Author: Stefania

[BigDataSur] blog 1/3: Imagining ‘Good’ Data: Northern Utopias, Southern Lessons

by Anna Carlson

What might ‘good data’ look like? Where to look for models, past and emerging? In this series of three blog posts, Anna Carlson highlights that we need to understand data issues as part of a politics of planetary sustainability and a live history of colonial knowledge production. In this first instalment, she introduces her own search for guiding principles in an age of ubiquitous data extraction and often dubious utopianism.           

I’m sitting by Cataract Gorge in Launceston, northern Tasmania. I’ve just climbed a couple of hundred metres through bushland to a relatively secluded look-out. It feels a long way from the city below, despite the fact that I can still hear distant traffic noise and human chatter. I pull out my laptop, perhaps by instinct. At around the same moment, a tiny native lizard dashes from the undergrowth and hovers uncertainly by my bare foot. I think briefly about pulling out my cracked and battered (second-hand) iPhone 4 to archive this moment, perhaps uploading it to Instagram with the hashtag #humansoflatecapitalism and a witty comment. Instead, I start writing.

I have been thinking a lot lately about the politics and ethics of data and digital technologies. My brief scramble up the hill was spent ruminating on the particular question of what “good data” might look like. I know what not-so-good data looks like. Already today I’ve generated a wealth of it. I paid online for a hostel bunk, receiving almost immediate cross-marketing from AirBnB and Hostelworld through social media sites as well as through Google. I logged into my Couchsurfing account, and immediately received a barrage of new “couch requests” (based, I presume, on an algorithm that lets potential couch surfers know when their prospective hosts login).  I’ve turned location services on my phone on, and used Google Maps to navigate a new city. I’ve searched for information about art galleries and hiking trails. I used a plant identification site to find out what tree I was looking at. Data, it seems, is the “digital air that I breathe.”

Writing in the Guardian, journalist Paul Lewis interviews tech consultant and author Nir Eyal, who claims that “the technologies we use have turned into compulsions, if not full-fledged addictions. […] It’s the impulse to check a message notification. It’s the pull to visit YouTube, Facebook, or Twitter for just a few minutes, only to find yourself still tapping and scrolling an hour later.” And this addictive quality is powerful: digital technologies are credited with altering everything from election results to consumer behaviour and our ability to empathise. Indeed, there’s money to be made from a digitally-addicted populace. Encompassing everything from social media platforms to wearable devices, smart cities and the Internet of Things, almost every action we take in the world produces data of some form, and this data represents value for the corporations, governments and marketers who buy it.

This is the phenomenon commonly referred to as Big Data, which describes sets of data so big that they must be analysed computationally. Usually stored in digital form, this data encompasses everything from consumer trends to live emotional insights, and it is routinely gathered by most companies with an online presence.

The not-goodness of this data isn’t intrinsic, however. There is nothing inherently wrong with creating knowledge about the activities we undertake online. Rather, the not-goodness is a characteristic of the murky processes through which data is gathered, consolidated, analysed, sold-on and redistributed. It’s to do with the fact that few of us really know what data is being gathered about us, and even fewer know what that data will be used for. And it’s to do with the lineages that have structured processes of mass data collection, as well as their unequally distributed impacts.

Many of us know that the technologies on which we rely have dark underbellies; that the convenience and comfort of our digital lives is contingent on these intersecting forms of violence. But we live in a world where access to these technologies increasingly operates as a precondition to entering the workforce, to social life, to connection and leisure and knowledge. More and more workers (even in the global north) are experiencing precarity, worklessness and insecurity; experiences that are often enabled by digital technologies and which, doubly cruelly, often render us further reliant on them.

The ubiquity of the digital realm provokes new ethical conundrums. The technologies on which we are increasingly reliant are themselves reliant on exploitative and often oppressive labour regimes. They are responsible for vast ecological footprints. Data is often represented as immaterial, ‘virtual,’ and yet its impact on environments across the world is pushing us ever closer to global ecological disaster. Further, these violent environmental and labour relations are unequally distributed: the negative impacts of the digital age are disproportionately focused on communities in the Global South, while the wealth generated is largely trapped in a few Northern hands.

Gathering data means producing knowledge within a particular set of parameters. In the new and emerging conversations around Big Data and its impact on our social worlds, much focus is placed on the scale of it, its bigness, the sheer possibility of having so much information at our fingertips. It is tempting to think of this as a new phenomenon – as an unprecedented moment brought about by new technologies. But as technologist Genevieve Bell reminds us, the “logics of our digital world – fast, smart and connected – have histories that proceed their digital turns.” Every new technological advance carries its legacies, and the colonial legacy is one that does not receive enough attention.

So, when we imagine what “good data” and good tech might look like now, we need to contend with the ethical quagmire of tech in its global and historical dimensions. To illustrate this point, I examine the limits of contemporary digital utopianism (exemplified by blockchain) as envisioned in the Global North (Episode 2), before delving into the principles guiding “good data” from the point of view of Indigenous communities (Episode 3).

Acknowledgments:  These blogposts have been produced as part of the Good Data project (@Good__Data), an interdisciplinary research initiative funded by Queensland University of Technology Faculty of Law, which is located in unceded Meanjin, Turrbal and Jagera Land (also known as Brisbane, Australia). The project examines ‘good’ and ‘ethical’ data practices with a view to developing policy recommendations and software design standards for programs and services that embody good data practices, in order to start conceptualising and implementing a more positive and ethical vision of the digital society and economy. In late 2018, an open access edited book entitled Good Data, comprising contributions from authors from different disciplines located in different parts of the world, will be published by the Amsterdam University of Applied Sciences Institute of Network Cultures.’

