[NetBehaviour] Know Your Filesystem (and how it affects you)
Dave Young
dvyng at riseup.net
Sun Oct 25 13:12:07 CET 2015
Hi Marc,
> But when you say a "sense of agency/ownership is important", I cannot
> help thinking of comparisons relating to land restriction and its
> ownership, and privatization of our spaces. This is where issues around
> boundaries come to the fore and a critique about us living in a
> proprietary based society, historically, socially, culturally,
> psychically and technically (analogue and digital).
The point I was making about ownership was intended to focus on the
closed relationship between the system/interface and its user, rather
than the relationship between one user and the next. At the moment, I
get a sense that we are more tenants of our devices - while the hardware
can be purchased, the OS is provided to us as a kind of 'service', and
there is an impact on our autonomy associated with that relationship. So
when I say 'ownership' I am not at all calling for enclosure, I am more
calling for autonomy - to allow us to be root users, to use Android
without the overly intrusive Google Play Services or to say 'never' to a
software update, to freely install a different OS on the device, for
instance.
> I find the use of the term "smart operating systems" strange.
The term 'smart phone', like 'cloud computing', is the produce of the
dark arts of corporate tech marketing, happily echoed by the likes of
The Verge, Engadget, Guardian Tech, etc.
> From this
> standpoint the term "smart operating systems" looks like a euphemism or
> feels like doublespeak, when really it could lean more towards 'unsmart'
> as we become more needy of technology but not able to delve into its
> structures and frameworks, break away from its protocols. Perhaps we are
> "human operating systems" being engineered by the technology.
It is precisely a euphemism. The Operating System is only "smart",
because it gives the impression that it is taking care of the labour of
computer use on your behalf, so you can focus on simply enjoying the
"content".
I quite like the challenge of developing an unsmart or anti-smart OS.
What would that look like? Perhaps a question for one of the RWX
worksession groups next week. :)
Cheers,
Dave
>
> On 21 October 2015 at 23:15, Dave Young <dvyng at riseup.net
> <mailto:dvyng at riseup.net>> wrote:
>
> Hi Marc and all,
>
> Thanks for the quote & question! To draw a minor correlation between my
> text and this Illich quote – Illich wrote Tools for Conviviality in the
> early 1970s, the same time the first GUI (Xerox Alto, later Star OS)
> operating system was being developed. So it's interesting to think that,
> while he writes at a time not too long ago but before even the personal
> computer and the GUI, his comments are very easily read within the
> present context where mass production quickly brings to mind the
> manufacturing of information. His ideas about isolationism, destruction
> of 'community' and relentless individuation recur frequently in
> contemporary net criticism, and his declaration that “corporate
> endeavours which thus threaten society cannot be tolerated” is
> especially resonant these days, with Google's rebranding etc.
>
> I think the shell metaphor is also quite fitting. What I wanted to get
> at in the text was that any interface acts as an enclosure: it presents
> options to the user, but in the end these parameters are designed and
> constrained - some possibilities of user-responses/interactions must be
> omitted, and we shouldn't readily consider these omissions to be inert
> gestures but moments where interaction is governed. I think the
> interfaces of Android, iOS/OSX, and Windows have been moving towards
> what Illich might have considered a “man-made shell” for quite some time
> already - our shifting perspective on the filesystem is to me emblematic
> of this. The more we find ourselves within this shell, perhaps the less
> we consider our devices (laptops, tablets, phones, etc) as tools? I have
> the impression that, when it comes to tool-use, a sense of
> agency/ownership is important. I think we are really losing the
> entitlements that come with user-agency and tool-ownership as a
> consequence of these 'smart operating systems' and their reluctance to
> share their dirty laundry (filesystems, background processes,
> data-caching, and so on) with us - should we ask them to.
>
> Regards,
> Dave
>
> On 21/10/15 12:26, marc garrett wrote:
> > Hi Dave,
> >
> > I've been reading your article 'Know Your Filesystem (and how it
> affects
> > you)', and I'd like to ask a question...
