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The Anti Web2.0 Manifesto (Adorno for idiots) by Andrew Keen

From an email sent to the mailing list of the Institute for Distributed Creativity. I didn’t check if Andrew Keen really said or wrote this text. I tend to disagree with the arguments but I think it is not good for me (and for everyone) to only read opinions of like-minded people, Web2.0 enthusiasts in this case. I agree with Sunstein when he states in Republic.com:

Unplanned, unanticipated encounters are central to democracy itself. Such encounters often involve topics and points of view that people have not sought out and perhaps find quite irritating.

So without further ado, here it is:

THE ANTI WEB 2.0 MANIFESTO (Adorno-for-idiots) by Andrew Keen
1. The cult of the amateur is digital utopianism’s most seductive delusion. This cult promises that the latest media technology — in the form of blogs, wikis and podcasts — will
enable everyone to become widely read writers, journalists, movie directors and music artists. It suggests, mistakenly, that everyone has something interesting to say.
2. The digital utopian much heralded “democratization” of media will have a destructive impact upon culture, particularly upon criticism. “Good taste” is, as Adorno never tired
of telling us, undemocratic. Taste must reside with an elite (“truth makers”) of historically progressive cultural critics able to determine, on behalf of the public, the value of a
work-of-art. The digital utopia seeks to flatten this elite into an ochlocracy. The danger, therefore, is that the future will be tasteless.
3. To imagine the dystopian future, we need to reread Adorno, as well as Kafka and Borges (the Web 2.0 dystopia can be mapped to that triangular space between Frankfurt,
Prague and Buenos Aires). Unchecked technology threatens to undermine reality and turn media into a rival version of life, a 21st century version of “The Castle” or “The Library
of Babel”. This might make a fantastic movie or short piece of fiction. But real life, like art, shouldn’t be fantasy; it shouldn’t be fiction.
4. A particularly unfashionable thought: big media is not bad media. The big media engine of the Hollywood studios, the major record labels and publishing houses has
discovered and branded great 20th century popular artists of such as Alfred Hitchcock, Bono and W.G. Sebald (the “Vertigo” three). It is most unlikely that citizen media will
have the marketing skills to discover and brand creative artists of equivalent prodigy.
5. Let’s think differently about George Orwell. Apple’s iconic 1984 Super Bowl commercial is true: 1984 will not be like Nineteen Eighty-Four the message went. Yes, the “truth”
about the digital future will be the absence of the Orwellian Big Brother and the Ministry of Truth. Orwell’s dystopia is the dictatorship of the State; the Web 2.0 dystopia is the
dictatorship of the author. In the digital future, everyone will think they are Orwell (the movie might be called: Being George Orwell).
6. Digital utopian economists Chris Anderson have invented a theoretically flattened market that they have christened the “Long Tail”. It is a Hayekian cottage market of small
media producers industriously trading with one another. But Anderson’s “Long Tail” is really a long tale. The real economic future is something akin to Google — a vertiginous
media world in which content and advertising become so indistinguishable that they become one and the same (more grist to that Frankfurt-Prague-BuenosAires triangle).
7. As always, today’s pornography reveals tomorrow’s media. The future of general media content, the place culture is going, is Voyeurweb.com: the convergence of
self-authored shamelessness, narcissism and vulgarity — a self-argument in favor of censorship. As Adorno liked to remind us, we have a responsibility to protect people from
their worst impulses. If people aren’t able to censor their worst instincts, then they need to be censored by others wiser and more disciplined than themselves.
8. There is something of the philosophical assumptions of early Marx and Rousseau in the digital utopian movement, particularly in its holy trinity of online community,
individual creativity and common intellectual property ownership. Most of all, it’s in the marriage of abstract theory and absolute faith in the virtue of human nature that lends
the digital utopians their intellectual debt to intellectual Casanovas like young Marx and Rousseau.
9. How to resist digital utopianism? Orwell’s focus on language is the most effective antidote. The digital utopians needs to be fought word-for-word, phrase-by-phrase,
delusion-by-delusion. As an opening gambit, let’s focus on the meaning of four key words in the digital utopian lexicon: a) author b) audience c) community d) elitism.
10. The cultural consequence of uncontrolled digital development will be social vertigo. Culture will be spinning and whirling and in continual flux. Everything will be in motion;
everything will be opinion. This social vertigo of ubiquitous opinion was recognized by Plato. That’s why he was of the opinion that opinionated artists should be banned from his
Republic.