NOW OUT! Special issue on ‘data activism’ of Krisis: Journal for Contemporary Philosophy

DATACTIVE is proud to announce the publication of the special issue on ‘data activism’ of Krisis: Journal for Contemporary Philosophy. Edited by Stefania Milan and Lonneke van der Velden, the special issue features six articles by Jonathan Gray, Helen Kennedy, Lina Dencik, Stefan Baack, Miren Gutierrez, Leah Horgan and Paul Dourish; an essay by, and three book reviews. The journal is open access; you can read and download the article from http://krisis.eu.

Issue 1, 2018: Data Activism
Digital data increasingly plays a central role in contemporary politics and public life. Citizen voices are increasingly mediated by proprietary social media platforms and are shaped by algorithmic ranking and re-ordering, but data informs how states act, too. This special issue wants to shift the focus of the conversation. Non-governmental organizations, hackers, and activists of all kinds provide a myriad of ‘alternative’ interventions, interpretations, and imaginaries of what data stands for and what can be done with it.

Jonathan Gray starts off this special issue by suggesting how data can be involved in providing horizons of intelligibility and organising social and political life. Helen Kennedy’s contribution advocates for a focus on emotions and everyday lived experiences with data. Lina Dencik puts forward the notion of ‘surveillance realism’ to explore the pervasiveness of contemporary surveillance and the emergence of alternative imaginaries. Stefan Baack investigates how data are used to facilitate civic engagement. Miren Gutiérrez explores how activists can make use of data infrastructures such as databases, servers, and algorithms. Finally, Leah Horgan and Paul Dourish critically engage with the notion of data activism by looking at everyday data work in a local administration. Further, this issue features an interview with Boris Groys by Thijs Lijster, whose work Über das Neue enjoys its 25th anniversary last year. Lastly, three book reviews illuminate key aspects of datafication. Patricia de Vries reviews Metahavens’ Black Transparency; Niels van Doorn writes on Platform Capitalism by Nick Srnicek and Jan Overwijk comments on The Entrepeneurial Self by Ulrich Bröckling.

[blog 1/3] Designing the city by numbers? Introduction: Hope for the data-driven city

This is the first of three blog posts of the series ‘Designing the city by numbers? Bottom-up initiatives for data-driven urbanism in Santiago de Chile’, by Martín Tironi and Matías Valderrama Barragán. Stay tuned: the next episode will appear next Friday, April 27!

The digital has invaded contemporary cities in Latin America, transforming ways of knowing, planning and governing urban life. Parallel to the spread of sensors, networks and digital devices of all kinds in cities in the Global North, they are increasingly becoming part of urban landscapes in cities in the Global South under Smart City initiatives. Because of this, vast quantities of digital data are produced in increasingly ubiquitous and invisible ways. The “datafication” or the growing translation of multiple phenomena into the format of computable data have been pronounced by various scholars in the North as propelling a revolution or large-scale epochal change in contemporary life (Mayer-Schönberger and Cukier, 2013; Kitchin, 2014) in which digital devices and the data collection would allow better self-knowledge and “smarter” decision-making across varied domains.

To examine the impacts of such hyped expectations and promises in Chile, from the Smart Citizen Project we have been studying different cases of Smart City and data-driven initiatives, focusing on how the idea of designing the city by digital numbers has permeated local governments in Santiago de Chile. Public officials and urban planners are being increasingly convinced that planning and governance will be better by quantifying urban variables and promoting decision making not only guided or informed but driven by digital data, algorithms and automated analytics -instead of prejudices, emotions or ideologies. In this “dataism” (van Dijck, 2014), it is believed that the data simply “speak for themselves” in a fantasy of immediacy and neutrality.

But perhaps the most innovative part of data-driven Smart City initiatives we’ve observed are the means by which they also promise to open a new era of experimentationand testing for citizen participation, amplifying notions like of ‘urban laboratory,’ ‘living lab,’ ‘pilot projects,’ ‘open innovation,’ and so on. Thanks to digital technologies, the assumption goes, a “democratization of policymaking” that might reduce the state’s monopoly on government decision-making (Esty, 2004; Esty & Rushing, 2007) might at last be realized, producing a greater “symmetry” or “horizontalization” between governors and the governed (Crawford & Goldsmith, 2014). This, however, depends on citizens’ willingness to function as sensors of their own cities, generating and “sharing” relevant and real-time geographic information about their behaviours and needs, which would be used by urban planners and public officials for their decisions (Goldsmith & Crawford, 2014; Goodchild, 2007).

Our work from the Smart Citizen Project at the Pontifical Catholic University of Chileunderscores the importance of nottaking as given any sort of homogeneous or universal “datafication” process and problematize how data-driven and smart governance are enacted –not without problems and breakdowns- in each location. Thus this series of three blog posts stresses how we must start instead by considering how multiple quantification practices are running at the same time, and how each one can present multiple purposes and meanings which can only be addressed on the basis of their heterogeneous contexts of materialization. Moreover, we explore how we are witnessing an increased diversity of what we call as “digital quantification regimes” produced from the South that aim to position themselves above existing technologies of the North in the market, and achieve an agreement that their data records are the most “participatory”, “representative”, or “accurate” bases for decision-making. Therefore, we must begin to explore the various suppositions, designs, political rationalities and scripts that these regimes establish in their diverse spheres of action under such growing “citizen” driven data initiatives in the South. What kind of practice-ontologies (Gabrys, 2016) might be produced through “citizen” driven data initiatives? At the same time, we believe that the “experimental” and “citizen” grammar that is increasingly infused into Smart City and data-driven initiatives in the South must be critically examined both in their actual development and forms of involvement. How the experimental grammar of smart projects is reconfiguring the idea of participation and government in the urban space?

