person:nicholas negroponte

  • [Essay] Machine Politics by Fred Turner | Harper’s Magazine
    https://harpers.org/archive/2019/01/machine-politics-facebook-political-polarization

    The rise of the internet and a new age of authoritarianism

    par Fred Turner

    “The Goliath of totalitarianism will be brought down by the David of the microchip,” Ronald Reagan said in 1989. He was speaking to a thousand British notables in London’s historic Guildhall, several months before the fall of the Berlin Wall. Reagan proclaimed that the world was on the precipice of “a new era in human history,” one that would bring “peace and freedom for all.” Communism was crumbling, just as fascism had before it. Liberal democracies would soon encircle the globe, thanks to the innovations of Silicon Valley. “I believe,” he said, “that more than armies, more than diplomacy, more than the best intentions of democratic nations, the communications revolution will be the greatest force for the advancement of human freedom the world has ever seen.”

    At the time, most everyone thought Reagan was right. The twentieth century had been dominated by media that delivered the same material to millions of people at the same time—radio and newspapers, movies and television. These were the kinds of one-to-many, top-down mass media that Orwell’s Big Brother had used to stay in power. Now, however, Americans were catching sight of the internet. They believed that it would do what earlier media could not: it would allow people to speak for themselves, directly to one another, around the world. “True personalization is now upon us,” wrote MIT professor Nicholas Negroponte in his 1995 bestseller Being Digital. Corporations, industries, and even whole nations would soon be transformed as centralized authorities were demolished. Hierarchies would dissolve and peer-to-peer collaborations would take their place. “Like a force of nature,” wrote Negroponte, “the digital age cannot be denied or stopped.”

    One of the deepest ironies of our current situation is that the modes of communication that enable today’s authoritarians were first dreamed up to defeat them. The same technologies that were meant to level the political playing field have brought troll farms and Russian bots to corrupt our elections. The same platforms of self-expression that we thought would let us empathize with one another and build a more harmonious society have been co-opted by figures such as Milo Yiannopoulos and, for that matter, Donald Trump, to turn white supremacy into a topic of dinner-­table conversation. And the same networked methods of organizing that so many thought would bring down malevolent states have not only failed to do so—think of the Arab Spring—but have instead empowered autocrats to more closely monitor protest and dissent.

    If we’re going to resist the rise of despotism, we need to understand how this happened and why we didn’t see it coming. We especially need to grapple with the fact that today’s right wing has taken advantage of a decades-long liberal effort to decentralize our media. That effort began at the start of the Second World War, came down to us through the counterculture of the 1960s, and flourishes today in the high-tech hothouse of Silicon Valley. It is animated by a deep faith that when engineering replaces politics, the alienation of mass society and the threat of totalitarianism will melt away. As Trump fumes on Twitter, and Facebook posts are linked to genocide in Myanmar, we are beginning to see just how misplaced that faith has been. Even as they grant us the power to communicate with others around the globe, our social-­media networks have spawned a new form of authoritarianism.

    #Fred_Turner #Autoritarisme #Médias_sociaux #Mobilisation #Extrême_droite

  • InRealLife (2013) a 1h30 British documentary (BFI), by Beeban Kidron

    –-> Have we outsourced our children to the Internet ?

    ​I​nRealLife takes us on a journey from the bedrooms of British teenagers to the world of Silicon Valley, to find out what exactly the internet is doing to our children​

    Subjects touched:
    – How internet porn addiction changes kid’s perception of love
    – The impact of gaming industry
    – Privacy (briefly) ; “I share therefore I am”
    – Facebook, obviously

    People appearing:
    Sherry Turkle (cfr “Alone Together: Why We Expect More from Technology and Less from Each Other” (recently also available in French))
    Nicholas Negroponte (MIT Media Lab)
    Nicholas Carr (cfr “The Shallows: What the Internet Is Doing to Our Brains​”​)
    Maggie Jackson (cfr “Distracted: The Erosion of Attention and the Coming Dark Age​”)
    Andrew Blum (cfr “Tubes: A Journey to the Center of the Internet​”)
    Danah Boyd (cfr “It’s Complicated - The Social Lives of Networked Teens​”)
    Jimmy Wales (Wikipedia)
    Daniel Solove, privacy expert (cfr “Nothing to Hide: The False Tradeoff Between Privacy and Security​”)​​​
    Clifford Nass (cfr “The Man Who Lied to His Laptop: What Machines Teach Us About Human Relationships​”)
    Julian Assange (Wikileaks)
    Cory Doctorow (SF writer, cfr “Little Brother”, “Homeland”​)

    ​quote:
    Facebook is a giant behaviourist casino designed to teach you to undervalue your privacy

    Clay Shirky (cfr “Here Comes Everybody: The Power of Organizing Without Organizations​”)

    At some point towards the end there is an interesting comment form MIT Media Lab director Joi Ito. He remarks that human beings develop an immune system by getting exposed to “bad stuff”, getting sick, falling, hurting your knee, eating dirt etc. It is a series of failures and learning how to overcome them.
    If you overprotect they become very fragile human beings.

    Now, Ito remarks, Internet can also be scary and has its dangers and perhaps in a similar sense it is good we get exposed to it, as opposed to not letting our kids use social media and over protect them.

    It is an interesting thought worth considering, but then the next fragment in the documentary gives it a blow it by showing the story of a 14 year old kid who died after being bullied over internet. (a medium which facilitates bullying).

    Anyway.
    Compelling documentary, always stimulating to listen the above mentioned people, but it just scratches the surface, albeit enough to make you think.

    ​Trailer:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=71pXYIwYpaU

    Website:
    http://inreallifefilm.com/press

  • D’ici 30 ans, nous avalerons des pilules pour savoir lire et écrire - Numerama.com
    http://alireailleurs.tumblr.com/post/95719156742

    La drogue est-elle l’avenir de la #cognition ? C’est ce qu’avance Nicholas Negroponte, le cofondateur du prestigieux Media Lab du MIT, rapporte Numerama, en évoquant les travaux d’Ed Boyden directeur du groupe de travail dédié à la neurologie synthétique du Media Lab.

    #cerveau #médecine #prospective