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> <channel><title>twopointouch &#187; discipline</title> <atom:link href="http://twopointouch.com/tag/discipline/feed/" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" /><link>http://twopointouch.com</link> <description>web 2.0, blogs and social media</description> <lastBuildDate>Mon, 09 May 2011 20:03:42 +0000</lastBuildDate> <language>en</language> <sy:updatePeriod>hourly</sy:updatePeriod> <sy:updateFrequency>1</sy:updateFrequency> <generator>http://wordpress.org/?v=3.1.3</generator> <item><title>Foucault – the lot of you</title><link>http://twopointouch.com/2009/social-media/foucault-the-lot-of-you/</link> <comments>http://twopointouch.com/2009/social-media/foucault-the-lot-of-you/#comments</comments> <pubDate>Wed, 27 May 2009 20:28:01 +0000</pubDate> <dc:creator>Ian</dc:creator> <category><![CDATA[social media]]></category> <category><![CDATA[stuff]]></category> <category><![CDATA[web 2.0]]></category> <category><![CDATA[blogs]]></category> <category><![CDATA[discipline]]></category> <category><![CDATA[foucault]]></category> <category><![CDATA[power]]></category> <guid
isPermaLink="false">http://twopointouch.com/2009/05/27/foucault-the-lot-of-you/</guid> <description><![CDATA[<p>The <a
href="http://twopointouch.com/2009/05/27/surrender-foucault-and-twitter">Foucault post yesterday</a> seemed to go down well, so I thought I’d chance my arm and respond to a couple of criticisms in a new post rather than the comment thread. Sorry, purists.</p><p>My erstwhile-friend <a
href="http://twopointouch.com/2009/05/27/surrender-foucault-and-twitter/#comment-13158">Roger</a> from Content &#38; Motion launched the first counter-offensive. ;-) His main point is about the decentralisation<p><a
href="http://twopointouch.com/2009/social-media/foucault-the-lot-of-you/">Continue reading Foucault – the lot of you</a></p>]]></description> <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The <a
href="http://twopointouch.com/2009/05/27/surrender-foucault-and-twitter">Foucault post yesterday</a> seemed to go down well, so I thought I’d chance my arm and respond to a couple of criticisms in a new post rather than the comment thread. Sorry, purists.</p><p>My erstwhile-friend <a
href="http://twopointouch.com/2009/05/27/surrender-foucault-and-twitter/#comment-13158">Roger</a> from Content &amp; Motion launched the first counter-offensive. ;-) His main point is about the decentralisation of power in the online world. There’s no central control tower any more in the online Panopticon.</p><p><strong>O RLY?</strong> UK Government agencies want/have <a
href="http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/politics/lawandorder/3140207/Government-spies-could-scan-every-call-text-and-email.html">your email</a>, <a
href="http://cow.neondragon.net/index.php/2303-Oyster-Card-Privacy">your movements</a> and <a
href="http://www.privacyinternational.org/issues/cctv/statement.html">your picture</a> already. We have entered an age when central government in the UK has access to almost everything you do. So no, power and discipline is not decentralised. It is more centralised than at any point in history.</p><p>OK: that’s a little bit of a feint from me, I know. I do know what he means. He means we choose — a lot of the time — about what authorities and news sources we read. We each can vote for the stories/pictures/video etc. that bubble up on twitter, digg and delicious. If I want to get my news from the <em>Doom-monger Daily</em> and nowhere else, then I can.</p><p>But then… but then <strong>all of those choices are recorded;</strong> they are creating more information about me — they are fleshing out the picture of who I am and what I do and what I like. And what <a
href="http://www.phorm.com/">marketing tactics</a> might work with me. And how much of a threat I might be, were I remotely threatening. Remember, that all knowledge, experience and information is also power given away. I went along to the always-splendid <a
