User:Birgit bachler/Final Project Proposal/10jan2011: Difference between revisions
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Birgit Bachler, Piet Zwart Institute Rotterdam 2011... page 1 | |||
Computers do not only serve as tools used for carrying out repetitive tasks – | |||
the success of commercial social networking platforms shows that the machine | |||
Computers do not only serve as tools used for carrying out repetitive tasks – the success of commercial social networking platforms shows that the machine has also become an important mediator of our social relationships. Even though human interaction is complex and unpredictable, we seem to accept that we have to truncate our behavior and communication according to the requirements of computers and machines. In order to create an online identity and connect with others we are tempted to publish our very personal data. I am interested in the emerging grey zone between the desire to exhibit ourselves online and the fear of surveillance and loss of privacy. In my research I want to search for networks that appear beyond the commercial business and experiment with possibilities of rendering them visible. | has also become an important mediator of our social relationships. Even though | ||
Technology has brought the benefits of being able to abandon geographical and political borders to us. But while making our lives easier, computers also alter our behavior and determine the ways we interact with them. Through online platforms the web is now also part of our social environment: We share our thoughts instantly via twitter, post our private photos on flickr, upload our videos to youtube and connect to each other via facebook. These activities, which used to be done in a private face-to-face manner, now become actions that are performed via commercial services and are visible to everybody. Real-world social attributes are compressed into an equivalent digital format. | human interaction is complex and unpredictable, we seem to accept that we | ||
Already in 1990 Mark | have to truncate our behavior and communication according to the requirements | ||
As opposed to real life relationships on facebook every person we are connected to is considered to be a “friend”. But the group of people in our friend list is rather heterogeneous and our relationships we have | of computers and machines. In order to create an online identity and connect | ||
The issues of the computer as a mediator of our friendships and the resulting loss of privacy have also been a central point in my previous work: | with others we are tempted to publish our very personal data. I am interested | ||
“Bonuskaart friends” is a social network that connects people according to their shopping behaviour at the Dutch supermarket chain | in the emerging grey zone between the desire to exhibit ourselves online and | ||
In “Windowstills” I collected the data myself on the street: Apartment windows in Rotterdam are often decorated so uniquely that they resemble sites and profiles on a social networking website. Regarding the window as the grey zone where the public eye meets the private realm of a citizen I categorized and tagged every single window and connected similarly decorated windows with each other. Performing the online routine of categorizing and tagging onto an offline medium challenges the gap between privacy definitions online and offline. | the fear of surveillance and loss of privacy. In my research I want to search | ||
In both projects I made use of an existing but yet unconnected infrastructure and tried to visualize possible networks by remediating and manipulating the data. For my final project I want to go deeper into the exploration of new forms of networks that do not comply with the rules of commercial social networking sites. | for networks that appear beyond the commercial business and experiment with | ||
My practical research online I will analyze the constitution of popular networking sites and examine the threshold the user has to cross in order to be part of the network. I will try to implement these findings in my search for alternative, offline emerging networks and experiment with the similarities and differences. I will also keep track on the development of the project Diaspora, a highly anticipated de-centralized alternative to facebook. A possible outcome of my research and experiments will be the visualization and constitution of my findings. | possibilities of rendering them visible. | ||
Technology has brought the benefits of being able to abandon geographical and | |||
political borders to us. But while making our lives easier, computers | |||
also alter our behavior and determine the ways we interact with them. Through | |||
online platforms the web is now also part of our social environment: We share | |||
our thoughts instantly via twitter, post our private photos on flickr, upload | |||
our videos to youtube and connect to each other via facebook. These activities, | |||
which used to be done in a private face-to-face manner, now become actions that | |||
are performed via commercial services and are visible to everybody. Real-world | |||
social attributes are compressed into an equivalent digital format. The use of | |||
social networking services is for free, since we pay with our private data. | |||
