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=<p style="font-family:helvetica">Introduction</p>=
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People have now more concrete experiences of the digital/Web interface than the physical space. Museums, hotels, houses, cars interiors, restaurants are themselves becoming more and more comparable to digital interface where everything is optimized, and where our behaviours, actions and even inactions are being detected and converted into commands in order to offer a more customized (and profitable) experience to each of us. In that sense, we are getting closer from becoming users of our own interfaced physical reality. By creating a plastic exhibition spaces explicitly inspired from a Web interface, I wish to question what could be the future of exhibition space, what are the limits of this interfaced and individualized reality,  how could it affect our own experience and understanding of art, how can our established understanding of digital interface could give us a new understanding  museum/gallery display and bring more interest into the practice of curating or spectacting physical exhibitions.
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==<p style="font-family:helvetica">1.        THE AGENCIES OF USERS & SPECTATORS</p>==
=<p style="font-family:helvetica">Thesis Outline:</p>=


What are users and spectators allowed or expected to do and agree on.
<b>Research question:</b>


===1.1            The user agency through the Web===
How can an understanding of the underlying mechanism operating between users and (self)surveillance systems create more awareness of the issues concerning the marketization of human data?


====1.1.1            Terms, conditions, agreements====
<b>Sub questions:</b>


Cookies, privacy, legal uses, advertisment, copyrights, etc
— How, when, and why did our online data become merchandized? By whom and for what purposes?<br>
— What are the issues related to the use of self-quantification/self-tracking practices? (self-alienation, legitimization of surveillance and self-surveillance in physical context, free labor).<br>
— What can be done to raise awareness to the users about the effects of self-quantification/self-tracking practices?<br>


===1.2            The spectator agency through the Exhibition Spaces/Museums/Galleries===
===Introduction (700 words)===


====1.2.1                Rules, safety, regulations====
— Starts with an appetizing paragraph, written as a small story about the life of a self-data user.<br>
— Brief context, what are we talking about and why? What is/are the problem(s) Why does it has to be discussed and addressed.<br>
— Introduce the topic of the first chapter about the marketisation of user’s data, from 2001 until nowadays.<br>
— Introduce the topic of the second chapter about self-quantification/alienation, legitimization of surveillance and self-surveillance in physical contexts, and free labor.<br>
— Introduce the topic of the third chapter exploring alternatives, and promoting a counter-use of techno surveillance systems.<br>


Artwork safety, public safety, prohibed items, public speaking, photography, equipments, behavior, circulation, etc.
===Chapter 1: The marketisation of user’s data, from 2001 until nowadays (1000 words)===
Maybe even more than on the Web, being a gallery/museum visitor implies to agree on terms and conditions.


* example: Louvres Visitors rules: https://www.louvre.fr/en/visit/museum-rules
How/When/Why did our online data became merchandized? How is it valued? <br>
By who and for what purposes can this information be used? Advertising, politics, governments, etc. <br>
Why did the human attention became an economy? <br>
<br>
<u>Helpful references:</u>


==<p style="font-family:helvetica">2. CONTEXTS () </p>==
• SHOSHANA ZUBOFF, The Age of Surveillance Capitalism (2019)<br>  
Warns against this shift towards a «surveillance capitalism». Her thesis argues that, by appropriating our personal data, the digital giants are manipulating us and modifying our behavior, attacking our free will and threatening our freedoms and personal sovereignty.<br>
<br>
• EVGENY MOROZOV, Capitalism’s New Clothes (2019) <br>
Extensive analysis and critic of Shoshana Zuboff research and publications.<br>
<br>
• TIM WU, The Attention Merchants, (2016) <br>
How the detection and marketisation human attention has definied industry of our time/attention <br>
<br>
• BYRON REEVES AND CLIFFORD NASS, The Media Equation, How People Treat Computers, Television, and New Media Like Real People and Places (1996) Precursor study of the relation between humans and machine, and how do you human relate to them.
<br>


What are the spatial, technological, political and architectural factors that are together define the context in which the representation and its spectator(s) are situated.


