https://challenge-magazine.org/2020/11/20/an-introduction-to-cybersocialism/

An Introduction to CyberSocialism
Editorial TeamContributions

Frank Rowley discusses the history, ideas and projects behind CyberSocialism 
and what they could mean for the left fighting capitalism in Britain today.

One of the biggest criticisms both from the capitalist world and from the 
workers of the former Soviet block (particularly in East Germany) was the 
comparative lack of variety in consumer products available to buy compared with 
the Capitalist world.

Leaving aside the capitalist influence of valuing coke and jeans over 
healthcare and almost zero unemployment, this, among many others, was a 
legitimate internal contradiction with the Soviet economic model of 
state-planned production.

When you have to manually calculate how much of everything is produced you 
naturally hit a limit to how many industries and unique products you can make 
at one time (since everything affects one-another dialectically).

This leads to a prioritisation of the most essential products to consume and 
commodities to trade, which inevitably leaves out more ‘luxury’ items.

This, combined with the capitalist capture of ‘desire’ and the hypnotic 
consumer culture of the 1960s onwards, expressed through Western TV, movies, 
pop-music and advertising which was always in the periphery of the Soviet 
citizen’s vision lead to the phenomenon of smuggling ‘luxury’ items over the 
Berlin wall.

This was made famous in the advertising of Levi Jeans and many other 
corporation during the 1980s, who used this fact to present themselves as 
promoting ‘freedom’ in their advertising against the ‘evil rooskies’.

Socialist Cybernetics

Meanwhile, the Soviets, from 1962 to 1970, were experimenting with ‘OGAS’, a 
vast computer system that linked up factories and industrial centres of Russia 
to a mainframe that recorded and processed this direct production information 
which economists could use to produce economic plans from.

This was advanced by the Chilean ‘Cybersyn Project’ (1971 to 1973) which, 
although never leaving the prototype stage, allowed factory workers to collect 
and visualise their production performance, check the impact of economic plans 
and linked them both to a central mainframe computer and every other factory in 
said system.

The system was principally designed by British ‘operations research’ scientist 
Stafford Beer, which embodied his notions of ‘organisational cybernetics’ in 
industrial management.

One of its main objectives was to devolve decision-making power within 
industrial enterprises to their workforce to develop self-regulation of 
factories. Both of these specific models failed to be implemented, the first 
due to late-Soviet bureaucracy’s mal-funding and the latter due to a CIA coup.


Cockshott

This was not lost on economists of the time, who (by the fact that 99% are 
die-hard Capitalists) smugly interpreted all these failings as absolute 
qualities of planned economic models and as evidence of the superiority of 
‘free-market’ Capitalism being proven once again.

Meanwhile, in the mind of Scottish Computer Scientist Paul Cockshott, an idea 
was beginning to form. He saw in the rise of consumer ‘micro-PCs’ and teletext 
technologies in Britain in the 1980s a massive potential to revive the ideas of 
cybernetic economic planning only flirted with by the socialist states a decade 
before by using these already existing technologies.

Cockshott interpreted the Soviet system’s main contradictions leading to it’s 
collapse being the lack of worker’s control of production and the resistance of 
implementing algorithmic computer calculation in economic modelling.

Both of which he believed stemmed from the unfortunate bureaucracy of the 
Communist party of the Soviet Union post-Stalin and it’s denial of the 
continuing of the class struggle within socialist society (leading to a 
right-wing takeover with Khrushchev).

He predicted that the specific limitations of product variety (along with many 
other key contradictions of analogue economic planning) could be done away with 
through the automation of economic calculation that computers allow.

Cockshott finally formalised his ideas, and learned economics formally with 
co-author Allin Cottrell for his 1993 book ‘Towards A New Socialism‘, which was 
written in response to the collapse of the Soviet Union, as a practical 
rebuttal to the idea that Socialism died along with it.

Here he described in detail his practical model of a cybernetic Socialist 
economy which would utilise direct democracy and communal production as it’s 
key tenets.

Current Relevance

Today the left talks a big game about destroying Capitalism, but the practical 
models to replace it are few and far between. Most are so wrapped up with the 
moral outrage of the very obviously oppressive and exploitative system we all 
suffer under that they don’t have any time to actually think what else we could 
do.

Cockshott, and the few like him who have actually put the work in to produce 
these practical visions of our Socialist future are invaluable in our 
Capitalist Realist landscape, with our collective inability to imagine a 
positive future beyond capitalism.

Even more than that, in the current cultural landscape, ‘technology’ as a 
concept IS communicative consumer electronics. More people have a mobile phone 
than a working toilet, with most being ‘smart’ phones.

These devices are able to record audio and visual data from their camera and 
microphones with striking clarity (among an amazing amount of other sensory 
information) and process them locally and remotely almost instantaneously 
through the internet.

This is to say nothing of the comparatively immense power of regular PCs and 
already existing computer-based infrastructure that record and control every 
aspect of banking, surveillance, direct communication and industrial 
organization.

Cockshott had BBC Micro’s and Teletext, we have iPhones and Wifi internet.

Companies such as Walmart (as detailed in the infamous book ‘The People’s 
Republic of Walmart‘) in particular have engineered incredibly sophisticated 
cybernetic planning systems which can send information directly from individual 
tills to a central computer system to be incorporated into economic plans and 
models instantly through a private network.

The difference between the model of Walmart and CyberSyn or OGAS is basic: the 
former is made for profits at the expense of workers, the latter was for 
production FOR the workers.

This is the contradiction Cockshott, and the movement of CyberSocialism aims to 
resolve.

Frank Rowley is a member of the YCL’s Kent Branch

‘Towards a New Socialism’ can be read in full, legally and for free here: 
http://ricardo.ecn.wfu.edu/~cottrell/socialism_book/new_socialism.pdf
Professor Cockshott also has a Youtube channel where he regularly produces 
short video lectures, here he introduces his book with context: 
https://invidious.snopyta.org/watch?v=Imh7W0Q1oyA
Here is an older summary of TANS he produced around 10 years ago, in full: 
https://watch.breadtube.tv/videos/watch/a7546de4-646a-4bf0-9061-7f8b0ae501eeAnd
Here is an audiobook version of TANS approved by Cockshott: 
https://invidious.snopyta.org/playlist?list=PL0-IkmzWbjoZNiItBbuVvKQBdE80tsyhx
CyberSocialism, Frank Rowley, Soviet Union, Technology


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