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Panic! at the Internets

My friend Alice just published a great article in FirstMonday (an online peer-reviewed academic journal) about the persistence of moral panic over the sexual vulnerability of kids and teens online -- from the great cyberporn panic of 1996 to the tizzy in a teapot over MySpace predators today.

The article's especially timely, given the recent news that Verizon, Sprint and TWC will now be monitoring the bits they carry, and blocking users' access to newsgroups that have been identified as child porn destinations.

Now, I'm against child pornography in all forms, but I hardly think an ineffective witch hunt (honestly, how many microseconds will it take for the pervs to create a viable workaround?) is sufficient justification to destroy the legislatively-enforced protection that ISPs have against culpability for the actions of their users, and to further erode what little privacy we have left in this country.

What's next -- the telcos being held responsible for monitoring the content of our private phone conversations? Oh, wait a second...

From Alice's article:

Thus, I conclude that the furor over MySpace is disproportionate to the amount of harm produced by the site. Indeed, the furor over online predators seems also to be disproportionate. Rather than focusing on nebulous “predators,” it seems that parents, teachers, and social workers should emphasize identifying and preventing abuse in specific, local community settings.

Word to the mothaf*cka, Alice!

Inflation in the marketplace of ideas

Back in the dot-com days, we guru types used to roll out our favorite chestnut when we wanted to impress people, or to propose "radical" new business models: "consumer data is the currency of the Internet." But we never could have predicted how true this would be, what with the rise of social network marketing, psychographic and behavioral targeting, and widespread government surveillance.

Of course, this idea of information-as-currency hardly originated with us; it's central to a range of social theory by academic gurus like Daniel Bell and Manuel Castells, predicated on the notion that we are now living in an "information society" peopled by "knowledge workers."

Which leads me to my little thought of the morning (bear in mind I haven't had my tea yet): that just as global flows of capital and labor have helped to devalue our economic currency by putting our industry in a vastly larger and more competitive environment, global flows of information have helped to devalue our information currency.

Obviously, as I and others have discussed ad nauseum over the past decade, this applies to information-based commercial goods like music, video, news and such. However, I think it may also apply to other forms of information whose value has not traditionally been measured directly in economic terms.

For instance, a mere signature used to be enough to serve as a guarantee of our identity in legal, regulatory and contractual contexts. Now we are increasingly required to present multiple forms of photo ID, supply passwords, and even volunteer biometric information in order to complete transactions, cash a check, enter a building, or what have you. Traditionally, this "inflation" in the currency of personal information has been treated as a byproduct of the age-old cat-and-mouse game between information security (encryption) and information liberty (decryption). However, this doesn't preclude or conflict with another interpretation: our signatures have simply become a less valuable form of information currency as they have gotten more widely accessible. Today, even our social security numbers have become commoditized (they cost about $2 apiece online, according to a fairly recent NYT article).

Another potential effect of information inflation is the devaluation of ideas themselves. If profitable business, thriving culture, and even success in achieving the quotidian goals of our everyday lives are based on our ability to innovate, and on the strength of our ideas relative to other ideas, then the globalization of the conceptual economy certainly threatens to devalue our ideas, and thereby to undermine our potential success in business, culture, and quotidian achievements.

Of course, I'd be remiss not to invoke Jefferson's oft-quoted adage that "He who receives an idea from me, receives instruction himself without lessening mine; as he who lights his taper at mine, receives light without darkening me." This premise -- that information, unlike other forms of capital, is non-rivalrous, non-excludable, and therefore increases rather than decreases in value with proliferation -- has been central to my work, and to many others', for some time.

This Jeffersonian framework for evaluating information is true when  we are discussing culture as a whole -- which certainly benefits from the "free flow of ideas" and the proliferation of cultural expression. Much as Metcalfe observed of all networks, the power and robustness of a cultural network grows exponentially as the number of expressive forms and practices comprising that network grows incrementally.

However, when ideas are in competition with one another -- as they must be for the Jeffersonian or Holmesian concept of the "marketplace of ideas" to function -- then the value of ideas-as-currency is derived from their relative strength, rather than their intrinsic qualities. Put in other terms, if you create a better mousetrap than I do, society overall will have fewer mice to deal with, but you'll end up with more food than I will.

Of course, there's nothing to stop me from taking your idea for a mousetrap, and adopting or even improving upon it myself. Hurray, everybody wins.

But wait -- not so fast. Technological and social latencies -- as well as ruinous IP laws (a/k/a institutionally enforced information latencies) -- invariably slow down the flow of ideas and the adoption of innovations (you might say the "free flow" is a myth -- always to be striven for, but never achieved), and therefore society becomes inevitably divided between information "haves" (those with better mousetraps) and information "have-nots" (those with worse mousetraps). And in some situations, such as a winner-take-all game (last one with a mouse loses), the speed of transmission is irrelevant, because only through the act of innovation (rather than the adoption of innovation) can an individual successfully achieve his or her goals.

Hence, the inflationary value of ideas. The wider and more fluid our information network, the more successfully and consistently we must innovate in order to prevent becoming information have-nots, or losing winner-take-all social dynamics. Today, we're already witnessing a kind of idea-hoarding that evokes images of Weimar-era Germans toting around wheelbarrows full of cash.

