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What is Technocult ure Phillip Simmonds • The Internet – Discipline and Control – The participatory Panopticon

What Is Technocultures

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Page 1: What Is Technocultures

What is

TechnoculturePhillip Simmonds

• The Internet– Discipline and Control– The participatory Panopticon

Page 2: What Is Technocultures

Chun, Wendy H. K. (2006). Control and freedom: power and paranoia in

the age of fiber optics. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press.

This piece focuses on the cultural influence of the internet. An increasingly important part of

technological progress in recent years.

Page 3: What Is Technocultures

The Internet

• The internet “broke media monopolies by enabling the free flow of information, reinvigorating free speech and democracy”

Although..“..some condemned the Internet for its excessive

freedoms, for the ways in which it encouraged so-called deviant behaviour that put our future at risk”.

Chun, Wendy H. K. (2006). Control and freedom: power and paranoia in the age of fiber optics.

Page 4: What Is Technocultures

Deviant behaviours?

• Who can gain access to our information?• When browsing a web page we send:Internet Protocol (IP) address, browser type,

language preference, and userdomainoften contains information such as your physical

location or username

Page 5: What Is Technocultures

“Using a packet sniffer, however, you can see that your computer constantly wanders without you” Chun, Wendy H. K. (2006).

Control and freedom: power and paranoia in the age of fiber optics.

Image Source: http://mitpress.mit.edu/books/chapters/0262033321intro1.pdf

Page 6: What Is Technocultures

• “Your screen, with its windows and background, suggests that your computer only sends and receives data at your request. It suggests that you are that all-powerful user Microsoft invoked to sell its Internet Explorer by asking, ‘‘Where do you want to go today?’’”

Chun, Wendy H. K. (2006). Control and freedom: power and paranoia in the age of fiber optics.

Page 7: What Is Technocultures

Michel Foucault – Discipline Societies

• French philosopher who’s ideas of discipline societies and sexuality from his works ‘Discipline and Punish’ (1975) and ‘The History of Sexuality’ (1984) are used by Chun to envisage the Internet as a sort of modern day prison

Page 8: What Is Technocultures

Gilles Deleuze – Control Society

• Another French philosopher who used the ideas of Foucault’s discipline societies from ‘Discipline and Punish’ (1975), to form his idea of ‘control societies’ described in his ‘Postscript on Control Societies’(1990)

Page 9: What Is Technocultures

“The computer, with its emphasis on information and its reduction of the individual to the password, epitomizes control societies. Digital language makes control systems invisible: we no longer experience the visible yet unverifiable gaze but a network of nonvisualizable digital control.”

Chun, Wendy H. K. (2006). Control and freedom: power and paranoia in the age of fiber optics.

Page 10: What Is Technocultures

The Panopticon

Image Source: http://mapage.noos.fr/dcolas/panopticon.jpg

Page 11: What Is Technocultures

• The idea of the panopticon came from English philosopher Jeremy Bentham.

• The idea is commonly used as a metaphor for the surveillance of internet users by persons such as governments, corporations, criminals/hackers, and even regular citizens

What is the Panopticon

Page 12: What Is Technocultures

What is the Panopticon“The Panopticon encapsulated the disciplinary mechanism for Foucault”

The general idea is of a prison composed of a central tower that is surrounded by an outer structure with individual cells that can be observed from the middle.

“In the Panopticon, visibility was a trap—the inhabitants could always be viewed by the central tower, but since the windows of the central tower were to be covered by blinds they could never be certain when they were beingwatched”

Chun, Wendy H. K. (2006). Control and freedom: power and paranoia in the age of fiber optics.

Image Source: http://www.library.auckland.ac.nz/subjects/socio/images/Panopticon.jpg

Page 13: What Is Technocultures

• “The major effect of the Panopticon was to ‘‘induce in the inmate a state of conscious and permanent visibility that assures the automatic functioning of power.’’

• “To work, power had to be visible, yet unverifiable.”

Chun, Wendy H. K. (2006). Control and freedom: power and paranoia in the age of fiber optics.