href="http://measurementcamp.wikidot.com/events">MeasurementCamp</a> meeting this morning – and as I imagined, this is grist to the mill for the social networks (Facebook, Bebo are delighted to share demographic information). It’s the only part of their business model that makes sense:</p><blockquote><p>What’s that? You want an ageing commie sympathiser who smells? Yeah, we’ve got a coupla hundred of them – check out this delaney guy – hahaha!</p></blockquote><p>Yep: there’s no longer a central control tower. There are hundreds and thousands of them. You’re covered by twenty cameras every time you move online. They each exert their portion of control and they do, I believe, have a central ideology – what’s become to be called the groupthink and circle-jerk of the Internet. More on that below.</p><p>[As an aside, I remember a guy from Microsoft asking me a couple of years ago whether selling ads against user-volunteered information in their profile was ethical. He was genuinely concerned. I said go-for-it – there has to be a value exchange for there to be a business.]</p><p>Catherine (location unknown, sadly) makes a great point (she made <a
href="http://twopointouch.com/2009/05/27/surrender-foucault-and-twitter/#comment-13208">three great points</a>, actually, but I am only doing one tonight):</p><blockquote><p>You may have no racists on your Twitter feed, but how is this different from the people you choose to associate with in real life? This isn’t socialmediaworld, this is the world most people create for themselves in real life. You may not like this process (and there is an argument to be made against it), but it’s certainly not down to social media.</p></blockquote><p>You know what, she’s right. Social media has extended my political world to a far greater extent than it has constrained it.</p><p>The second-half of the post regarding transgression is severely unfinished – it was nearly 2am. I’d love to see some analysis on internet Groupthink. I know I see it on a daily basis. But the extent to which minority views and change are thus made impossible? That would be the theoretical outcome of <em>Foucault and Social Media</em>  and that’s why it’s there, but I don’t have any data whatsoever. <em>mea culpa</em>.</p><p>[NB: I’ll certainly back the original post up, insofar as I able, but be aware that I wrote it as an <strong>exercise</strong> in <a
href="http://twitter.com/iandelaney/status/1926765939">response</a> to an <a
href="http://twitter.com/amayfield/status/1926801217">invitation</a>. It’s not a manifesto. It’s mucking around with ideas to create something potentially useful and thought-provoking. That’s not a cop-out; it’s the way it is].</p> ]]></content:encoded> <wfw:commentRss>http://twopointouch.com/2009/social-media/foucault-the-lot-of-you/feed/</wfw:commentRss> <slash:comments>2</slash:comments> </item> <item><title>Surrender! Foucault and Twitter</title><link>http://twopointouch.com/2009/business/surrender-foucault-and-twitter/</link> <comments>http://twopointouch.com/2009/business/surrender-foucault-and-twitter/#comments</comments> <pubDate>Tue, 26 May 2009 23:42:00 +0000</pubDate> <dc:creator>Ian</dc:creator> <category><![CDATA[business]]></category> <category><![CDATA[social media]]></category> <category><![CDATA[stuff]]></category> <category><![CDATA[discipline]]></category> <category><![CDATA[feature]]></category> <category><![CDATA[foucault]]></category> <category><![CDATA[law]]></category> <category><![CDATA[trangression]]></category> <guid
isPermaLink="false">http://twopointouch.com/2009/05/27/surrender-foucault-and-twitter/</guid> <description><![CDATA[<p><a
href="http://twopointouch.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/05/image3.png"></a></p><p>Some of my early hopes for social media, that it represented, like Kevin Kelly reckons, some kind of <a
href="http://www.wired.com/culture/culturereviews/magazine/17-06/nep_newsocialism?currentPage=1">renaissance for socialism</a> in the western world, are starting to run dry.</p><p>There’s a splendid series of articles over at <a
href="http://radar.oreilly.com">O’Reilly Media</a> concerning the dark side of social media by <a
href="http://radar.oreilly.com/josh">Joshua-Michéle Ross</a>.<p><a
href="http://twopointouch.com/2009/business/surrender-foucault-and-twitter/">Continue reading Surrender! Foucault and Twitter</a></p>]]></description> <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a
href="http://twopointouch.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/05/image3.png"><img