Money as Debt

Money is money only because people think it is money, and hence accept it as money. In reality money does not exist, it is just a piece of paper or some bits stored somewhere. So, are there better systems to regulate humans social interactions? You bet there are!
For now just start thinking about the questions that emerge from the following video, would you?
Paul Grignon’s 47-minute animated presentation of “Money as Debt” tells in very simple and effective graphic terms what money is and how it is being created.

Vice President of Italy trying to convince chineses to come to Italy … in macaronic English

You can see the video on the chinese section of new italia.it portal (Update March 2018: the page is no more there) (also uploaded on Youtube or embedded in this post). I know my (Macaronic) English is far away from perfect but I would expect a better message from our Vice President especially when he wants to convince people to come to Italy, and considering he has people working for him writing the text and he had the chance to film it as many times as he wanted. Actually after watching it, I feel too feeble for making any comment, so I’ll just write down what he said because I think I need to see the words to let them go.

Please
visiT the Web site buT
please
visiT
iTaly.
We’re
the best country in the world in terms of
culTure,
landscapeS,
arts,
history,
cities,
villeegis,
beautiful
countryside,
seaside,
mountains,
that is Italy,
you know or perhaps you’re dreaming about,
but please,
visit our country
we will welcome you warmly,
and with a beTTTer organization.

UPDATE march 25, 2007:
Backstage of Rutelli video “Pliz, visit Itali”

Paolo trying to be Kitta (and to get a free shirt ;-)

Via Bru, I found a photo of Kitta wearing a Technorati shirt (Ryan, who sent the present, jokes about this being his only contribution at Technorati people will remember). So I thought “what she has more than me?”. Actually a non-fake Technorati T-shirt. See with your eyes this image or the one without head.
So here goes the plea: please Technorati send me a real Technorati shirt so that I could look as cool as Kitta. ;-)
Of course, I will do the same for Flickr (wearing their shirt) or anyone else. Looking for a testimonial model? Look no more, you’ve found it right here! Actually I think I could do everything for a free T-Shirt, just try me ;-)

AAAI 2005 conference will be Flickred

As I already written it, there is a aaai-05 user on Flickr and the photos submitted by it are shown on aaai-05 blog.
If you are at AAAI and taking pictures, you might want to consider creating an identity on Flickr and sharing your photos, tagging them as “aaai05”.
Questions to Flickr-aholic:
– I’ve my identity on Flickr and I will tag photos with “aaai05” this evening, so, do you know if there is an easy way to show on a aaai05 blog a zeitgeist of photos tagged under a certain tag and not only belonging to a single user?
– Is this a bug of Flickr or I’m missing something? (Probably the second). There are some pictures tagged by user aaai-05 under “aaai05” but they don’t show up when you see all the photos tagged under “aaai05”.

Using wifi at AAAI (with GNU/Linux)

I thought I might share this information with you. If you are at AAAI05, you know there is free wifi connection. If you use GNU/Linux, the instructions (“just open the browser and everything will be fine”) don’t work. Instead you have to do something like that:
1. iwconfig wlan0 essid “STSN” //set the essid of the network
2. dhclient wlan0 //you should have an IP address after this.
3. connect with your browser to 172.18.98.157 //the login screen will be there, login with your 24-hours access code.
UPDATE: I realized later that posting information on the web that are addressed to someone that is not able to connect to the web is kind of strange but maybe your connected neighbour can help you with that and sharing information is, in general, always a good thing.