So stay tuned for the next posts in this series for more on RUBI Urban bike tracker project and the KAPPO pro-cycling smart phone game in Santiago.

 

Cited works

Esty, D. C. & Rushing, R. (2007). Governing by the Numbers: The Promise of Data-Driven Policymaking in the Information Age. Center for American Progress,5, 21.

Gabrys, J. “Citizen Sensing: Recasting Digital Ontologies through Proliferating Practices.”Theorizing the Contemporary, Cultural Anthropology website, March 24, 2016.

Espeland, W. N., & Stevens, M. L. (2008). A sociology of quantification. European Journal of Sociology/Archives Européennes de Sociologie, 49(3), 401-436.

Esty, D. C. & Rushing, R. (2007). Governing by the Numbers: The Promise of Data-Driven Policymaking in the Information Age. Center for American Progress, 5, 21.

Goldsmith, S. & Crawford, S. (2014). The responsive city: engaging communities through data-smart governance. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass, a Wiley Brand.

Goodchild, M. F. (2007). Citizens as sensors: The world of volunteered geography.GeoJournal, 69(4), 211-221.

Kitchin, R. (2014). The Data Revolution: Big Data, Open Data, Data Infrastructures and Their Consequences.London: Sage.

Mayer-Schönberger, V. and Cuckier, K. (2013).  Big Data: A revolution that will transform how we live, work, and think. New York: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.

van Dijck, J. (2014). Datafication, dataism and dataveillance: Big Data between scientific paradigm and secular belief. Surveillance & Society, 12(2), 197-208.

 

About the authors

Martín Tironi is Associate Professor, School of Design at the Pontifical Catholic University of Chile. He holds a PhD from Centre de Sociologie de l’Innovation (CSI), École des Mines de Paris, where he also did post-doctorate studies. He received his Master degree in Sociology at the Université Paris Sorbonne V and his BA in Sociology at the Pontifical Catholic University of Chile. Now he’s doing a visiting Fellow (2018) in Centre of Invention and Social Proces, Goldsmiths, University of London [email: martin.tironi@uc.cl]

Matías Valderrama Barragán is a sociologist with a Master in Sociology from the Pontifical Catholic University of Chile. He is currently working in research projects about digital transformation of organizations and datafication of individuals and environments in Chile. [email:mbvalder@uc.cl]

 

Stefania discusses data, citizenship and democracy in Lisbon, Bologna & Fribourg

On April 12, Stefania will give a talk on the politics of code and data at the ISCTE – Instituto Universitário de Lisboa, in Lisbon, Portugal.

On April 23, she will be in Bologna, Italy, at the School of Advanced International Studies of Johns Hopkins University. She will present her thoughts on ‘Citizenship Re-invented: The Evolution of Politics in the Datafied Society’.

Finally, on April 30 Stefania will lecture at the University of Fribourg, in Switzerland, upon invitation of Prof. Regula Haenggli. The lecture is entitled ‘Digitalization as a challenge to democracy: Possibilities of self-organization, emancipation, and autonomy’.

Para exercer plenamente a cidadania, é preciso conhecer os filtros virtuais (Época Negócios)

Stefania was commissioned an article by the Brazilian business magazine Época Negócios. In sum, she argues that “estar ciente dos elementos que moldam profundamente nossos universos de informação é um passo fundamental para deixarmos de ser prisioneiros da internet”. Continue reading the article in Portuguese online. Here you can read the original in English.

Why personalization algorithms are ultimately bad for you (and what to do about it)

Stefania Milan

I like bicycles. I often search online for bike accessories, clothing, and bike races. As a result, the webpages I visit as well as my Facebook wall often feature ads related to biking. The same goes for my political preferences, or my last search for the cheapest flight or the next holiday destination. This information is (usually) relevant to me. Sometimes I click on the banner; largely, I ignore it. Most of the cases, I hardly notice it but process and “absorb” it as part of “my” online reality. This unsolicited yet relevant content contributes to make me feel “at home” in my wanderings around the web. I feel amongst my peers.

Behind the efforts to carefully target web content to our preferences are personalization algorithms. Personalization algorithms are at the core of social media platforms, dating apps, and generally of most of the websites we visit, including news sites. They make us see the world as we want to see it. By forging a specific reality for each individual, they silently and subtly shape customized “information diets”.

Our life, both online and offline, is increasingly dependent on algorithms. They shape our way of life, helping us find a ride on Uber or hip, fast food delivery on Foodora. They might help us finding a job (or losing it), and locating a partner for the night or for life on Tinder. They mediate our news consumption and the delivery of state services. But what are they, and how can they do their magic? Algorithms can be seen like a recipe for baking an apple tart: in the same way in which the grandma’s recipe tells us, step by step, what to do to make it right, in computing algorithms tell the machine what to do with data, namely how to calculate or process it, and how to make sense of it and act upon it. As forms of automated reasoning, they are usually written by humans, however they operate into the realm of artificial intelligence: with the ability to train themselves over time, they might eventually “take up” their own life, sort to speak.