Before writing this post, I probably should have read the new Gladwell article on innovation and economics (it's been sitting on my night table for a few days). But I've got my own information latencies -- dozens of papers to grade, and only so many hours during which my son's in preschool. I'll take a look at it today, and check back in if I've got anything to add or amend.

UPDATE: The Gladwell article is great -- it punctures the myth of scientific genius by examining the ways in which ideas "in the air" occur to multiple innovators simultaneously -- e.g. Newton and Leibniz with calculus (strangely, no mention of Plato's contribution to the "in the air" premise). Unfortunately, he reserves the genius myth for the arts -- a claim I vehemently disagree with. However, other than describing the goings on at meetings of Myhrvold's idea-hoarding Intellectual Ventures (which sound like a lot of fun), the article doesn't have too much relevance to the question of information inflation.

UPDATE 2: Found this article from last year by Paul & Baron on a phenomenon they call "information inflation" -- however, their article refers to the sudden exponential growth in the volume of written information, and suggests the legal challenges associated with it. By contrast, I am using the term to discuss the devaluation of information, analogous to other forms of currency.

Thought-control interface for gaming

_44438417_headset_info416_2People who know me know that I love stuff like this: creepy sci-fi technologies seeping almost without comment into our quotidian world. A company called Emotiv has just announced it will be shipping thought-control (and emotion-reading) interfaces, mass marketed to video gamers, later this year. Of course, this stuff has been around for a while -- mostly, DARPA-funded projects whose ostensible purpose is to help paraplegics move a mouse cursor, but of course the real agenda is more like Firefox (not the browser -- the Clint Eastwood movie) -- thought-controlled weaponry to nudge our soldiers ever closer to maximal killing efficiency and an Ender's Game-like remove from the visceral experience of taking life. But, to my knowledge, this is the first time such technology will be available at BestBuy.

Of course, as I've been arguing for years, this tech is half of the necessary infrastructure for networked telepathy (the other half has also been built -- someone just has to put the two pieces together), or, if you want to get really sinister about it, networked thought control.

To put on my analyst's hat for a second: imagine the data mining possibilities this thing will have! McDonald's will actually be able to target action-oriented marketing (buy a Big Mac right now, for 99 cents!!!) based on the real time emotional state of media consumers. Whoa. I've got to bake that into my SEMPO projections.

Now, to put on my video game professor's hat: imagine the feedback effect the adoption of technologies like this would have on game design. Once designers can count on collecting and delivering data through such an interface, it could significantly change gameplay; levels could become faster or harder depending on the level of stress the user exhibits (certain biofeedback games already do this, in a way), or enterprising designers could use the device to break the 4th wall. Imagine Psycho Mantis from Metal Gear Solid taunting you -- not with "his" psychic knowledge of the games you've got stored on your memory card, but based on "his" real-time assessment of your emotional state. [Shudder].

(Thanks, Masha!)

UPDATE: Dave [surname redacted] sez:

hmmm....i'll believe it when/if it works...
at this point, it is all very functional and doesn't work very well, at least what i've seen.  it is all based on mapping electrical signals AFAIK.  neuroscience/brain imaging scares the shit out of me b/c so many people want to believe its possible (and have a vested interest in making it appear possible) that the technology is being sold as being able to do more than it can.  you've seen the stories CNN has done where they're using fMRIs on people to show their "real" voting preferences?  it's batshit crazy to say that one is true (the scan) over the other (the person's articulated preference).  at best you can say that they're in conflict.  but once CNN (or Wired or anyone who can make money off overblowing claims) gets a hold of it, they start making fMRIs say more than they do.

i've been thinking a lot about Eugene Thacker's biomedia argument- what you get is not someone's thoughts, but a machinic interpretation of them, mediated by a computer program that is designed to interpret signals in a particular way.  it is IMO not any different from what was going on in the 19th C when they were measuring fatigue and inferring neurasthenia based on slow reaction time, declining tactual acuity, etc. 

T

Brainstormwalken

senate to telcos: please spy on americans

the senate just voted, 67 to 31, to reject the dodd-feingold amendment (S. AMDR. 3907) that would have allowed us to sue the phone companies and other communication service providers for spying on us illegally. they also voted down other amendments sponsored by feinstein and specter aiming to preserve some degree of civil liberties.

just for the record, both hillary and barack were co-sponsors of the dodd-feingold amendment. the official vote tally hasn't been posted yet, but clearly there was bipartisan support for this lurch toward american fascism.

fortunately, the house of representatives version of the bill doesn't provide immunity, so there's still a chance for us.

another dark day for democracy, all in the guise of "security." didn't i see this movie already?

Senator

Most trusted...?!? Are you kidding???

So a press release just crossed my digital transom, informing me that TRUSTe has just announced that HP, Intuit, and AOL "have been honored as the Most Trusted Companies for Privacy for 2007."

WHHHHAAAAATTTT!!!??!!

You gotta be kidding me. HP secretly spies on its customers, steganographically encoding invisible serial numbers and time stamps onto all of the documents they print without their knowledge or consent. And just a year and a half ago, AOL proudly published the search records of 650,000 users, many of whom were personally and embarrassingly identifiable, without their knowledge or consent. And Intuit's recent QuickBooks update accidentally deleted vital data on untold thousands of users' computers, irretrievably.

If these are the most trusted companies, I'd hate to see the least trusted ones.