Page 14: What Is Technocultures

Taking Liberties

• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jb0sY_p94cM

• part of a UK documentary ‘Taking Liberties’ • - available on YouTube

Page 15: What Is Technocultures

• The internet Panopticon is not something that is being forced on us

• If the internet becomes the most viable option of doing tasks such as reading the news, talking to others, watching movies, shopping etc then it becomes a cultural necessity

• “Further, the implementation of the panopticon model may be perceived by users as a necessity if they are convinced that such a structure would protect them or make their transactions online more efficient”

Brignall, T (2002), The New Panopticon: The Internet Viewed as a Structure of Social Control, Theory & Science, [http://theoryandscience.icaap.org/content/vol003.001/brignall.html]

Page 16: What Is Technocultures

• “The inmates (are) caught up in a power situation of which they are themselves the bearers” (Foucault, 1972: 201).

• Those within the panopticon becomes less concerned of a ‘Big Brother’ but rather of ‘Little Brothers’ (such as other inmates) who may keep on eye on you for their own gains.

• The panopticon becomes:• “a faceless gaze that transformed the whole social body into

a field of perception: thousands of eyes posed everywhere, mobile attentions ever on the alert” (Foucault, 1972: 214).

Foucault, M. (1972). The Archaeology of Knowledge & The Discourse On Language. Trans. A. Sheridan. New York: Pantheon Books.

Foucault, M. (1995). Discipline & Punish: The Birth of the Prison. Trans. A. Sheridan New York: Vintage Books.

Page 17: What Is Technocultures

• In one of his article from WorldChanging.com, Jamais Cascio refers to this as a ‘participatory panopticon’

• “constant surveillance is done by the citizens themselves, and is done by choice. It's not imposed on us by a malevolent bureaucracy or faceless corporations. The participatory panopticon will be the emergent result of myriad independent rational decisions, a bottom-up version of the constantly watched society.”

Cascio, J (2005), The Rise of the Participatory Panopticon, WorldChanging, [http://www.worldchanging.com/archives/002651.html]

Page 18: What Is Technocultures

• Cascio refers to the idea of the individual citizens using technology to watch those in charge as ‘sousveillance’

• “..a recent neologism meaning "watching from below" -- in comparison to "surveillance," meaning "watching from above.”�

• “Proponents of the notion see it as an equalizer, making it possible for individual citizens to keep tabs on those in charge. For the sousveillance movement, if the question is who watches the watchmen? the answer is all of us.”� � � �

Cascio, J (2005), The Rise of the Participatory Panopticon, WorldChanging, [http://www.worldchanging.com/archives/002651.html]

Page 19: What Is Technocultures

• “Digital devices and network connections can allow individuals to bypass chains of command and control”

• A picture of a prisoner being abused by the American military in Iraq, which was then sent via email to the rest of the world

• In reaction to the photos, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld said: "We're functioning ... in the Information Age, where people are running around with digital cameras and taking these unbelievable photographs and then passing them off, against the law, to the media, to our surprise, when they had not even arrived in the Pentagon.”�

Cascio, J (2005), The Rise of the Participatory Panopticon, WorldChanging, [http://www.worldchanging.com/archives/002651.html]

Image Source: http://www.worldchanging.com/images/Abu_Ghraib.jpg

Page 20: What Is Technocultures

The I.T. Generation

• Are we living in an easier and more advanced age than ever before?

Or• Is technology impairing and hindering us..

Even controlling us more than it is providing freedom?

Page 21: What Is Technocultures

URL Reference List• Control & Freedom: Power & Paranoia in the Age of Fiber Optics

http://mitpress.mit.edu/books/chapters/0262033321intro1.pdf• Deleuze and the Internet• http://www.australianhumanitiesreview.org/archive/Issue-December-200

7/Buchanan.html• Why Web 2.0 will end your privacy:• http://www.bit-tech.net/columns/2006/06/03/web_2_privacy/• Panopticon.com: online surveillance and the commodification of

privacy:• http://goliath.ecnext.com/coms2/summary_0199-871016_ITM• The New Panopticon:

The Internet Viewed as a Structure of Social Control:• http://theoryandscience.icaap.org/content/vol003.001/brignall.html• The Rise of the Participatory Panopticon:• http://www.worldchanging.com/archives/002651.html • Gilles Deleuze ‘Postscript on the Societies of Control’:• http://tannerhiggin.the-means.com/blog/2008/04/06/gilles-deleuze-pos

tscript-on-the-societies-of-control/• Taking Liberties:• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jb0sY_p94cM