The central role played by algorithms in our life should be of concern, especially if we conceive of the digital as complementary to our offline self. Today, our social dimension is simultaneously embedded and (re)produced by technical settings. But algorithms, proprietary and opaque, are invisible to end users: their outcome is visible (e.g., the manipulated content that shows up on one’s customized interface), but it bears no indication of having been manipulated, because algorithms leave no trace and “exist” only when operational. Nevertheless, they do create rules for social interaction and these rules indirectly shape the way we see, understand and interact with the world around us. And far from being neutral, they are deeply political in nature, designed by humans with certain priorities and agendas.

While there are many types of algorithms, what affects us most today are probably personalization algorithms. They mediate our web experience, easing our choices by giving us information which is in tune with our clicking habits—and thus, supposedly, preferences.

They make sure the information we are fed is relevant to us, selecting it on the basis of our prior search history, social graph, gender and location, and generally speaking about all the information we directly on unwillingly make available online. But because they are invisible to the eyes of users, most of us are largely unaware this personalization is even happening. We believe we see “the real world”, yet it is just one of the many possible realities. This contributes to envelop us in what US internet activist and entrepreneur Eli Pariser called the “filter bubble”— that is to saythe intellectual isolation caused by algorithms constantly guessing what we might like or not, based on the ‘image’ they have of us. In other words, personalization algorithms might eventually reduce our ability to make informed choices, as the options we are presented with and exposed to are limited and repetitive.

Why should we care, if all of this eventually is convenient and makes our busy life easier and more pleasant?

First of all, this is ultimately surveillance, be it corporate or institutional. Data is constantly collected about us and our preferences, and it ends up “standing in” for the individual, who is made to disappear in favoir of a representation which can be effortlessly classified and manipulated.“When you stare into the Internet, the Internet stares back into you”, once tweeted digital rights advocate @Cattekwaad. The web “stares back” by tracking our behaviours and preferences, and profiling each of us in categories ready for classification and targeted marketing. We might think of the Panopticon, a circular building designed in mid-19thcentury by the philosopher Jeremy Bentham as “a new mode of obtaining power of mind over mind” and intended to serve as prison. In this special penal institute, a single guard would be effortlessly able to observe all inmates without them being aware of the condition of permanent surveillance they are subjected to.

But there is a fundamental difference between the idea of the Panopticon and today’s surveillance ecosystem. The jailbirds of the internet age are not only aware of the constant scrutiny they are exposed to; they actively and enthusiastically participate in generation of data, prompted by the imperative to participate of social media platforms. In this respect, as the UK sociologist Roy Boyne explained, the data collection machines of personalization algorithms can then be seen as post-Panopticon structures, whereby the model rooted on coercion have been replaced by the mechanisms of seduction in the age of big data. The first victim of personalization algorithms is our privacy, as we seem to be keen to sacrifice freedom (including the freedom to be exposed to various opinions and the freedom from the attention of others) to the altar of the current aggressive personalized marketing in favour of convenience and functionality.

The second victim of personalization algorithms is diversity, of both opinions and preferences, and the third and ultimate casualty is democracy. While this might sound like an exaggerated claim, personalization algorithms dramatically—and especially, silently—reduce our exposure to different ideas and attitudes, helping us to reinforce our own and allowing us to disregard any other as “non-existent”. In other words, the “filter bubble” created by personalization algorithms isolates us in our own comfort zone, preventing us from accessing and evaluating the viewpoints of others.

The hypothesis of the existence of a filter bubble has been extensively tested. On the occasion of the recent elections in Argentina, last October, Italian hacker Claudio Agosti in collaboration with the World Wide Web Foundation, conducted a research using facebook.tracking.exposed,a software intend to “increase transparency behind personalization algorithms, so that people can have more effective control of their online Facebook experience and more awareness of the information to which they are exposed.”

The team rana controlled experiment with nine profiles created ad hoc, creating a sort of “lab experiment” in which profiles were artificially polarized (e.g., maintaining some variables constant, each profile “liked” different items). Not only did the data confirmed the existence of a filter bubble; it showed a dangerous reinforcement effect which Agosti termed “algorithm extremism”.

What can we do about all this? This question has two answers. The first is easy but uncomfortable. The second is a strategy for the long run and calls for an active role.

Let’s start from the easy. We ultimately retain a certain degree of human (and democratic) agency: in any given moment, we can choose to opt out. To be sure, erasing our Facebook account doesn’t do the trick of protecting our long-eroded privacy: the company has the right to retain our data, as per Terms of Service, the long, convoluted legal document—a contract, that is—we all sign to but rarely read. With the “exit” strategy we lose in contacts, friendships, joyful exchange and we are no longer able to sneak in the life of others, but we gain in privacy and, perhaps, reclaim our ability to think autonomously. I bet not many of you will do this after reading this article—I haven’t myself found the courage to disengage entirely from my leisurely existence on social media platforms.

But there is good news. As the social becomes increasingly entrenched in its algorithmic fabric, there is a second option, a sort of survival strategy for the long run. We can learn to live with and deal withalgorithms. We can familiarize with their presence, engaging in a self-reflexive exercise that questions what they show us in any given interface and why. If understandably not all of us might be inclined to learn the ropes of programming, “knowing” the algorithms that so much affect us is a fundamental step to be able to fully exercise our citizenship in the age of big data. “Knowing” here means primarily making the acquaintance with their occurrence and function, and questioning the fact that being turned into a pile of data is almost an accepted fact of life these days. Because being able to think with one’s own head today, means also questioning the algorithms that so much shape our information worlds.

 

 

 

 

 

[blog] Cloud communities and the materiality of the digital (GLOBALCIT project, EUI)

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This invited blog post originally appeared in the forum ‘Cloud Communities: The Dawn of Global Citizenship?’ of the GLOBALCIT project (European University Institute). It is part of an interesting multidisciplinary conversation accessible from the GLOBALCIT website. I wish to thank Rainer Baubock and Liav Orgad for the invitation to contribute to the debate. 

