Florian Cramer on Thu, 5 May 2016 04:10:54 +0200 (CEST) |
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Re: <nettime> Live Your Models |
Hello Frederic, 1/ on the one hand, you show very well that "there is hardly a system that is more dependent on�efficiency-optimized global supply chains, high investments into manufacturing capacities, economics of scale and, well, the neoliberal economic system as computer electronics," you criticize the "naive automation" of the three last decades, you insist on the fact that our electronics society leans on "rare" metals; 2/ but you also argue that "a modern big�furniture factory is significantly more environmentally and�resource-friendly than a FabLab; and of course, a modern data center�centrally hosting several thousand or million websites is�environmentally more friendly than thousand or million micro servers in�individual homes," siding with accelerationists who - like "post-environmentalists," "eco-pragmatists," etc. - reject so called "Folk politics." My point is radically pragmatic. In most cases, production (or services like a web server) is more resource-efficient at larger scale. That by itself has nothing to do with cybernetic automation, but with simple physics. A network server running 1000 virtual hosts on a single 36 Gigaflops-CPU and a 350W power supply is significantly resource-friendlier than decentral 1000 microservers with 0.04 Gigaflops-CPUs and 1.5W power supplies. The same is true for the mass production of a chair in a efficiently engineered furniture factory versus laser-cutting the same chair in a FabLab, or mass-producing 1000 cups vs. one thousand decentral 3D printers printing that cup, or even artisans manually producing 1000 cups. I see "Folk politics" as a heritage of 19th century resistance against industrialization in, among others, romanticism, the Luddite movement and the Arts and Craft movement that trickled down to the counter-cultures of the 20th century. It is a belief that decentralized, local, small-scale production is by definition better and ecologically friendlier than mass production - which makes sense for products like milk (locally farmed milk vs. centrally farmed milk that gets transported several hundred or thousand miles in trucks) but for designed products. (On the issue of whether or not organic farming is environmentally friendlier than conventional farming, see - among others - this article -�[1]http://blogs.scientificamerican.com/science-sushi/httpblogsscient ificamericancomscience-sushi20110718mythbusting-101-organic-farming-con ventional-agriculture/ . I do not claim expertise on this subject; it only strikes me that science tells something else than intuition, and that the scientists voicing doubts are _not_ the climate-change-denying type of scientists or publicists.) "Naive automation" concerns something completely different: namely the automation of critical infrastructures, including power plants and energy grids, stock markets and financial transactions, transportation (autonomous cars...), flood protection, police and military systems - in short, not the automation of production, but the cybernetic/computerized automation of systems on the level of analysis, control and decision-making. "Total automation", to quote Snricek and Williams, and the "abolition of work", to quote Black and others, needs to include this type of automation since otherwise, it would neither be total, nor abolish work. On top of that, there's the question whether this total automation would be technically possible at all, even if one ignored all the risks, given the actual limitations of hardware, software and the things artificial intelligence can not do. From their very different perspectives, leftists (Snricek/Williams, Graeber), liberals (Rifkin) and right-wingers (Singularity and transhumanism evangelists) seem to buy into a 21st century messianism of the deus ex machina - the last remaining hope that technology will be able to save us. What I cannot understand is how some people who argue for acceleration, posthumans, and accelerated technologization The problem is: All these discourses still work on the basis of a 19th century romanticist paradigm (fully developed in such literary-philosophical works as Mary Shelley's "Frankenstein") of "humanist" versus "posthumanist", "acceleration" versus "slowdown" etc. A critically informed activism would overcome these binarisms and make technologically, scientifically and ecologically informed, pragmatic decisions where automation is useful and where it should be strictly avoided. I.e.: in a world soon inhabited by 10 billion people, highly efficient furniture factories are better than FabLabs or even artisans inefficiently producing furniture; soy food factories are preferable to the currently one billion�cows on farmland, a greater source of CO2 pollution than cars. But you don't want software run political elections, nuclear power plants, military defense systems, and not even the middle management of your municipal administration or school, as Graeber suggests. Florian
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