style="display: inline; border: 0pt none;" title="image" src="http://twopointouch.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/05/image-thumb.png" border="0" alt="panopticon" width="500" height="389" /></a></p><p>Some of my early hopes for social media, that it represented, like Kevin Kelly reckons, some kind of <a
href="http://www.wired.com/culture/culturereviews/magazine/17-06/nep_newsocialism?currentPage=1">renaissance for socialism</a> in the western world, are starting to run dry.</p><p>There’s a splendid series of articles over at <a
href="http://radar.oreilly.com">O’Reilly Media</a> concerning the dark side of social media by <a
href="http://radar.oreilly.com/josh">Joshua-Michéle Ross</a>. The first of these, <a
href="http://radar.oreilly.com/2009/05/the-digital-panopticon.html">The Digital Panopticon</a>, was drawn to my attention by <a
href="http://www.antonymayfield.com/">Antony Mayfield</a> today.</p><p>[<em>This post is terribly unpolished – my books are in boxes for a couple of weeks, so only internet research here – and also, I am a critical theory dilettante at the best of times</em>].</p><p>The <a
href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Panopticon">Panopticon</a>, as you probably know, was a scarily-perfect model of perpetual surveillance in a prison, first mooted by <a
href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeremy_Bentham">Jeremy Bentham</a>, one of the great philosophers of <a
href="http://www.wsu.edu/~brians/hum_303/enlightenment.html">The Enlightenment</a>. Prisoners in such an institution may be observed at any time and they’re unable to tell whether or not they’re being watched. Thus, they’re kept in continual paranoia. Many prisons, including current-day institutions like London’s Pentonville and Pelicon Bay in California, are believed to be inspired by the Panopticon model.</p><p>Josh suggests, and I am bound to agree somewhat, that social media technologies have a strong panoptical element:</p><blockquote><p>In the age of social networks we find ourselves coming under a vast grid of surveillance — of permanent visibility. The routine self-reporting of what we are doing, reading, thinking via status updates makes our every action and location visible to the crowd. This visibility has a normative effect on behavior (in other words we conform our behavior and/or our speech about that behavior when we know we are being observed).</p></blockquote><p>Josh’s point is that we somehow accept social media networks as empowering, democratic and all about spreading fresh ideas. The reverse may be the case: any given information about ourselves donates some portion of control to another party.</p><p>Let’s take this across to one model of critical theory. Post-structuralist <del
datetime="2009-05-27T18:40:39+00:00">modernist</del> (I get my posts mixed up) philosopher Michel Foucault back in the 70s picked up and ran with the idea of the Panopticon, especially in his best-known work <a
href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Discipline_and_Punish">Discipline and Punish</a>. His idea was that Bentham’s model wasn’t just an idea for a prison; but for a society.</p><p>He argued that prisons are a really new idea. Back in the past, we simply thrashed/burned/drowned/stabbed transgressors. That all changed in the C18th with the Enlightenment . The idea of law-enforcement was ‘enlightened’ with the  understanding that resources [people] didn’t need to be wasted and that better social control is exercised through freely-given compliance, rather than co-option.</p><p>People could be turned into machines, a consequence of political thinking in the emergence of industrial society and the rush to efficiency and cost-allocation. Once properly mechanised, they could be ‘trusted’ – the scare quotes, because the trusted prisoner is no longer human. A big part of that process is surveillance: once people know that they are always (potentially) watched, they’re a bit more compliant to the rules, and a bit more like machines.</p><p>The genius of the current model is that we are self-surveillant, of course. We willingly offer our <a
href="http://www.linkedin.com">identity</a>, <a
href="http://www.facebook.com">friends</a>, <a