Cloud communities and the materiality of the digital

By Stefania Milan (University of Amsterdam)

As a digital sociologist, I have always found ‘classical’ political scientists and lawyers a tad too reluctant to embrace the idea that digital technology is a game changer in so many respects. In the debate spurred by Liav Orgad’s provocative thoughts on blockchain-enabled cloud communities, I am particularly fascinated by the tension between techno-utopianism on the one hand (above all, Orgad and Primavera De Filippi), and socio-legal realism on the other (e.g., Rainer Bauböck, Michael Blake, Lea Ypi, Jelena Dzankic, Dimitry Kochenov). I find myself somewhere in the middle. In what follows, I take a sociological perspective to explain why there is something profoundly interesting in the notion of cloud communities, why however little of it is really new, and why the obstacles ahead are bigger than we might like to think. The point of departure for my considerations is a number of experiences in the realm of transnational social movements and governance: what we can learn from existing experiments that might help us contextualize and rethink cloud communities?

Three problems with Orgad’s argument

To start with, while I sympathise with Orgad’s provocative claims, I cannot but notice that what he deems new in cloud communities—namely the global dimension of political membership and its networked nature—is indeed rather old. Since the 1990s, transnational social movements for global justice have offered non-territorial forms of political membership—not unlike those described as cloud communities. Similar to cloud communities, these movements were the manifestation of political communities based on consent, gathered around shared interests and only minimally rooted in physical territories corresponding to nation states (see, e.g., Tarrow, 2005). In the fall of 2011 I observed with earnest interest the emergence of yet another global wave of contention: the so-called Occupy mobilisation. As a sociologist of the web, I set off in search for a good metaphor to capture the evolution of organised collective action in the age of social media, and the obvious candidate was… the cloud. In a series of articles (see, for example, here and here) and book chapters (e.g., here and here), I developed my theory of ‘cloud protesting’, intended to capture how the algorithmic environment of social media alters the dynamics of organized collective action. In light of my empirical work, I agree with Bauböck, who acknowledges that cloud communities might have something to do with the “expansion of civil society, of international organizations, or of traditional territorial polities into cyberspace”. He also points out how, sadly, people can express their political views – and, I would add, engage in disruptive actions, as happens at some fringes of the movement for global justice – only because “a secure territorial citizenship” protects their exercise of fundamental rights, such as freedom of expression and association. Hence the questions a sociologist might ask: do we really need the blockchain to enable the emergence of cloud communities? If, as I argue, the existence of “international legal personas” is not a pre-requisite for the establishment of cloud communities, what would the creation of “international legal personas” add to the picture?[1]

Secondly, while I understand why a blockchain-enabled citizenship system would make life easier for the many who do not have access to a regular passport, I am wary of its “institutionalisation”, on account of the probable discrepancies between the ideas (and the mechanisms) associated with a Westphalian state and those of politically active activists and radical technologists alike. On the one hand, citizens interested in “advanced” forms of political participation (e.g., governance and the making of law) might not necessarily be inclined to form a state-like entity. For example, many accounts of the so-called “movement for global justice” (McDonald, 2006; della Porta & Tarrow, 2005) show how “official” membership and affiliation is often not required, not expected and especially not considered desirable. Activism today is characterised by a dislike and distrust of the state, and a tendency to privilege flexible, multiple identities (e.g., Bennett & Segerberg, 2013; Juris, 2012; Milan, 2013). On the other hand, the “radical technologists” behind the blockchain project are animated by values—an imaginaire (Flichy, 2007)—deeply distinct from that of the state (see, e.g., Reijers & Coeckelbergh, 2018). While the blockchain technology is enabled by a complex constellation of diverse actors, it is legitimate to ask whether it is possible to bend a technology built with an “underlying philosophy of distributed consensus, open source, transparency and community” with the goal to “be highly disruptive”(Walport, 2015)… to serve similar purposes as those of states?

Thirdly, Orgad’s argument falls short of a clear description of what the ‘cloud’ stands for in his notion of cloud communities. When thinking about ‘clouds’, as a metaphor and a technical term, we cannot but think of cloud computing, a “key force in the changing international political economy” (Mosco, 2014, p. 1) of our times, which entails a process of centralisation of software and hardware allowing users to reduce costs by sharing resources. The cloud metaphor, I argued elsewhere (Milan, 2015), is an apt one as it exposes a fundamental ambivalence of contemporary processes of “socio-legal decentralisation”. While claiming distance from the values and dynamics of the neoliberal state, a project of building blockchain-enabled communities still relies on commercially-owned infrastructure to function.

Precisely to reflect on this ambiguity, my most recent text on cloud protesting interrogates the materiality of the cloud. We have long lived in the illusion that the internet was a space free of geography. Yet, as IR scholar Ron Deibert argued, “physical geography is an essential component of cyberspace: Where technology is located is as important as what it is” (original italics). The Snowden revelations, to name just one, have brought to the forefront the role of the national state in—openly or covertly—setting the rules of user interactions online. What’s more, we no longer can blame the state alone, but the “surveillant assemblage” of state and corporations (Murakami Wood, 2013). To me, the big absent in this debate is the private sector and corporate capital. De Filippi briefly mentioned how the “new communities of kinship” are anchored in “a variety of online platforms”. However, what Orgav’s and partially also Bauböck’s contributions underscore is the extent to which intermediation by private actors stands in the way of creating a real alternative to the state—or at least the fulfilment of certain dreams of autonomy, best represented today by the fascination for blockchain technology. Bauböck rightly notes that “state and corporations… will find ways to instrumentalise or hijack cloud communities for their own purposes”. But there is more to that: the infrastructure we use to enable our interpersonal exchanges and, why not, the blockchain, are owned and controlled by private interests subjected to national laws. They are not merely neutral pipes, as Dumbrava reminds us.

