Patrice Riemens on Mon, 21 Jul 2014 08:28:31 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> Ippolita Collective, In the Facebook Aquarium Part Two, |
Ippolita Collective, In the Facebook Aquarium Part Two Anonymous, or out-of-the-box activism (section 8, continued) Viewed from out the media, the reaction of the church of Scientology, just as that of all Anonymous' (many) casualties afterwards, was to portray the members of the group as monomaniac computer fanatics and cyber-terrorists, or in one word: (dangerous) hackers. It is not easy to define Anonymous in terms of ideology, but one aspect cannot escape notice: what boils up from all the Anonymous nodes is a very peculiar interpretation of freedom of expression, which is adamantly refered to as 'non-negotiable' [71]. As can be seen with the /OpBart/ operation, Anonymous often appears when censorship appears too [72]. Anonymous' and Wikileaks' paths crossed again between December 6 and 10, 2010 during /Operation Avange Assange (aka Operation Payback/), when several DDoS attacks were mounted, many successful, against a twelve-some banks and financial institutions which had blocked monetary transfers in favor of Wikileaks [73x]. To uncover the enemy's misdeeds while keeping a mask on, defy opacity through transparence while remaining anonymous, attack powerful actors (churches, armies, governments, banks) by way of interventions pairing technical competences with spectacular mass media engagement, and to adopt a truly warrior attitude, whether in the form of open warfare or sabotage actions - these are the features Anonymous and Wikileaks share in common. But the similarities stop here. Unlike Wikileaks, one cannot identify Anonymous with one really existing person because it is not a SPO [###*], but always operates as a (fluctuating) collective. In theory, anybody can be part of Anonymous, whereas passing on a top secret piece of information to Wikileaks does not result in identification of the person doing it. Anonymous in its turn, is made up of a great many individuals, networks, and (separate) operations. Can The Pirate Bay, Wikileaks and Anonymous be considered as different manifestations of the same hacker spirit? It is clear that the 'Petri dish' where Anonymous stems from is, at least partially, connected to the high-level world of hackerdom, as can be seen the participation of various Anonymous groups to a number of operations conducted by Lulzsec [74]. The hacker motto /just for fun/ finds its expression in the Lulz spirit, which is a transformation of the acronym LOL (/Laughing Out Loud/) used in on-line chats. The //b//canal random/ of the picture showcase 4chan [75] surely is part and parcel of those who defined themselves as the first members of Anonymous, for the simple reason that the major part of its contents were posted anonymously. a number of people, arrested during the successive waves of repression that hit Anonymous, were users of 4chan. In case you feel no affinity whatsoever nor any curiosity about mangas, Japanese animus, video games, TV series, outlandish acronyms, black humor, randy pre-porn, LOLcats (photoshopped feline pets, usually with some 'funny' legend), publicity jamming, etc., 4chan is definitely not for you. You might think you've just been dumped in a cage filled with maniacs with an annoying soft spot for horror and the surreal, a meeting point for youngsters talking gobbledygook. And in case you are gifted with a paranoid imagination your conclusion will be clear: dangerous cyber-terrorists at work! Mass media have focused on Anonymous hacking operations, but actually there have been many simultaneous (types of) Anonymous interventions, on different networks. There have also been public demonstrations of the more traditional ('in real life') kind, where Anonymous activists would wear Guy Fawkes masks. With the politicization of real life actions, Lulz on-line attacks have become less numerous, and the group went more political. This until groups appeared within Anonymous which openly called themselves anarchists, the A(A)A for Anon Anarchist Action, for instance. But what kind of anarchism are we talking about here? Is it the anarcho-capitalist variety, bent on the total triumph of the free market, and of all-out privatization facilitated by a liberating technology, or is it anarchy understood as an anti-authoritarian practice and the struggle for a society made up of 'free and equals', where competition takes a step back in favor of mutual help and solidarity? For sure, there are members of Anonymous who are active within (genuinely) anarchist organizations, but there are among them also who espouse liberal (capitalist) or even libertarian tendencies. The fact that journalists hailed 4chan as the Web's most anarchist site should raise some doubt - and more questions. Moot's (young New Yorker Christopher Poole's nick) positions provide a good benchmark for evaluation. Poole has declared himself in favor of total opacity, and absolute anonymity on-line, which gives to each and everyone the opportunity to choose for 'bad behavior' without offending, without disturbing, and especially, without getting caught and punished for conduct deemed to be on the wrong side of the law. Hence Pool is (surely) not going to bear with Facebook's radical transparency. But that is a bit unsubstantial for claiming the subversive anarchist label. Canvas, a site accessible through a Facebook account, demonstrates the evolution of a showcase format that allows for modification of on-line images [76]. This is an innovative system for the creation of on-line content, and we will come back on it in our concluding remarks. But again, no way this can be taken as a revolutionary or political hacking project of anarchist, anti-authoritarian nature. On the contrary, it is a project funded by venture capital, without in any way diverging from the advertisements-based business model already successfully operated by Google, Facebook, and all other Web 2.0 actors extracting profits from online sociality. (to be continued) Next time: online sociality, politics, democracy, anarchism, the work: the conclusion of this section - and the end of Part II! . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . [71] An Anonymous member copy-pasted the motto from a famous sentence in a George W Bush' speech where he told his audience in justification of the 'total war against terrorism', "the American way of life is non-negotiable". [72] Check out this Youtube clip: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MlsLmDOhQ5Y [73x] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Payback [###*] Single Person Organisation, aka UPO (Unique Personality Organisation) Thesis 6 of Geert Lovink & Patrice Riemens 'Twelve Theses on Wikileaks': http://www.eurozine.com/articles/2010-12-07-lovinkriemens-en.html [74] It was group of hackers which decreed in May/June 2010 'Ten Days of Lulz'. It hits the most varied of targets (FBI, Sony, Fox TV, Twitter) and published logins and passwords of lambda users - 'just to show we could do it'. The Lulz pirate vessel left deep traces in the web ocean, and the torrent of its operations and of the affected sites can still be downloaded from various mirror sites. [75] 4chan Showcase was started in 2003 by Christopher Poole (then 15 years old, he managed to stay anonymous till 2008) takes its inspiration from similar Japanese sites. Begin 2011 Showcase had sometimes the totally astonishing number of one and half million plus unique visitors a day. [76] https://www.facebook.com/canvas Canvas' former site at http://canv.as is no longer reachable, whereas this new site appears to no longer need formal FB usership identification (-transl) ----------------------------- Translated by Patrice Riemens This translation project is supported and facilitated by: The Institute of Network Cultures, Amsterdam University of Applied Sciences (http://networkcultures.org/wpmu/portal/) The Antenna Foundation, Nijmegen (http://www.antenna.nl - Dutch site) (http://www.antenna.nl/indexeng.html - english site under construction) Casa Nostra, Vogogna-Ossola, Italy # 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://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org