> >
> > The article reminds me Ivan Illich's 'Tools for Conviviality'...
> >
> > In his book, he says "Society can be destroyed when further growth of
> > mass production renders the milieu hostile, when it extinguishes the
> > free use of the natural abilities of society's members, when it
> isolates
> > people from each other and locks them into a man-made shell, when it
> > undermines the texture of community by promoting extreme social
> > polarization and splintering specialization, or when cancerous
> > acceleration enforces social change at a rate that rules out legal,
> > cultural, and political precedents as formal guidelines to present
> > behavior. Corporate endeavors which thus threaten society cannot be
> > tolerated. At this point it becomes irrelevant whether an
> enterprise is
> > nominally owned by individuals, corporations, or the slate, because no
> > form of management can make such fundamental destruction serve a
> social
> > purpose."
> >
> > Now, when he says "locks them into a man-made shell" -- it kind of
> feels
> > similar to your own concerns relating to how the filesystem
> mediates our
> > everyday use of computer interfaces and shape our interactions
> with our
> > data and digital tools.
> >
> > Do you see a connection between Illich's past, analogue
> perspective, and
> > your own computer orientated position on the matter?
> >
> > Thanks Dave ;-)
> >
> > wishing you well.
> >
> > marc
> >
> > Hey!!! In fact, anyone is welcome to join in with these public
> > discussions...
> >
> > On 21 October 2015 at 11:13, furtherfield
> <furtherfielder at gmail.com <mailto:furtherfielder at gmail.com>
> > <mailto:furtherfielder at gmail.com
> <mailto:furtherfielder at gmail.com>>> wrote:
> >
> > Know Your Filesystem (and how it affects you)
> >
> > By Dave Young.
> >
> > Dave Young writes about the context of Localhost: RWX, a symposium
> > and worksession at Edinburgh Sculpture Workshop from 29-31 October
> > 2015. He explores how the filesystem mediates our everyday use of
> > computer interfaces, shaping our interactions with our data and
> > digital tools.
> >
> >
> http://www.furtherfield.org/features/know-your-filesystem-and-how-it-affects-you
> >
> > Dave Young (IE) is an artist and researcher based in
> Edinburgh. His
> > practice follows critical research into digital culture,
> manifested
> > through workshops, website development, and talks on subjects
> > varying from cybernetics and the Cold War history of network
> > technologies, to issues around copyright and open source/free
> culture.
> >
> > He is founder of Localhost, a forum for discussing,
> dismantling and
> > disrupting network technologies, with past events focusing on
> > Google's entry into media art curation, and the role of analog
> radio
> > as a potential commons in the digital age. He has presented
> > workshops and given talks at institutions and festivals
> > internationally, including at Edinburgh College of Art, V2
> > Rotterdam, Furtherfield, LiWoLi, and Transmediale. Localhost:
> > http://l-o-c-a-l-h-o-s-t.com
> >
> >
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> >
> >
> >
> > --
> > Marc Garrett
> > Co-Founder, Co-Director and main editor ofFurtherfield.
> >
> > Furtherfield - A living, breathing, thriving network
> > http://www.furtherfield.org - for art, technology and social change
> > since 1997
> >
> > Furtherfield Gallery & Commons,
> > Finsbury Park, London N4 2NQ
> > T +44(0)208 802 1301 <tel:%2B44%280%29208%20802%201301>/+44(0)208
> 802 2827 <tel:%2B44%280%29208%20802%202827>
> > M +44(0)7717 887923 <tel:%2B44%280%297717%20887923>
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> <http://www.furtherfield.org>
> >
> >
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>
> --
> Marc Garrett
> Co-Founder, Co-Director and main editor ofFurtherfield.
>
> Furtherfield - A living, breathing, thriving network
> http://www.furtherfield.org - for art, technology and social change
> since 1997
>
> Furtherfield Gallery & Commons,
> Finsbury Park, London N4 2NQ
> T +44(0)208 802 1301/+44(0)208 802 2827
> M +44(0)7717 887923
> www.furtherfield.org <http://www.furtherfield.org>
>
>
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