Self-governance in practice: A cautionary tale

To be sure, many experiments allow “individuals the option to raise their voice … in territorial communities to which they do not physically belong”, as beautifully put by Francesca Strumia. Internet governance is a case in point. Since the early days of the internet, cyberlibertarian ideals, enshrined for instance in the ‘Declaration of Independence of Cyberspace’ by late JP Barlow, have attributed little to no role to governments—both in deciding the rules for the ‘new’ space as well as the citizenship of its users (read: the right to participate in the space and in the decision-making about the rules governing it). In those early flamboyant narratives, cyberspace was to be a space where users—but really engineers above all—would translate into practice their wildest dreams in matter of self-governance, self-determination and, to some extent, fairness. While cyberlibertarian views have been appropriated by both conservative (anti-state) and progressive forces alike, some of their founding principles have spilled over to real governance mechanisms—above all the governance of standards and protocols by the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF), and the management of the the Domain Name System (DNS) by the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN).[2] Here I focus on the latter, where I have been active for about four years (2014-2017).

ICANN is organized in constituencies of stakeholders, including contracted parties (the ‘middlemen’, that is to say registries and registrars that on a regional base allocate and manage on behalf of ICANN the names and numbers, and whose relationship with ICANN is regulated by contract), non-contracted parties (corporations doing business on the DNS, e.g. content or infrastructure providers) and non-commercial internet users (read: us). ICANN’s proceedings are fully recorded and accessible from its website; its public meetings, thrice a year and rotating around the globe, are open to everyone who wants to walk in. Governments are represented in a sort of United Nations-style entity called the Government Advisory Committee. While corporate interests are well-represented by an array of professional lobbyists, the Non-Commercial Stakeholder Group (NCSG), which stands in for civil society,[3] is a mix and match of advocates of various extraction, expertise and nationality: internet governance academics, nongovernmental organisations promoting freedom of expression, and independent individuals who take an interest in the functioning of the logical layer of the internet.

The 2016 transition of the stewardship over the DNS from the US Congress to the “global multistakeholder community” has achieved a dream unique in its kind, straight out of the cyberlibertarian vision of the early days: the technical oversight of the internet[4] is in the hands of the people who make and use it, and the (advisory) role of the state is marginal. Accountability now rests solely within the community behind ICANN, which envisioned (and is still implementing) a complex system of checks and balances to allow the various stakeholder voices to be fairly represented. No other critical infrastructure is regulated by its own users. To build on Orgad’s reasoning, the community around ICANN is a cloud community, which operates by voluntary association and consensus [5],[5] and is entitled to produce “governance and the creation of law”.[6]

But the system is far from perfect. Let’s look at how the so-called civil society is represented, focusing on one such entity, the NCSG. Firstly, given that everyone can participate, the variety of views represented is enormous, and often hinders the ability of the constituency to be effective in policy negotiations. Yet, the size of the group is relatively small: at the time of writing, the Non-Commercial User Constituency (the bigger one among the two that form the NCSG) comprises “538 members from 161 countries, including 118 noncommercial organizations and 420 individuals”, making it the largest constituency within ICANN: this is nothing when compared to the global internet population it serves, confirming, as Dzankic argues, that “direct democracy is not necessarily conducive to broad participation in decision-making”. Secondly, ICANN policy-making is highly technical and specialised; the learning curve is dramatically steep. Thirdly, to be effective, the amount of time a civil society representative should spend on ICANN is largely incompatible with regular daily jobs; civil society cannot compete with corporate lobbyists. Fourthly, with ICANN meetings rotating across the globe, one needs to be on the road for at least a month per year, with considerable personal and financial costs.[7] In sum, while participation is in principle open to everyone, informed participation has much higher access barriers, which have to do with expertise, time, and financial resources (see, e.g., Milan & Hintz, 2013).

As a result, we observe a number of dangerous distortions of political representation. For example, when only the highly motivated participate, the views and “imaginaries” represented are often at the opposite ends of the spectrum (cf., Milan, 2014). Only the most involved really partake in decision-making, in a mechanism which is well known in sociology: the “tyranny of structurelessness” (Freeman, 1972), which is typical of participatory, consensus-based organising. The extreme personalisation of politics that we observe within civil society at ICANN—a small group of long-term advocates with high personal stakes—yields also another similar mechanism, known as “the tyranny of emotions” (Polletta, 2002), by which the most invested, independently of the suitability of their curricula vitae, end up assuming informal leadership roles—and, as the case of ICANN shows, even in presence of formal and carefully weighted governance structures. Decision-making is thus based on a sort of “microconsensus” within small decision-making cliques (Gastil, 1993).[8] To make things worse, ICANN is increasingly making exceptions to its own, community-established rules, largely under the pressure of corporations as well as law enforcement: for example, the corporation has recently been accused of bypassing consensus policy-making through voluntary agreements ad private contracting.

Why not (yet?): On new divides and bad players

In conclusion, while I value the possibilities the blockchain technology opens for experimentation as much as Primavera De Filippi, I do not believe it will really solve our problems in the short to middle-term. Rather, as it is always with technology because of its inherent political nature (cf., Bijker, Hughes, & Pinch, 2012), new conflicts will emerge—and they will concern both its technical features and its governance.