Already in 1990 Mark Poster states that it becomes “norm” that our lives are | |||
governed by databases. By constantly having to fill in profiles in order to | |||
be able to use a social website we feed these databases ourselves and create | |||
a multitude of digital identities. But also through every action we perform | |||
online we generate a digital shadow of ourselves. How are we coping with the | |||
variety of our digital identities that we created or that are being created for | |||
us? Participatory surveillance as it is exercised on social networking sites | |||
exists already from the beginnings of the Industrial Revolution and I want to | |||
explore how it influences our existence online. | |||
The temporary networks of the unknown | |||
An attempt to explain my desire and curiosity to understand the desire and curiosity that | |||
leads people into the usage of new technology in order to sustain their desired identity and | |||
their curious networks | |||
Facebook jargon graffiti sprayed on a house wall in The Hague Privacy settings panel on Facebook to control what to share | |||
Birgit Bachler, Piet Zwart Institute Rotterdam 2011... page 2 | |||
As opposed to real life relationships | |||
on facebook every person we are | |||
connected to is considered to be a | |||
“friend”. But the group of people in | |||
our friend list is rather heterogeneous | |||
and our relationships we have with | |||
them extremely diverse. Marketers | |||
generally divide this mass into strong | |||
and weak ties. Paul Adams, Senior User | |||
Experience Researcher at Google, also | |||
names the group of temporary ties, | |||
which is becoming more commonplace | |||
online: “Temporary ties are people that | |||
you have no recognized relationship | |||
with, but that you temporarily | |||
interact with.” With the growth of | |||
user generated content we are more and | |||
more confronted with texts, reviews | |||
and opinions of people we do not know | |||
but whose advice we accept. Can these | |||
temporary ties, from a non-marketer’s | |||
position, also be constituted in | |||
offline spaces? I want to examine | |||
how people connect temporarily in | |||
situations like sharing an elevator, | |||
responding to scribbles on a public | |||
toilet, signing a visitor’s book or | |||
when two women on a party are wearing | |||
the same dress. These temporarily | |||
emerging links between people happen | |||
in an unpredictable and not determined | |||
way and are interesting to me since | |||
they happen to function opposite to | |||
the logical processes within a computer | |||
network. | |||
The issues of the computer as a mediator of our friendships and the resulting | |||
loss of privacy have also been a central point in my previous work: | |||
“Bonuskaart friends” is a social network that connects people according to | |||
their shopping behaviour at the Dutch supermarket chain Albert Heijn. Like | |||
any customer card the Albert Heijn bonuskaart is an effective tool for data | |||
mining and creating customer profiles. The website I programmed only required | |||
to fill in your unique card number and would scrape all the information about | |||
your shopping from the publicly available Albert Heijn-website. By questioning | |||
the relevance and sensitivity of this data, the social network of Bonuskaartfriends, | |||
which is based upon the look of facebook, tries to portray possible | |||
abuse and false conclusions about a person based on that data. | |||
HAL 9000 is the sentient on-board computer of the Discovery | |||
One spacecraft in 2001: A Space Odyssey. | |||
Social network, analog: The summit book of Rosenkranzhöhe, | |||
Austria (2118m), every visitor can leave a trace in the book. | |||
Birgit Bachler, Piet Zwart Institute Rotterdam 2011... page 3 | |||
In “Windowstills” I collected the data myself on the street: Apartment windows | |||
in Rotterdam are often decorated so uniquely that they resemble sites and | |||
profiles on a social networking website. Regarding the window as the grey | |||
zone where the public eye meets the private realm of a citizen I categorized | |||
and tagged every single window and connected similarly decorated windows with | |||
each other. Performing the online routine of categorizing and tagging onto | |||
an offline medium challenges the gap between privacy definitions online and | |||
offline. | |||
In both projects I made use of an existing but yet unconnected infrastructure | |||
and tried to visualize possible networks by remediating and manipulating | |||
the data. For my final project I want to go deeper into the exploration | |||
of new forms of networks that do not comply with the rules of commercial | |||
social networking sites. I want the research on Michel Foucault’s term of | |||
Governmentality and explore power not only as an oppressing force, but also as | |||
the origin for productivity and creativity. | |||
My practical research online I will analyze the constitution of popular | |||
networking sites and examine the threshold the user has to cross in order to be | |||
part of the network. I will try to implement these findings in my search for | |||
alternative, offline emerging networks and experiment with the similarities and | |||
differences. I will also keep track on the development of the project Diaspora, | |||
a highly anticipated de-centralized alternative to facebook. A possible outcome | |||