===Chapter 2: Self-quantification/alienation, legitimization of surveillance and self-surveillance in physical contexts, and free labor (2300 words)===


===<p style="font-family:helvetica">2.1            Technological context of the Web</p>===
Self-tracking practices
How does the promotion of self tracking/quantification practices/tools allow tech giants to gather and sell even more personal informations about it’s users?  What are the alienating effects of such tools/practice? How does this participates in a culture of surveillance and self-surveillance where monitoring systems don’t limit themselves to the online world but are also implemented in physical environments and on human bodies.


====2.1.1                A network of factors  / Technological contexts / Point of views ====
From online to physical
What are the example of tools, devices, systems which monitors humans behavior in physical contexts, under what pretext do they exist, what are be the risk for our freedoms? How far could it go? Are we becoming users of our own environments?
<br>
<u>Helpful references:</u>


On the Web, the render/display of same Web page is always slighly different from a user’s to another. It depends on the technological and spatial context in which each user in situated. This context is made of many factors, such as the device used, its configuration (addons/plugins/custom settings/luminosity/scale), the IP adress, the browser used, its versions among an almost infinite list of other parameters. All theses factors added together creates a very singular context to which the Web and its contents are forced to adapt.
• OMAR KHOLEIF, Goodbye, World! — Looking at Art in the digital Age (2018)
<br>Ask how the Internet has changed the way we perceive and relate, and interact with/to images. State that the internet has created an transforming the «world a the network of all network»<br>
<br>
• MARK O’CONNELL, To Be a Machine: Adventures Among Cyborgs, Utopians, Hackers, and the Futurists Solving the Modest Problem of Death Hardcover (2017)<br>
Talks about trans humanism, and show how the fascination/obsession for new technologies can lead to conceive our own human body as a device.


Ref:
* [http://whatyouseeiswhatyouget.net/ What you see is what you get — Jonas Lund] (2012)


====  2.1.2              Elasticity, obsolescence and unpredictability / Responsive technology====
===Chapter 3: Agree and continue? Exploring alternatives, and promoting a counter-use of techno surveillance systems (2300 words)===


How do these companies manage to sill get the consent from most of their users on their policy?
What human biases do they exploit? What can be the alternatives to techno-surveillance? What can be the active of roles of artists, curators and public cultural institution such as museum upon this realm
<br>
<u>Helpful references:</u>


In that sense the Web materiality is sort of elastic (see: plasticity), which makes it singularily different from most physical objects or achitectures. Added to that, the display and functionalities of a website are also affected by the constant evolution of the Web itself, with patches, updates, expired and added elements that contribute to the ephemerality and unpredictability of what can be seen.
• MELISSA GRONLUND, Contemporary Art and Digital Culture (2016) Analyses the impact of the internet and digital technologies in our modern societies and contemporary art practice<br>
 
<br>
In order to overcome the impredicatability of rendering online interfaces among the incredible diversity of connected devices, a technology of flexibility has been developped, improved and  democratised on the Web.
• AARON SWARTZ, Freedom to Connect: on Victory To Save Open Internet, Fight Online Censors (1986-2013) How do computers and the Internet « empower people around the world with the freedom to connect », and preaching the Open access to information<br>
 
<br>
Ref:
• KATRIN FRITSCH, Towards an emancipatory understanding of widespread datafication (2018)<br>
*[[Plasticity of User Interfaces:A Revised Reference Framework]] NOTES INSIDE<br>
Suggests that in response to our society of surveillance, artists can suggest activist response that doesn’t necessarily involve technological literacy, but instead can promote strong counter metaphors or/and counter use of these introsuing technologies.<br>
Gaëlle Calvary, Joëlle Coutaz, David Thevenin
Quentin Limbourg, Nathalie Souchon, Laurent Bouillon, Murielle Florins, Jean Vanderdonckt
<br><br>
See more:
* Lopez, J.F., Szekely, P., Web page adaptation for Universal Access, in Proc. of Conf. on Universal Access in HCI UAHCI’ 2001<br>
(New Orleans, August 5-10, 2001), Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Mahwah, 2001,
 
===<p style="font-family:helvetica">2.2            Technological contexts in the museum/exhibition space</p>===
 
