xDxD.vs.xDxD on Sun, 26 Jan 2020 11:54:44 +0100 (CET) |
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Re: <nettime> DiEM25 Green Paper on Technological Sovereignty |
Hello everyone the main limit with all of this (including GDPR and all current institutional actions) is that the extractive and exploitative nature of the data and computation industry are not questioned at all. <<Hi folks! Data is the new oil: here's how you should make your extraction and refinement plant!>> This is a real issue. This equivalence is being promoted so much that it is beginning to be extremely difficult to imagine other ways in which it is possible to think. In a world in which so much of our possibility to express and to benefit from our rights and freedoms passes through data and computation, data and computation cannot be merely technical issues: they are existential, psychological, cultural issues. As such, the discussion should have forms and scopes that are entirely different, also and most importantly at the level of the institutions, and of those organizations that wish to influence institutions. While, for example, I truly respect the work expressed in these publications, which is also the result of the actions of many friends and people I really love and respect, I feel the need to highlight the dangers that come from these technical/administrative first approaches. Technologies are not neutral at all: we invent technologies just as much as technologies invent us. It may seem banal, but it is always useful to keep in mind. A few months ago, I unexpectedly found myself engaged in the task force that was brought up from the italian government within AgID (the agency for the digital agenda) to confront with the theme of artificial intelligence, with the objective of producing a similar whitepaper. The first result was tragic, from my point of view, as it seemed as a text which could have been produced, on the one hand, by a transhumanist on steroids and, on the other hand, by a frankenstein which recombined the desires of research, commercial, political, ideological lobbies, each squeezing in a paragraph or two, to promote their interest. It tried to mimick similar papers put out in France, US, Germany, Sweden and others, and by the usual suspects of MIT & C, while seemingly focusing on trying to understand what should be expected from a modern, democratic, liberal country. There was no vision at all. Wittgenstein came up to mind: the output was as if it was spoken by the "AI language" of all these countries and institutions, a series of cliches and standard forms, juxtaposed. I and a few others opposed such an output, and required the intervention of philosophers and other humanists, to expose the fallacies and to propose changes. Among them was, for example, philosopher Aldo Masullo (you can see an extract of the interview which we did for this https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XMEBZGLSdy0 in italian, sorry). >From this action, an additional chapter was added to the output publication, which was unimaginatively called "the human challenge". It was revised from the initial, more radical, proposal, but we were happy that these proposals made it through the apparatus. We held an event for this in Rome at Palazzo delle Esposizioni, also engaging the EU Commission through its STARTS program and a variety of foundations, organizations and also businesses, which were engaged through the narrative of a new possible "made in Italy" that addresses data and computation by establishing collaboration paths between arts, design, fashion with science and technology, to explore not extractive models anymore, but generative ones deeply rooted in society in ways that are able to address the psychological, social, aesthetic, cultural and, most important of all, existential challenges posed by technologies, and in particular data + computation If you want, you can learn more about the event here: https://www.he-r.it/ai-public-administration-arts-and-design/ A few months after that, when the government was changed in Italy, the task force on AI was disassembled, and then recreated inside the ministry of economic development, whose minister is Luigi Di Maio, the head of the populist 5 star movement, for which data and AI are crucial technologies (a "party" which advocates and promotes direct democracy and, at the same time, uses platforms that are not open source, transparent etc: very psychedelic :) ) Only a few of the participants of the previous task force were confirmed, and none of the faction which helped me to promote the action which I just told you about. Nonetheless, we are still in the process of conducting such actions in Italy, and we're actively collaborating with institutions and many foundations and organizations. Sadly, we have not found any support in any recognized political party, who have chosen to conduct actions along lines that are really simplistic, solutionistic and, most of all, technical solutions-driven: there are an aboundance of blockchain, AI, data, algorithmic government etc commissions and workiing tables of all sorts, but none of them are addressing the human, environmental, psychological, relational and, in one word, existential mutation that comes with our new and everchanging condition on the planet. best wishes to you all! s On Fri, Jan 24, 2020 at 6:33 PM Geert Lovink <geert@xs4all.nl> wrote: > Dear nettimers, > > I read this policy paper of the DiEM25 movement and really liked it. It’s > good to see that there is progress in bringing together different fields > that have been dealt with in different scenes for a long time. The text > mentions the building of a digital commonwealth. “We want to end the > practice of socialising the costs and privatizing the profits.” > > For sure, the tech agenda can be much more radical and concrete. <...> -- *[**MUTATION**]* *Art is Open Source *- http://www.artisopensource.net *[**CITIES**]* *Human Ecosystems Relazioni* - http://he-r.i <http://human-ecosystems.com/>t *[**NEAR FUTURE DESIGN**]* *Nefula Ltd* - http://www.nefula.com *[**RIGHTS**]* *Ubiquitous Commons *- http://www.ubiquitouscommons.org --- Professor of Near Future and Transmedia Design at ISIA Design Florence: http://www.isiadesign.fi.it/ # 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 # @nettime_bot tweets mail w/ sender unless #ANON is in Subject: