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A Peer-to-Peer Surveillance State?

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Over at I’m Not Actually a Geek, Hutch Carpenter has an interesting post about the New York Times’s coverage of Comcast using Twitter to respond to customer feedback in the social media sphere. It’s interesting stuff. I’m especially interested in his response to the article:

What caught my eye in the NYT article is that some people are concerned about Comcast doing this. They feel like Comcast is acting like Big Brother. According to the article, 20 year-old Brandon Dilbeck blogged about his dislike of ads on Comcast’s programming guide. A Comcast representative found the post (Google blog alert perhaps?), and responded to him via email.

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On Google, On Thinking, On Why I’m Not Working on My Dissertation Right Now

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The July issue of The Atlantic arrived at my parent’s house today. It contains a Nicholas Carr essay entitled “Is Google Making Us Stupid?”. The article is worth a look (in a twist, it isn’t on the Internet yet), but it isn’t anything particularly profound. Basically, his argument is that the Internet, and especially Google, is replacing the way our brains are wired with a more parallel approach to information acquisition, information processing, and information retention. I would imagine that most people who blog, rss, and otherwise live the Web2.0 lifestyle (I think “rss” should be a verb) have, if they stop to think about it, noticed that this change is occurring. While I’ve read three books this week, that’s my job and I’ve noticed that it’s getting harder for me to focus on it now that I’ve got so much information competing for my time.

The thing is, though, I live in an information ecology that doesn’t normally value this style of thought. Instead, the English Department continues to value the long, complex, linear narratives that dominated our cultural mind before television and that Carr says are passing away. Frankly, I don’t think this is really how the story goes: television clearly killed the book and, as Carr also points out, people are reading more, now, than they were 20 years ago. This fact troubles a lot of people (again, Carr says that this reading is a new and different kind of reading that removes a lot of the contemplation of linear text consumption), but I see it as positive. Also, when I make this claim about text and English Studies’ relationship with it, I don’t just mean on a profound level: I’m interested in how many of colleagues’ eyes glaze over when I start excitedly babbling about RSS readers and Twitter. On some fundamental level English Studies has never understood the Internet.

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Openness (an end of Web2.0) or Why You Should Be Reading _Limbo_

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I just finished reading Bernard Wolfe’s science fiction
novel, Limbo,
which, as the review I linked to says, is “one of those novels that
only five people or so read a year but all five of them declare it
brilliant.” I wonder who the other four are? Seriously, though, the
fact that this book is way out of print is criminal (also, as the copy
I read was a moldy first edition from Rutgers, I now have to clean up
the pieces of the book’s binding that have been deposited all over my
house). It has to rank as one of the strangest novels I’ve ever read. Large chunks of the book are rants about
Freud or
Weiner or
Korzybski. It has some truly
strange sex scenes and some rather embarrassing misogyny. The book is
largely a consideration of cybernetics and their implications for
re-making man. N. Katherine Hayles has a pretty good essay, from How We Become Posthuman
on Limbo. There are a lot of things that I could say about this
book (and will, I’m sure), especially in light of the fact that Wolfe
considers the possibility of physically remaking the human to be a
losing proposition and that true transcendence can only result from a
wetware upgrade.

As I was reading Wolfe’s novel, I saw some stuff on some blogs that
relates: in this post on Digital Inspiration,
there’s a discussion of whether or not the failure of
Spresent and
Slideaware represents the beginning of the
end of Web2.0. I don’t think we can make that claim so quickly, and,
probably, such claims are a result of the cave-in that resulted in the
end of Web1.0 (why does no one ever talk about that?). What
interested me about this post is the question of what would actually
constitute the end of Web2.0.

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A Note on Form and Content

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I’ve used Firebug for a long time, but I
never really grasped how powerful it can be, before today. I’ve
redesigned the blog to be more compliant with new features in Wordpress
(Widgets and the lik

e). Rather than role my own theme, as I’m lazy, I’m
using a theme called Barthelme. As you
can see, though, looking at that screenshot, this blog doesn’t look much
like the original. I wasn’t happy with Barthelme’s kind of blah colors
(and I started hating that left-aligned sidebar in a moment of web
design iconoclasm), so I thought I’d make “some minor tweaks” to the
style sheet.

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Twitter (Crises in Web2.0)

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In addition to restarting this blog, I’ve also started using Twitter again. As others have reported Twitter has a really high turnover when it comes to reporting the news. Presumably, if you are following the right people on Twitter, you could know everything as soon as it happens. That’s all well and good,
but as I restart a lot of my own web presence again, I’m wondering how hard it must be to filter through this information.

I follow around 12 twitter feeds. Most of them are my friends, but I also get the BBC news, BoingBoing, and ESPN News. I have my Twitter account piped to my Jabber account, which means I get “tweets” as they happen. Consequently, I am now afraid of “missing something” if I’m away from the computer for more than a few minutes. The same thing happens with my Google Reader account: I find myself a prisoner of my information.

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Time (Is On My Side)

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Recently, I’ve been thinking a lot about calendaring. I lead a very exciting life, let me tell you. Anyway, I’ve recently moved my calendaring from iCal to Google Calendar because I like being able to edit my calendar from the office (or the road), in addition to working on it from my home computer. Anyway, all this work about calendaring (I’ve also set it up so that people can see when I’m busy) culminated in my discovery of this passage in Jean Baudrillard’s Fragments (which is excellent (and cheap)):

Since I stopped having one, I’ve become very curious about other people’s daily schedules. Whatever can they be working at from the moment they wake up? How can they bear having something to do from right after breakfast? How can they spin round all day long like fluid in a washbasin, until they reach the orifice of sleep? They tap away at the touch screens of their lives, on which is perpetually displayed a hysterical daily round, and, from time to time, the ecstatic daily round of empty time (13)

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