href="http://www.twitter.com">thoughts</a> and <a
href="http://www.shelfari.com/">so</a>-<a
href="http://www.sneakerplay.com/">forth</a>, to the all-seeing eyes of anyone who can be bothered to set up an appropriate <a
href="http://www.google.com/alerts">search alert</a>. We’re consequently a bit less likely to say or do things that fall outside the accepted models of political and corporate behaviour.</p><p>Foucault saw this coming in what was happening back in the C18th. Foucault observed that over the period of that century, the exercise of power changed from explicitly keeping people down to encouraging people to express themselves (and then governing that), rather than repressing expression as in the earlier model. Foucault’s ideas of power produced knowledge, produced information, produced pleasure – in the right directions. <strong>Creating knowledge, creating information is a form of surrender in this model.</strong></p><p>It produced (arguably) blog-conversations, for example. They are a <a
href="http://diskurs.hum.aau.dk/english/discourse.htm">discourse</a>, in his terminology – conversations that follow an agreed etiquette, language and code – creating implicitly agreed audience-identities and scope. If you cannot submit to that discourse, you cannot be a part of it. I can’t explore that fully right now, but blog conversation as discourse is a rich course of enquiry, I promise.</p><p>One small part of this to pick out: Foucault remarked on the way people could now be disciplined by:</p><blockquote><p>tiny, everyday, physical mechanisms, by all those systems of micro-power that are essentially non-egalitarian and asymmetrical</p></blockquote><p>How perfect a description is that of the unfollow, unfriend, forum-ban, IP-ban?</p><p>For dozens of contemporary examples, check out this issue of <a
href="http://www.surveillance-and-society.org/journalv1i3.htm">Surveillance and Society</a>, though it is <em>very</em> academic.</p><p>And where is <strong>transgression</strong> in social media?</p><p>It is simply not allowed to exist in many cases. <strong>No</strong>, wacky viral videos and satire along the lines of the <a
href="http://www.thedailyshow.com/">Daily Show</a> do no not count – the former often serve Capitalism, the remainder and all of the latter are our current carnivalesque release-valve on norms that really couldn’t care less about political change. Porn doesn’t count either, because it’s so fully and perfectly Capitalist in the first place.</p><p>Blogs you don’t like: don’t subscribe/unsubscribe – you get the <a
href="http://www.ajr.org/Article.asp?id=268">Daily Me</a>; Facebook people get unfriended if they say the wrong thing; unsavoury Twitter followers are not followed or blocked. Bland self-approval of the group takes over. There are no racists on my spectrum right now. As far as I am concerned, they don’t exist. But that’s not the real story, clearly. Racists are poised to <a
href="http://www.bbc.co.uk/stoke/news/2003/03/bnp.shtml">take Stoke</a> in the next by-election. They don’t appear on my spectrum because I have deliberately blinded myself to their existence on a day-to-day basis. Diversity of opinion is purely opt-in (with strong incentives to opt-out) in socialmediaworld.</p><p>In socialmediaworld, there’s consequently no-one who wants to topple our social democracy. <strong>Almost everything that I see, and almost anything I am likely to see, is already ranked (Google) and focused (Twitter) through the twin lenses of liberal democracy</strong>. Minority views are excluded by the machine – only the recommended and personalised is allowed through. The stuff that dulls and comforts the political imagination. Foucault talked about a ‘new economics of power’ with regard to the French media of the 70s – he would have so relished and reviled our current political abstinence and lack of ideas.</p><p>Transgression has almost ceased to exist. Almost. Look to the unchampioned uninnovative for that: IRC, usenet, forums, web-sites.</p><p>Terribly unpopular post on ‘innovation and politics’ to follow…</p> ]]></content:encoded> <wfw:commentRss>http://twopointouch.com/2009/business/surrender-foucault-and-twitter/feed/</wfw:commentRss> <slash:comments>26</slash:comments> </item> </channel> </rss>
