Pit Schultz on Thu, 21 Mar 96 17:13 MET |
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nettime: re: cyberspace |
X-List: cyberspace-and-society@mailbase.ac.uk From: "sasha1@netcom.com" I usually write an essay draft to circulate among widening groups of people in hope to polish it and bring a well-prepared document to the world. This strategy is a bit too taxing; I am not sure I want to continue spending my precious time and resources contributing to groups far more affluent than I am. So I'll probably start writing rough drafts and launching them, and not put much work into it until I get paid for it. (I'll still take feedback though). The few thoughts that I would like to share now reflect my observations of recent organized attempts to rate and restrict information flows, and John Perry Barlow's "Declaration of the Independence of Cyberspace". I think all sides of this debate are misguided. The solution I would like to see would involve: - discussing the situation with info/techno development and coming up with a reasonably defined concept platform, on which all the sides may start real argument. - making this platform known (good ideas do not automatically win wide recognition in the society driven more by selfish interests of existing powers, with little interest in valid paradigms) - creating and supporting enabling technologies and social formations that can protect and promote interests of all sides and ensure reasonable cooperation between them in the areas of common or conflicting interests. Example: The Cyberspace freedom declarations usually start with something like "We citizens of Cyberspace/Electronic world...". Sounds like it is coming from uploaded infomorphs. Actually, there are the same citizens of the same countries communicating with each other in a slightly new way; the "electronic" and "Digital" nature of these communications are non-essential. Waves of air pressure that carry our voices in the "real" communications are dependent on electrons to a greater extent than many modern communication links (especially fiber optics); our DNA is more digital than the computer signal that is just emulation of digital on analog hardware; all of these are just non-essential implementation details anyway. As I see it, territorial governance is there to, well, govern behavior of people residing on a certain territory. Territoral government is there to address most important issues that require explicit and enforceable social contracts. What kind of social issues require government and how they should be resolved is a separate issue. While transportation and communications between territorial entities were not developed, sovereignty and jurisdiction of the governments were naturally confined to the territorial issues. With increasing contacts and fading boundaries between territorial entities we witness greater and greater role of exterritorial and non-territorial issues. They require new forms of governance. Let's return to "Cyberspace" and decency issues. Silly as they are, they provide good examples for the discussion that can hopefully be understood by everybody. Case 1. Territorial action. If a person and hir dog make their shit or genitals (or symbolic representations of those) available for viewing to human children in the same physical area, they should be subject to the same law; direct representations of forbidden objects seem more offensive; if mentioning of those object can be punishable by jail terms, then not flushing the toilet or letting your dog run around with exposed genitals should be punished by something worse. If a mention is made, there is no difference for any party whether it is handwritten, said, or e-mailed. So the law should be the same as well. [ I would also like to see some explanations how humans managed to become the first species on Earth whose young can be traumatized by sights that do not bother any other species, and whether the puritan laws have anything to do with this stupid situation ] Case 2. Exterritorial action. Supposed a citizen of the chunk of land C1 performs some action affecting the situation on the chunk of land C2. Which government is the judge here? Again, there is no difference between C-space and Land-Space here. There are lots of legal precedents and laws at work whether you are trying to go from Alabama to New York to perform an abortion, or going from Sweden to Finland to get drunk or leaving Australia for Thailand on a sex tour. I personally think that it's a good indicator of tyranny when a government tells you that you can't do something though it doesn't affect anybody in its jurisdiction and doesn't offend anybody beyond it. In any case, the actions should be judged by intentions and effects, and not implementational details - such as, whether you pushed your electrons physically or electrically to get this action done. Case 3. Non-territorial action. A considerable portion of Net structures, from public-domain software to default settings of international mailing lists, does not fall into territorial issues even under very loose interpretations. There is no reason to extend the jurisdiction over these issues to the territorial governments, as they have never been set up for handling them. There is also no reason to think that the usual control attempts here, such as demanding that these new issues should be governed by the same structures or the same people, can bring any benefit to either of the sides. This seems somewhat analogous to a local Fire Department telling people how to play with their pets or what music to listen to. Pets and music, just as Net discussions are not a new space with new people. But neither they are social formations that governing bodies such as Fire Department, Pentagon or White House were designed to control. New social structures allow, and require, new forms of social institutions and governance. And not just "free". [ Why would personal freedoms be more essential in computer-mediated communications than they are elsewhere? ] They have been arising, together with advisory documents, enabling software, functional governance and mediation, etc., etc. - including tools designed to protect the emerging domains from interference of existing powers. This includes anonymous mail and Web site (Ray Cromwell's current work), PGP, digital cash, steganography, and some other attempts by a few enthusiasts. Unfortunately, the "Cyberspace citizens", despite frequent claims that they "support" much of this work, actually just wish somebody did it for them for free - while their income goes to support the government and local grocery stores. One doesn't have to be a great professional to help improve the global information structures. Send a little check to those who work to improve your life and protect your rights on the Net. It will allow them to spend more time doing their work. The Net has lots of powers, but the ability to bring control over the world to a bunch of whining lazybones is not one of them. It is not surprizing that people are confused and scared by the rapid technological and social progress. Personal memory augmented by social experience-sharing does not provide much help in unprecedented situations. Governmental control cannot be quick and diverse enough to direct all emerging technologies, ideas, medicines, foods, conflicts, etc. Fortunately, there are efforts to discuss and develop alternative social institutions and methods of evaluating social novelties and distributing the knowledge - digital reputations, collaborative evaluations of documents, Idea futures markets, and others. Unfortunately, they get no support whatsoever. So the extremely valuable time is rapidly running out, coercive powers are advancing, citizenry gets increasingly confused and scared of the avalanche of novelty they are unable to conceptualize, while people who are able to fix much of it have to work menial jobs for food. I watched this happen once - in the Soviet Union. It is too late to do much there now: the environment is contaminated, people are spoiled, brainwashed and nerve-wrecked, most of the new technologies have been appropriated by the old scums, young would-be geniuses and visionaries turned into the old could-have-beens... I am quite sure that the current generation of Russians is going to die without ever seing decent social order. The Western civilization can be one generation away from this situation. It is not too late yet - if people stop behaving like sheep and start actually *supporting* the work that they wish to see done. [ I spent a few hours typing this up - instead of doing things for myself. Was it worth it? I regret wasting my time and nerves on the Soviet regime. Am I just wasting my time here as well? I don't know. But the situation here is a bit different. I have nowhere else to go. ] ------------------------------------------------ Alexander Chislenko <sasha1@netcom.com> Website: http://www.lucifer.com/~sasha/home.html - celebrating first million hits! ------------------------------------------------ -- * distributed via nettime-l : no commercial use without permission * <nettime> is a closed moderated mailinglist for net criticism, * collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets * more info: majordomo@is.in-berlin.de and "info nettime" in the msg body * URL: http://www.desk.nl/nettime/ contact: nettime-owner@is.in-berlin.de