Earlier contributors to this debate have raised important concerns which are worth listening to. Besides Bauböck’s concerns over the perils for democracy represented by a consensus-based, self-governed model, endorsed also by Blake, I want to echo Lea Ypi’s reminder of the enormous potential for exclusion embedded in technologies, as digital skills (but also income) are not equally distributed across the globe. For the time being, a citizenship model based on blockchain technology would be for the elites only, and would contribute to create new divides and to amplify existing ones. The first fundamental step towards the cloud communities envisioned by Orgad would thus see the state stepping in (once again) and being in charge of creating appropriate data and algorithmic literacy programmes whose scope is out of reach for corporations and the organised civil society alike.

There is more to that, however. The costs to our already fragile ecosystem of the blockchain technology are on the rise along with its popularity. These infrastructures are energy-intensive: talking about the cryptocurrency Bitcoin, tech magazine Motherboard estimated that each transaction consumes 215 Kilowatt-hour of electricity—the equivalent of the weekly consumption of an American household. A world built on blockchain would have a vast environmental footprint (see also Mosco, 2014). Once again, the state might play a role in imposing adequate regulation mindful of the environmental costs of such programs.

But I do not intend to glorify the role of the state. On the contrary, I believe we should also watch out for any attempts by the state to curb innovation. The relatively brief history of digital technology, and even more that of the internet, is awash with examples of late but extremely damaging state interventions. As soon as a given technology performs roles or produces information that are of interest to the state (e.g., interpersonal communications), the state wants to jump in, and often does so in pretty clumsy ways. The recent surveillance scandals have abundantly shown how state powers firmly inhabit the internet (cf., Deibert, 2009; Deibert, Palfrey, Rohozinski, & Zittrain, 2010; Lyon, 2015)—and, as the Cambridge Analytica case reminds us, so do corporate interests. Moreover, the two are, more often than not, dangerously aligned.

I do not intend, with my cautionary tales, to hinder any imaginative effort to explore the possibilities offered by blockchain to rethink how we understand and practice citizenship today. The case of Estonia shows that different models based on alternative infrastructure are possible, at least on the small scale and in presence of a committed state. As scholars we ought to explore those possibilities. Much work is needed, however, before we can proclaim the blockchain revolution.

References

Bennett, L. W., & Segerberg, A. (2013). The Logic of Connective Action Digital Media and the Personalization of Contentious Politics. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.

Bijker, W. E., Hughes, T. P., & Pinch, T. (Eds.). (2012). The Social Construction of Technological Systems. New Direction in the Sociology and History of Technology. Cambridge, MA and London, England: MIT Press.

Deibert, R. J. (2009). The geopolitics of internet control: censorship, sovereignty, and cyberspace. In A. Chadwick & P. N. Howard (Eds.), The Routledge Handbook of Internet Politics (pp. 323–336). London: Routledge.

Deibert, R. J., Palfrey, J. G., Rohozinski, R., & Zittrain, J. (Eds.). (2010). Access Controlled: The Shaping of Power, Rights, and Rule in Cyberspace. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.

della Porta, D., & Tarrow, S. (Eds.). (2005). Transnational Protest and Global Activism. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield.

Flichy, P. (2007). The internet imaginaire. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press.

Freeman, J. (1972). The Tyranny of Structurelessness.

Gastil, J. (1993). Democracy in Small Groups. Participation, Decision Making & Communication. Philadelphia, PA and Gabriola Island, BC: New Society Publishers.

Juris, J. S. (2012). Reflections on #Occupy Everywhere: Social Media, Public Space, and Emerging Logics of Aggregation. American Ethnologist, 39(2), 259–279.

Lyon, D. (2015). Surveillance After Snowden. Cambridge and Malden, MA: Polity Press.

McDonald, K. (2006). Global Movements: Action and Culture. Malden, MA and Oxford: Blackwell.

Milan, S. (2013). WikiLeaks, Anonymous, and the exercise of individuality: Protesting in the cloud. In B. Brevini, A. Hintz, & P. McCurdy (Eds.), Beyond WikiLeaks: Implications for the Future of Communications, Journalism and Society (pp. 191–208). Basingstoke, UK: Palgrave Macmillan.

Milan, S. (2015). When Algorithms Shape Collective Action: Social Media and the Dynamics of Cloud Protesting. Social Media + Society, 1(1).

Milan, S., & Hintz, A. (2013). Networked Collective Action and the Institutionalized Policy Debate: Bringing Cyberactivism to the Policy Arena? Internet & Policy, 5, 7–26.

Milan, S., & ten Oever, N. (2017). Coding and encoding rights in internet infrastructure. Internet Policy Review, 6(1).

Mosco, V. (2014). To the Cloud: Big Data in a Turbulent World. New York: Paradigm Publishers.

Murakami Wood, D. (2013). What Is Global Surveillance?: Towards a Relational Political Economy of the Global Surveillant Assemblage. Geoforum, 49, 317–326.

Polletta, F. (2002). Freedom Is an Endless Meeting: Democracy in American Social Movements. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

Reijers, W., & Coeckelbergh, M. (2018). The Blockchain as a Narrative Technology: Investigating the Social Ontology and Normative Configurations of Cryptocurrencies. Philosophy & Technology, 31(1), 103–130.

Tarrow, S. (2005). The New Transnational Activism. New York: Cambridge University.