====  2.2.1                Space and agents of the production of knowledge====
 
Architecture, scale, size, interior design, colors, layout, writing, arrangement, lighting, display, etc
 
* Stéphanie Moser, 2010. [[THE  DEVIL  IS IN THE  DETAILS: MUSEUM - Displays  and the Creation of Knowledge]] [https://pzwiki.wdka.nl/mw-mediadesign/images/5/57/The_Devil_is_in_the_details-_DETAIT-_MUSEUM_Displays_and_the_Creation_of_Knowledge.pdf Doc]. 1st ed. Southampton, England
 
====2.2.2              Institutional critique (optional)====
 
Questioning and redifining the exhibition spaces and the heritage from the White Cube by the institutional critique practice (?)
 
* [[From the Critique of Institutions to an Institution of Critique - Andrea Fraser]][https://aaaaarg.fail/upload/andrea-fraser-from-the-critique-of-institutions-to-an-institution-of-critique-1.pdf Doc]
* [http://nt2.uqam.ca/fr/biblio/after-white-cube [[After the White Cube.]]] [https://www.lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v37/n06/hal-foster/after-the-white-cube ref]
 
=<p style="font-family:helvetica">II.    Reversing the desktop metaphor</p>=
 
The desktop metaphor was invented in the early ages of computers for facilitating the use and understanding of the digital interfaces, by making mental associations related to domains from the physical world.  Now democratised, widely used and quiet often replacing our needs to converge in physical spaces, I would like to reverse the process by getting inspired by the concepts of the Web interfaces in order to suggest a singular experience and understanding of the physical exhibition space who is awell another space of representation.
 
==<p style="font-family:helvetica">1. CONCEPTS OF THE INTERFACED REALITY</p>==
 
Conceiving the exhibition space as a digital Web interface
 
*Ref: The screenless office - Brendan Howell (http://screenl.es/)
 
===1.1            "Architectural Device" ===
 
Conceiving the architecture as a technological and political device made of a set of factors and parameters
 
===1.2            "Physical Events" ===
 
On the Web, our actions and inactions can be converted into (silent and invisible) events that can give activate things and be converted into valuable informations for advertisers, algorythms, etc.
How could such thing be conceptualized inside an exhibition space.
 
===1.3            "Programmed physical space" ===
 
Comparing the programming of an interface with the curation of a exhbibition space. Could an exhibition space be programmed?
 
===1.4            "Exhibition User" ===
 
Conceiving the Spectator as a User of the physical space
 
===1.5            "Variable Display" ===
 
Conceiving the physical space as an elastic/variable and potentially unpredicatable display; in order to diffract the range of viewing contexts offered by the Web.
 
=<p style="font-family:helvetica">Conclusion</p>=
 
[...]
 
==<p style="font-family:helvetica">References</p>==
   
 
*    Stéphanie Moser, 2010. THE DEVIL IS IN THE DETAILS: MUSEUM - Displays and the Creation of Knowledge. 1st ed. Southampton, England
 
*    Alexander R. Galloway - The Interface Effect 1st ed. Malden, USA: Polity Press.
 
*    Jonas Lund, 2012. What you see is what you get
 
*    Shilpa Gupta, 2009 - 2010. Speaking Wall


*    Frederick Kiesler, 1925, City of space
===Conclusion (700 words)===
<br><br>
More [[XPUB2_Research_Board_/_Martin_Foucaut#Readings_.28new.29.28english.29.28with_notes_in_english.29|here]]


==<p style="font-family:helvetica">Format of the Thesis</p>==
—Sum up of all the chapter<br>
—Answer to the research question<br>
—Further research<br>


Online, the thesis could be displayed differently and contain more or less words/informations/images depending on the user/reader technological context (device used, operating system, browser, screen size, IP adress, etc).
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Latest revision as of 11:28, 26 January 2022

Thesis Outline:

Research question:

How can an understanding of the underlying mechanism operating between users and (self)surveillance systems create more awareness of the issues concerning the marketization of human data?