Creating playable Games on Google Maps

Wow! I’ve been BoingBoinged: Google Maps, Reloaded: Animated Mozillas and Gnus attack Redmond.
In the previous Google Maps hack post I was pondering how easy it would be to create a playable game on Google Maps.
Intelligent Artifice comes to writeIt’s a New Genre about to be born! I predict a dedicated conference in 2006.
So I created a Games on Google Maps wiki page for collecting ideas (and implementations!). Contribute to it, if you like! And if there will be a conference “Real Games on Real Maps”, I would really like to be in the committee. ;-)

Animated Invasion over Google Map

UPDATE: This is a demo on Google Maps I put together in few hours in 2005. And this was the first time I got BoingBoinged (it was the last time too … ;) The demo was working in 2005 but now the Google Maps API changed and it does not work, so I replaced it with the flash video I recorded at that time.

Some Mozillas and some Gnus are invading Microsoft office in Redmond (the blue E).
First I saw on BoingBoing that Vestadesign created Star Wars ATATs attacking Palo Alto using Google Maps API. So I thought I could add some animations. I also ended up changing the environment (Micro$oft offices) and the invaders (Mozillas and Gnus). Free software to the rescue!
Go to the page with the Javascript code that produces the animation.
Below there is the Flash animation but you should see the real page (with the code). (If you can’t see them, check the static image.)

It should be very easy to create real playable games on Google Maps. Here are some ideas:
– playing Risk on the real world map (with the ability to zoom in/out to combat at different scales). Extend Jrisk or JavaRisk (code available on SourceForge).
– playing FreeCiv on real world maps. Modify FreeCiv source code.
– driving a car race on streets of the real world.
– much more I guess
Let me know if you create such a game.

UPDATE: after being BoingBoinged, I created a Games on Google Maps wiki page, for collecting ideas (and implementations!). Contribute to it, if you like.

Software Patents WebStrike: “close” your web site to Save Europe from Software Patents!

My homepage is closed. I’m participating to the Web Demo Against Software Patents. Please, do the same!
On 6th July in Strasbourg the European Parliament could Save Europe from Software Patents
The Software Patents Directive, as approved by the European Council of Ministers, would codify US-style Software Patents in the European Union.
If that happens, software developers will no longer own what they write and can be sued for selling or distributing their own software.
If you don’t inform your parliament, mega-corporations are doing the job for you: “The European Parliament is filled with lobbyists of Microsoft, Eicta, CompTIA and so on. There are 30 to 40 lobbyists permanently roaming the halls.” (in Eweek, 21 June (http://www.eweek.com/article2/0,1759,1829955,00.asp))

What you can do
1. Participate in the Web Demo until the vote of 6th of July
2. Please send nice faxes or make phone calls to your representatives in the European Parliament (http://www.ffii.org/~gibuskro/meplist/) and ask them to follow the FFII voting recommendations (http://europarl.ffii.org/amendments.en.html). You can also ask them to follow the rapporter Rocard.

Live8 and Africans


Ethan Zuckermann ponders about Live8:
But in the age of citizen journalism, it’s pretty easy to hear what
smart, opinionated Africans think about Live 8 directly from their blogs. I just did a roundup of African bloggers writing about Live 8 over at Global Voices.
You may be unsurprised to discover that, generally speaking, there’s less enthusiasm for Live 8 on the continent than there is in the US or UK.
While it’s admirable that thousands of bloggers have added
to their pages to promote Live 8, to support African debt relief or to try to revive Bob Geldof’s career. But it would be a damn sight more useful and transformative if bloggers would go a step further and start reading some African bloggers… perhaps starting with some of the folks who are justifiably skeptical about the value of yet another rock concert. Allow me to recommend Thinker’s Room’s “Live Aid? Please!”, Sokari Ekine’s “Live 8419” or Gerald Caplan’s brilliant piece in Pambazuka.