of my research and experiments will be the visualization and constitution of my | |||
findings. | |||
Bonuskaart-Friends: The Bonuskaart-number is the only data | |||
needed for creating a complete profile with pictures and friends | |||
Windowstills: With the map people can find each other by | |||
common interests through similar decoration in their windows | |||
Birgit Bachler, Piet Zwart Institute Rotterdam 2011... page 4 | |||
References: | References: | ||
• A Nation of Voyeurs, Neil Swidey, Globe Staff, 2/2/2003 | • A Nation of Voyeurs, Neil Swidey, Globe Staff, 2/2/2003 | ||
• Postscript on the Societies of Control, Gilles Deleuze 1992 | • Postscript on the Societies of Control, Gilles Deleuze 1992 | ||
• Reality TV. The work of being watched, Mark Andrejevic, 2004 | • Reality TV. The work of being watched, Mark Andrejevic, 2004 | ||
• The Real Life Social Network v2, presentation of Paul Adams, http://www.slideshare.net/padday/the-real-life-social-network-v2 | • The Real Life Social Network v2, presentation of Paul Adams, | ||
http://www.slideshare.net/padday/the-real-life-social-network-v2 | |||
• Open 19: Beyond Privacy. New Perspectives of the Private and Public Domains, 2010 | • Open 19: Beyond Privacy. New Perspectives of the Private and Public | ||
Domains, 2010 | |||
• Being Digital, Nicholas Negroponte | • Being Digital, Nicholas Negroponte | ||
• You are not a Gadget: A Manifesto, Jaron Lanier, | • You are not a Gadget: A Manifesto, Jaron Lanier, 2010 | ||
• The Return of Panopticism: Supervision, | • The Return of Panopticism: Supervision, Subjec tion and the new | ||
• Control and Freedom: Power and Paranoia in the Age of Fiber Optics, Wendy Chun | surveillance | ||
• Control and Freedom: Power and Paranoia in the Age of Fiber Optics, | |||
Wendy Chun | |||
• The Surveillant Assemblage, Kevin D. Haggerty and Richard V. Ericson | • The Surveillant Assemblage, Kevin D. Haggerty and Richard V. Ericson | ||
• Governing the Soul. The Shaping of the Private Self, Nikolas Rose | • Governing the Soul. The Shaping of the Private Self, Nikolas Rose | ||
• A Genealogy of Homo-Economicus: Neoliberalism and the production of subjectivity, Jason Read | • A Genealogy of Homo-Economicus: Neoliberalism and the production of | ||
• The Mode of Information: Foucault and Databases. Participatory surveillance, Mark Poster 1990 | subjectivity, Jason Read | ||
• The Mode of Information: Foucault and Databases. Participatory | |||
surveillance, Mark Poster 1990 | |||
Diaspora: A de-centralized alternative to facebook? - https://www.joindisspora.com |
Latest revision as of 21:43, 10 January 2011
text dump backup:
The temporary networks of the unknown
Birgit Bachler, Piet Zwart Institute Rotterdam 2011... page 1 Computers do not only serve as tools used for carrying out repetitive tasks – the success of commercial social networking platforms shows that the machine has also become an important mediator of our social relationships. Even though human interaction is complex and unpredictable, we seem to accept that we have to truncate our behavior and communication according to the requirements of computers and machines. In order to create an online identity and connect with others we are tempted to publish our very personal data. I am interested in the emerging grey zone between the desire to exhibit ourselves online and the fear of surveillance and loss of privacy. In my research I want to search for networks that appear beyond the commercial business and experiment with possibilities of rendering them visible. Technology has brought the benefits of being able to abandon geographical and political borders to us. But while making our lives easier, computers also alter our behavior and determine the ways we interact with them. Through online platforms the web is now also part of our social environment: We share our thoughts instantly via twitter, post our private photos on flickr, upload our videos to youtube and connect to each other via facebook. These activities, which used to be done in a private face-to-face manner, now become actions that are performed via commercial services and are visible to everybody. Real-world social attributes are compressed into an equivalent digital format. The use of social networking services is for free, since we pay with our private data. Already in 1990 Mark Poster states that it becomes “norm” that our lives are governed by databases. By constantly having to fill in profiles in order to be able to use a social website we feed these databases ourselves and create a multitude of digital identities. But also through every action we perform online we generate a digital shadow of ourselves. How are we coping with the variety of our digital identities that we created or that are being created for us? Participatory surveillance as it is exercised on social networking sites exists already from the beginnings of the Industrial Revolution and I want to explore how it influences our existence online. The temporary networks of the unknown An attempt to explain my desire and curiosity to understand the desire and curiosity that leads people into the usage of new technology in order to sustain their desired identity and their curious networks Facebook jargon graffiti sprayed on a house wall in The Hague Privacy settings panel on Facebook to control