the designer. How could it be otherwise in any human venture? (188)

Sally L. Hacker, “ Feminist Perspectives on Computer Based Systems and Democracy at the Workplace.” In: Computers and Democracy: A Scandinavian Challenge, Bjerknes, G. and Ehn, P. and Kyng, M. eds, Avebury (1987), 177—190.

On the Democracy to Come, from Jodi Dean

Some intriguing theses on democracy from Jodi Dean —even if she doesn’t call them theses, I read them that way. For example,

Fourth, the production of democratic subjects is a challenge; if it has been done before, it has only been achieved temporarily. The production is neither certain, secure, nor robust. There are lots of glitches and faux democrats out there on the market.

I agree with them for the most part, even if I don’t see the requirement for the “Party” as she suggests in the comments…I rather take things from David Graeber’s perspective that functioning democracies can exist without recourse to a Party structure; see his Fragments of an Anarchist Anthropology for some examples. While the obvious rejoinder to such a suggestion is, “How do things work at scale?”, such a question presupposes large-scale as a necessary condition. I don’t think that is a requirement, but that is fodder for a much longer post.

Criminalizing US protesters' uses of Twitter, or, how to get your home raided by the FBI

reposted from hastac

In case you missed this news over the past month or so due to the continual onslaught of digital information, there has been a disturbing—to put it lightly—incident involving Twitter, its use by protesters, and the exertion of state force. Briefly, the situation is as follows: During the recent G20 protests in Pittsburgh, PA in late September, a group of protesters were monitoring public police scanners, incoming information from people on the ground, as well as Twitter feeds, in order to post information on Twitter that would hopefully be of use to those on the ground. This tactic of having an off-site monitoring of public sources is a common one within protests. Equally common, of course, are police raids on this so-called “communication team” in order to shut them down and disrupt the means of communication, which is what happened in this case. Usually that is the end of the story. In this case, however, the two people involved (Elliot Madison and Michael Wallschlaeger) were charged under Pennsylvania law with what can only properly be called Orwellian offences: namely that they were “hindering prosecution” by posting on Twitter that an “order to disperse” had been made. According to Madison’s lawyer this would be like criminalizing someone on the street telling another, “Don’t go down that street; the police are rounding up protesters and arresting them”.

Of course, the grand and most-horrible irony in all of this is that the US State Department, just earlier this summer had been lauding the use of Twitter in the protests in Iran and had allegedly even intervened to ask Twitter to delay regular maintenance. Yet when these same techniques are used locally, the response is to press criminal charges.

The story only gets worse; a week after their arrest (and, I should say, the state charges have now been dropped) their home in Queens, NY, an anarchist commune, was raided by the FBI, purportedly to do with “violations” of little-used anti-rioting laws (the same laws used against the Chicago 8). You can read about the incident on their solidarity blog. As far as anyone can tell, the raid is directly related to their actions in Pittsburgh. However, with the exception of a few documents that the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) has been able to obtain, the actual reasons for the raid are still under seal. In the words of the Tortuga house members:

There is a pending federal grand jury in the Eastern District Federal Court of New York investigating somethingwhat? We dont know. We do not know how long it has been going on or if it directly involves us. We do not know what is in the sealed affidavits that are the basis for the search warrants that authorized the raid on our house. We do not know if we will be indicted by this federal grand jury or when. We do not know (although we can guess the answer) if the government will be allowed to search through our things. [This, unfortunately, has just been granted.] And so, we give you the condition of the citizen-subject experiencing the thrill of justice under Democracy! We know that we dont know anything!

I think the implications here are obvious. We have a situation where the use of a new technology is originally lauded overseas, but is criminalized when used at home. We have the preemptive use of the law and force that would aim to silence the use of this technology in the future, and where we can see that the original charges (in PA) were dropped because of the shakiness of their case. We have a situation where, as the developer of a similar tool I too am worried about the ways in which these laws can be used against me. And, most importantly for the this community, we have a situation that complicates in no uncertain terms any sort of valorization of social media tools as inherently democratic. Democracy, for whom, when, where? What types of democracy? Who has the power to define the discourse surrounding democratic use of technology? Social media tools are now being invested in by the CIA, and, as this case has shown, are being heavily monitored for activity that would fall outside of “normal” and “acceptable” channels. As users of these technologies are of course implicated. We, as scholars, should be very careful then of how much support we give to social media companies—-and here I mean support in terms of our time, our looking at and engaging with other people’s posts on these services, our scholarly attention where we use their trademarked terms within our work and could potentially be examining other non-commercial options (such as identi.ca and crabgrass). As young scholars and intellectuals in this area, we have the ability to help define the conversations surrounding use of these tools, to denounce heavy-handed attempts to preemptively limit their usefulness, and, through our discursive and practical work, foment the construction of alternatives.

Blogs on HASTAC

I don’t have a long time to write at the moment, but I wanted to post a bit about some of the blog entries I’ve made at the HASTAC website, as I’m “officially” a HASTAC scholar for the next year. Read these posts to get an idea of what I’m thinking about these days :-)

Shell Oil and the Privatization of the University

Pouissance in Malaysia

Post Singapore/Malaysia Update

Just got back last week from a great vacation in Singapore and Malaysia, the police-state nature of Singapore notwithstanding (more on that in a later post). ISEA was most definitely a mixed bag, with most of the bag holding bad, with a few good here and there. Look for a review of the conference in the next month or so.

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