Patrice Riemens on Mon, 5 Jul 2010 15:14:05 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> Anand Giridharadas: FIFA's digital philosophy (NYT/IHT) |
Original to: http://anand.ly/articles/in-search-of-a-digital-philosophy published in The International Herald Tribune, w/e July 3-4, 2010. In search of a digital philosophy by Anand Giridharadas MUMBAI ? The world saw the goal clear as day, but the referees did not. And in this age of camera-embedded everything and crowd-sourced truths, the error of the few startlingly prevailed over the cameras and the eyes of the many. So, despite an apology days later from Sepp Blatter, the head of the World Cup?s governing body, FIFA, and a promise to re-examine the technology question, England never got its second goal against Germany last weekend. What might have been had it entered the second half with the psychic buoyancy of an equal? Fans and commentators simmered: How can these multibillion-dollar games shun a technology contained in the average cellphone? Why not embrace the inevitable? But another way of seeing FIFA?s approach is as a rare and revealing act of resistance in relentlessly digitizing times. Technology is of human making. But these days we contort ourselves to organize life around the tools and not the other way around. If the technologists sell always-on broadband, we end up being always on. If they invent a new gadget, we line up to buy it before knowing its uses. If e-mail can reach us anywhere, we assume that it should. FIFA?s digital skepticism is a notable exception to this feature-led culture. In a noteworthy statement issued three months before the World Cup, the association offered more than Luddism to explain its reticence. It spoke of a game with certain deep essences that it wished to preserve and argued that technology threatened them. High among these is universality; the game played in a Mumbai slum looks like the game played at the World Cup, with many of the same rules, rhythms, rites. Digitizing elite contests would, FIFA suggested back then, break the universality. Constant replay would make the elite game choppy and eternally interrupted, like basketball. The narrative continuity that defines the sport would disappear. And the clarity of automated officiating might starve fans of opportunities for impassioned ?debate,? the statement said. FIFA was making a point that is becoming hard to dispute: To digitize something is not merely to bring efficiency to it. It is also in many cases to change it in a fundamental way, to give it a new essence. To digitize sport, book-reading, dating ? to do any of these things is transformative. The transformations can be good, bad or both. Whichever it is, digitization brings hard choices about the essences of particular human activities, and what of them we will negotiate away for the expediency of technology. Yet we often stumble upon the choices rather than choose them. A new digital philosophy could serve as a guide, but philosophers are seldom technologists and technologists seldom philosophers. Those good at ?why? and those good at ?how? rarely talk. So many more philosophers have waded into the questions raised by bio-manipulation than those posed by the more immediate dilemmas of becoming digital people. (...) <middle part filtered out as it is full of insufferably conventional trite about how ICT has wipped out the social and invalidated the cat's subway pass in the process...> (you can always read the original) (...) For now, FIFA has reminded everyone that the offerings of technology are not inevitabilities but choices, and that we don?t have to live in new ways just because they have been invented. It remains possible to determine first the kind of life you wish to lead, and only then ask how magnificent and hazardous arrays of ones and zeroes can be put to the task of making that life come true. # 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