Walport, M. (2015). Distributed Ledger Technology: Beyond blockchain. London: UK Government Office for Science. London: UK Government Office for Science.

Notes:

[1] I am aware that there is a fundamental drawback in social movements when compared to cloud communities: unlike the latter, the former are not rights providers. However, these are the questions one could ask taking a sociological perspective.

[2] The system of unique identifiers of the DNS comprises the so-called “names”, standing in for domain names (e.g., www.eui.eu), and “numbers”, or Internet Protocol (IP) addresses (e.g., the “machine version” of the domain name that a router for example can understand). The DNS can be seen as a sort of “phone book” of the internet.

[3] Technically, of the DNS, which is only a portion of what we call “the internet”, although the most widely used one.

[4] Civil society representation in ICANN is more complex than what is described here. The NCSG is composed of two (litigious) constituencies, namely the Non-Commercial User Constituency (NCUC) and the Non-Profit Operational Concerns (NPOC). In addition, “non-organised” internet users can elect their representatives in the At-Large Advisory Committee (ALAC), organised on a regional basis. The NCSG, however, is the only one who directly contributes to policy-making.

[5] ICANN is both a nonprofit corporation registered under Californian law, and a community of volunteers who set the rules for the management of the logical layer of the internet by consensus. See also the ICANN Bylaws (last updated in August 2017).

[6] This should at least in part address Post’s doubts about the ability of a political community to govern those outside of its jurisdiction. One might argue that internet users are, perhaps unwillingly or simply unconsciously, within the “jurisdiction” of ICANN. I do believe, however, that the case of ICANN is an interesting one for its being in between the two “definitions” of political communities.

[7] ICANN allocates consistent but not sufficient resources to support civil society participation in its policymaking. These include travel bursaries and accommodation costs and fellowship programs for induction of newcomers.

[8] Although a quantitative analysis of the stickiness of participation in relation to discursive change reveals a more nuanced picture (see, for example, Milan & ten Oever, 2017).

 

BigBang hackaton in London, March 17-18

This weekend the DATACTIVE team will be joining the IETF101 hackathon to work on quantitative mailing-list analysis software. The Internet Engineering Taskforce (IETF) is the oldest and most important Internet standard setting body. The discussions and decisions of the IETF have fundamentally shaped the Internet. All IETF mailing-lists and output documents are publicly available. They represent a true treasure for digital sociologist to understand how the Internet infrastructure and architecture developed over time. To facilitate this analysis DATACTIVE has been contributing to the development of BigBang, a Python-based automated quantitative mailinglists tool. Armed with almost 40 gigabyte worth of data in the form of plain text files, we are eager to boldly discover what no one has discovered before. By the way, we still have some (open) issues, feel free to contribute on Github 🙂

fresh out of the press: Political Agency, Digital Traces, and Bottom-Up Data Practices

The article ‘Political Agency, Digital Traces, and Bottom-Up Data Practices’ by Stefania Milan has been published in the International Journal of Communication, in a special section on ‘Digital Traces in Context’, edited by Andreas Hepp, Andreas Breiter, Thomas N. Friemel. It is open access 🙂

Abstract. This theoretical article explores the bottom-up data practices enacted by individuals and groups in the context of organized collective action. Conversing with critical media theory, the sociology of social movements, and platform studies, it asks how activists largely reliant on social media for their activities can leverage datafication and mobilize social media data in their tactics and narratives. Using the notion of digital traces as a heuristic tool to understand the dynamics between platforms and their users, the article reflects on the concurrent materiality and discursiveness of digital traces and analyzes the evolution of political agency vis-à-vis the datafied self. It contributes to our understanding of “digital traces in context” by foregrounding human agency and the meaning-making activities of individuals and groups. Focusing on the possibilities opened up by digital traces, it considers how activists make sense of the ways in which social media structure their interactions. It shows how digital traces trigger a quest for visibility that is unprecedented in the social movement realm, and how they can function as particular “agency machines.”

Niels and Stefania at the Internet Governance Forum 2017 in Geneva

Niels and Stefania will be in Geneva in mid-December for the 2017 edition of the Internet Governance Forum (IGF), taking place at the United Nations Office at Geneva on December 18-21. The IGF is a global multistakeholder forum that promotes discussions and dialogue about public policy issues related to the Internet. It was convened in 2006 by the United Nations Secretary-General. This year’s will the the IGF’s 12th edition.

Among other things, DATACTIVE will be featured in one of the main sessions, entitled Local interventions, global impacts: How can international, multistakeholder cooperation address internet disruptions, encryption and data flows, and  discussing the impacts that national policy initiatives may have on the global Internet environment and the jurisdictional issues still to be solved (December 18). Stefania will speak in the sub-them of “data flows”. In addition, DATACTIVE is co-hosting, in collaborating with the Data Justice Lab at Cardiff University a workshop entitled “Datafication and Social Justice: What challenges for Internet Governance?” (December 21). 

Stefania keynotes at workshop on slow computing, Maynooth, Ireland, 14 December

Stefania will take part in ‘Slow computing: A workshop on resistance in the algorithmic age’, organised by Rob Kitchin and Alistair Fraser and hosted by the  Programmable City project, the Social Sciences Institute and the Department of Geography of Maynooth University, Ireland. “In line with the parallel concepts of slow food (e.g. Miele & Murdoch 2002) or slow scholarship (Mountz et al 2015), ‘slow computing’ (Fraser 2017) is a provocation to resist”, reads the call for papers. Check out the program and the line-up. Stefania’s presentation is titled “Resist, subvert, accelerate. Towards an ethics of engagement in the age of the computational theocracy”.