Michael H Goldhaber on Tue, 8 Dec 2009 03:13:19 +0100 (CET) |
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Re: <nettime> Handoko Suwono: Facebook paves its way to IPO |
Prem et al., These issues come up over and over, but those who raise them also have the responsibility of in effect setting up a panopticon to scare others into not daring to make political acts. Current capitalism involves plenty of bamboozling, including one capitalist or firm bamboozling another. In fact, some firms, such as Lehman Bros. manage to bamboozle themselves. If a firm can get hold of anything it thinks it might be able to sell to someone else, it will advertise that as highly advantageous, whether it truly is or not. Internet firms using cookies find themselves capable of collecting all sorts of data supposedly related to users' habits and preferences . These firms claim this stuff is of value and try to sell it. That does not mean it actually is of so much value. Mostly they try to sell it to advertisers; that leads to the following sort of scenario.: You once bought, say, a pair of shoes of a certain kind. So the advertiser tries to sell you something connected with that purchase, ranging from similar shoes to laces, to vacations in the sort of country in which such shoes might come in handy. If you are sufficiently intrigued, the worst that happens is that you buy the additional items. But inevitably, given finite resources of both money and attention, you learn to filter such ads out. All that happens, most likely is a slight shift in sales from one set of companies to another. That does little to affect the overall picture of capitalism or the problems with it. Of course, both companies and governments also try to collect data of other sorts that might possibly help them decide what customers to avoid, what workers to be wary of, what citizens might harm government plans. They have done this sort of thing for centuries, and it's not entirely impossible that Internet records are of some additional use in this regard. But it's pretty obvious that current government or even corporate attempts in this regard are far from foolproof. Nor would they necessarily rely on the kinds of data likely collected by Facebook. To act as if being politically open on such sites is dangerous as, you do Prem, does discourage political action that most people otherwise would consider safe. Not only are capitalists often fools, but so are government spy agencies. It does no good to act as if they are superhuman. Why are you not trying to encourage important sorts of protests rather than setting up Facebook and sites like it as straw men? Can't you find more salient aspects of current society to criticize? There would seem to be plenty. Best, Michael On Dec 5, 2009, at 12:44 AM, Prem Chandavarkar wrote: > I agree - the question is one of transparency and not capitalism. And > this happens because in current capitalism one unwittingly leaves an > information trail even through very mundane and routine activities. So > for example if I purchase something with my credit card, I am offering > information on who I am, where I live, what I buy, when I buy, what my > shopping patterns are, and more. Somebody gathers this data, analyses > it and and then acts on it in a way that will ultimately affect me in > some way. And I do not know what is happening behind the scenes and how > actions by some pretty powerful folks are being targeted at people like > me. <...> # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: http://mail.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org