what to share Birgit Bachler, Piet Zwart Institute Rotterdam 2011... page 2 As opposed to real life relationships on facebook every person we are connected to is considered to be a “friend”. But the group of people in our friend list is rather heterogeneous and our relationships we have with them extremely diverse. Marketers generally divide this mass into strong and weak ties. Paul Adams, Senior User Experience Researcher at Google, also names the group of temporary ties, which is becoming more commonplace online: “Temporary ties are people that you have no recognized relationship with, but that you temporarily interact with.” With the growth of user generated content we are more and more confronted with texts, reviews and opinions of people we do not know but whose advice we accept. Can these temporary ties, from a non-marketer’s position, also be constituted in offline spaces? I want to examine how people connect temporarily in situations like sharing an elevator, responding to scribbles on a public toilet, signing a visitor’s book or when two women on a party are wearing the same dress. These temporarily emerging links between people happen in an unpredictable and not determined way and are interesting to me since they happen to function opposite to the logical processes within a computer network. The issues of the computer as a mediator of our friendships and the resulting loss of privacy have also been a central point in my previous work: “Bonuskaart friends” is a social network that connects people according to their shopping behaviour at the Dutch supermarket chain Albert Heijn. Like any customer card the Albert Heijn bonuskaart is an effective tool for data mining and creating customer profiles. The website I programmed only required to fill in your unique card number and would scrape all the information about your shopping from the publicly available Albert Heijn-website. By questioning the relevance and sensitivity of this data, the social network of Bonuskaartfriends, which is based upon the look of facebook, tries to portray possible abuse and false conclusions about a person based on that data. HAL 9000 is the sentient on-board computer of the Discovery One spacecraft in 2001: A Space Odyssey. Social network, analog: The summit book of Rosenkranzhöhe, Austria (2118m), every visitor can leave a trace in the book. Birgit Bachler, Piet Zwart Institute Rotterdam 2011... page 3 In “Windowstills” I collected the data myself on the street: Apartment windows in Rotterdam are often decorated so uniquely that they resemble sites and profiles on a social networking website. Regarding the window as the grey zone where the public eye meets the private realm of a citizen I categorized and tagged every single window and connected similarly decorated windows with each other. Performing the online routine of categorizing and tagging onto an offline medium challenges the gap between privacy definitions online and offline. In both projects I made use of an existing but yet unconnected infrastructure and tried to visualize possible networks by remediating and manipulating the data. For my final project I want to go deeper into the exploration of new forms of networks that do not comply with the rules of commercial social networking sites. I want the research on Michel Foucault’s term of Governmentality and explore power not only as an oppressing force, but also as the origin for productivity and creativity. My practical research online I will analyze the constitution of popular networking sites and examine the threshold the user has to cross in order to be part of the network. I will try to implement these findings in my search for alternative, offline emerging networks and experiment with the similarities and differences. I will also keep track on the development of the project Diaspora, a highly anticipated de-centralized alternative to facebook. A possible outcome of my research and experiments will be the visualization and constitution of my findings. Bonuskaart-Friends: The Bonuskaart-number is the only data needed for creating a complete profile with pictures and friends Windowstills: With the map people can find each other by common interests through similar decoration in their windows Birgit Bachler, Piet Zwart Institute Rotterdam 2011... page 4 References: • A Nation of Voyeurs, Neil Swidey, Globe Staff, 2/2/2003 • Postscript on the Societies of Control, Gilles Deleuze 1992 • Reality TV. The work of being watched, Mark Andrejevic, 2004 • The Real Life Social Network v2, presentation of Paul Adams, http://www.slideshare.net/padday/the-real-life-social-network-v2 • Open 19: Beyond Privacy. New Perspectives of the Private and Public Domains, 2010 • Being Digital, Nicholas Negroponte • You are not a Gadget: A Manifesto, Jaron Lanier, 2010 • The Return of Panopticism: Supervision, Subjec tion and the new surveillance • Control and Freedom: Power and Paranoia in the Age of Fiber Optics, Wendy Chun • The Surveillant Assemblage, Kevin D. Haggerty and Richard V. Ericson • Governing the Soul. The Shaping of the Private Self, Nikolas Rose • A Genealogy of Homo-Economicus: Neoliberalism and the production of subjectivity, Jason Read • The Mode of Information: Foucault and Databases. Participatory surveillance, Mark Poster 1990 Diaspora: A de-centralized alternative to facebook? - https://www.joindisspora.com