Sub questions:

— How, when, and why did our online data become merchandized? By whom and for what purposes?
— What are the issues related to the use of self-quantification/self-tracking practices? (self-alienation, legitimization of surveillance and self-surveillance in physical context, free labor).
— What can be done to raise awareness to the users about the effects of self-quantification/self-tracking practices?

Introduction (700 words)

— Starts with an appetizing paragraph, written as a small story about the life of a self-data user.
— Brief context, what are we talking about and why? What is/are the problem(s) Why does it has to be discussed and addressed.
— Introduce the topic of the first chapter about the marketisation of user’s data, from 2001 until nowadays.
— Introduce the topic of the second chapter about self-quantification/alienation, legitimization of surveillance and self-surveillance in physical contexts, and free labor.
— Introduce the topic of the third chapter exploring alternatives, and promoting a counter-use of techno surveillance systems.

Chapter 1: The marketisation of user’s data, from 2001 until nowadays (1000 words)

How/When/Why did our online data became merchandized? How is it valued?
By who and for what purposes can this information be used? Advertising, politics, governments, etc.
Why did the human attention became an economy?

Helpful references:

• SHOSHANA ZUBOFF, The Age of Surveillance Capitalism (2019)
Warns against this shift towards a «surveillance capitalism». Her thesis argues that, by appropriating our personal data, the digital giants are manipulating us and modifying our behavior, attacking our free will and threatening our freedoms and personal sovereignty.

• EVGENY MOROZOV, Capitalism’s New Clothes (2019)
Extensive analysis and critic of Shoshana Zuboff research and publications.

• TIM WU, The Attention Merchants, (2016)
How the detection and marketisation human attention has definied industry of our time/attention

• BYRON REEVES AND CLIFFORD NASS, The Media Equation, How People Treat Computers, Television, and New Media Like Real People and Places (1996) Precursor study of the relation between humans and machine, and how do you human relate to them.


Chapter 2: Self-quantification/alienation, legitimization of surveillance and self-surveillance in physical contexts, and free labor (2300 words)

Self-tracking practices How does the promotion of self tracking/quantification practices/tools allow tech giants to gather and sell even more personal informations about it’s users? What are the alienating effects of such tools/practice? How does this participates in a culture of surveillance and self-surveillance where monitoring systems don’t limit themselves to the online world but are also implemented in physical environments and on human bodies.

From online to physical What are the example of tools, devices, systems which monitors humans behavior in physical contexts, under what pretext do they exist, what are be the risk for our freedoms? How far could it go? Are we becoming users of our own environments?
Helpful references:

• OMAR KHOLEIF, Goodbye, World! — Looking at Art in the digital Age (2018)
Ask how the Internet has changed the way we perceive and relate, and interact with/to images. State that the internet has created an transforming the «world a the network of all network»

• MARK O’CONNELL, To Be a Machine: Adventures Among Cyborgs, Utopians, Hackers, and the Futurists Solving the Modest Problem of Death Hardcover (2017)
Talks about trans humanism, and show how the fascination/obsession for new technologies can lead to conceive our own human body as a device.


Chapter 3: Agree and continue? Exploring alternatives, and promoting a counter-use of techno surveillance systems (2300 words)

How do these companies manage to sill get the consent from most of their users on their policy? What human biases do they exploit? What can be the alternatives to techno-surveillance? What can be the active of roles of artists, curators and public cultural institution such as museum upon this realm
Helpful references:

• MELISSA GRONLUND, Contemporary Art and Digital Culture (2016) Analyses the impact of the internet and digital technologies in our modern societies and contemporary art practice

• AARON SWARTZ, Freedom to Connect: on Victory To Save Open Internet, Fight Online Censors (1986-2013) How do computers and the Internet « empower people around the world with the freedom to connect », and preaching the Open access to information

• KATRIN FRITSCH, Towards an emancipatory understanding of widespread datafication (2018)
Suggests that in response to our society of surveillance, artists can suggest activist response that doesn’t necessarily involve technological literacy, but instead can promote strong counter metaphors or/and counter use of these introsuing technologies.

Conclusion (700 words)

—Sum up of all the chapter
—Answer to the research question
—Further research