Why is this shocking and why is it OK for someone to have your information and 
cheat you through compound interest and mortgages or the market in general but 
the government that you vote for and can campaign to change is bad.   I don't 
buy that there are no "others."     National boundaries are even more so today 
than twenty years ago.    I used to be able to wander into Canada while hiking. 
 Not so today with drug runners and homeland security, it isn't even safe to 
hike without being armed.   There are more Goys, Gadje, Gaidjim and Yonegas 
than ever and everyone knows who you aren't.   Hi Mike,   Thanks for your work. 

 

REH

 

From: futurework-boun...@lists.uwaterloo.ca 
[mailto:futurework-boun...@lists.uwaterloo.ca] On Behalf Of michael gurstein
Sent: Saturday, June 22, 2013 8:21 AM
To: ottawadissent...@yahoogroups.com; Futurework
Subject: [Futurework] FW: [New post] In an Internetworked World No One Is 
“Foreign”

 


Michael Gurstein posted: " As everyone knows there have been some startling and 
shocking revelations concerning the surveillance activities of the USA's NSA.  
This has occasioned considerable to-ing and fro-ing from the US Executive 
Office, from the major Internet corporations im" 



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New post on Gurstein's Community Informatics 

  
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<http://gurstein.wordpress.com/2013/06/21/in-an-internetworked-world-no-one-is-foreign/>
 In an Internetworked World No One Is “Foreign”


by  <http://gurstein.wordpress.com/author/gurstein/> Michael Gurstein 

As everyone knows there have been some startling and shocking revelations 
concerning the surveillance activities of the USA's NSA.  This has occasioned 
considerable to-ing and fro-ing from the US Executive Office, from the major 
Internet corporations implicated in these revelations, and from various 
elements of civil society.

To an equally astonishing and disturbing degree much of this to-ing and fro-ing 
has centred around whether the rights of Americans have been assaulted.  
Watching these discussions unfold including from US colleagues in civil 
society, it has been interesting how a fine bright line has been drawn between 
the rights of citizens and residents of the USA and everyone else.  The 
argument appears to be that while the rights of Americans are somehow 
sacrosanct--protected by among other things the US constitution and duly 
constituted legislation, foreigners i.e. everyone else in the world have no 
rights--are "fair game" for whatever actions the NSA or whoever chooses to 
invoke.

As a non-USAian watching all of this unfold I've been equally astonished and 
horrified that otherwise perfectly sane and reasonable people who pop up in all 
the right places often saying useful things internationally could be so tone 
deaf when dealing with a real issue with global ramifications.

As I've been thinking about this I haven't been quite sure why the terminology 
of Americans "good"--"foreigners" "suspicious" should grate so much.

We (being those of the non-USAian persuasion) are so used to listening to 
cultural messages coming from the US including via movies, television, music 
and so on that at some unconscious cultural level "we are all Americans now".  
So when the divide between those placing themselves under the shading 
protection of the US constitution and everyone else is so actively and 
frequently expressed, the real divide is made even clearer and more explicit.

However, as we all know as well, the Internet as a communications and 
expressive platform knows few if any boundaries. While on the Internet of 
course, some are more equal than others the specific nationality as framed by 
boundaries and constitutions and legislation is left somewhere in the 
background only to be invoked at times of crisis or system failure.

 And that is why the language and conceptualization of the US vs. foreigners 
seems so odd and unsettling since on the Internet no one is a "foreigner" (and 
no one is a "national" except possibly of the nation of the Internet and its 
netizens/"citizens"...

 This isn't to idealize the Internet as a place without boundaries but rather 
to state the obvious, I'm able to and am frequently active in being in my home 
in Canada or with my friends in Brazil or with business colleagues in India 
instantaneously and seamlessly from anywhere I happen to be able to connect--no 
passports, no jurisdictional entanglements, in many cases no authorities 
evidently hovering in the background. So when something like Ed Snowden's 
revelations re-arrange again the Internet world around boundaries--around "us" 
and "them", "citizens" and "foreigners" it feels, well, so 20th century.

And to go on a wee bit--what is equally unsettling is the knowledge again that 
we (foreigners) have gleaned from Ed Snowden's revelations that the marginal 
and largely notional "protections" that distance and boundaries have up to now 
offered to us from the over-weaning and often absurdist actions by US 
authorities can now be seen as having been finally and irrevocably 
"disappeared"; and while we may be "foreigners" from the perspective of 
"rights", we are very much not foreigners from the perspective of being somehow 
subject to the actions of US authorities wherever we may or whatever we may be 
doing anywhere in the world.

And of course, this is the case not simply for the usual ("legitimate") 
suspects but also for ordinary citizens, businesses, governments, 
whatever--since the power of the Internet and the facility with which its depth 
of penetration has been projected almost universally has meant that the power 
wielded by those authorities is now global in scope and reach and essentially 
unrestricted in its actions. Thus in the sense of being subjects to US 
authority (or the authority of anyone with the wealth and facility to 
effectively use these tools--recent days have seen reports of similar actions 
by spooks in India and Brazil) no one is now a "foreigner"--in that area we are 
all equal and equally powerless.

So, if we are all -- USAians and everyone else now subjects of the omnipresent 
eyes, ears and capacities for actions at a distance of the Internet and ICTs in 
general; where are the structures and rules, procedures, legislative mechanisms 
that would allow all of us--citizens of an Internet-enabled world to hold those 
wielding this authority to some measure of accountability and transparency.

Without those mechanisms and those rules and procedures--we all and in this we 
must include all of us USAians and the like--will be the objects of control and 
subject of the authority of a future SurveillanceState without recourse or 
appeal. The time to recognize that we are all equally citizens of the Internet 
world (and equally foreigners in the boundary burdened world where you need a 
passport to be on the Internet) and to get about the job of building the 
governance institutions for the world that we are all living in and put paid to 
those institutions that govern the world that we are in the process of 
out-growing.

 <http://gurstein.wordpress.com/author/gurstein/> Michael Gurstein | June 21, 
2013 at 09:38 | Tags:  <http://gurstein.wordpress.com/?tag=internet-governance> 
Internet Governance | Categories:  
<http://gurstein.wordpress.com/?cat=38502503> Canadian ICT policy,  
<http://gurstein.wordpress.com/?cat=40821> Civil Society,  
<http://gurstein.wordpress.com/?cat=771367> Community Informatics,  
<http://gurstein.wordpress.com/?cat=1> Uncategorized | URL:  
<http://wp.me/pJQl5-cb> http://wp.me/pJQl5-cb 


 
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