Hi all, I saw a link this info from the Bricolist this morning,
It stinks of top-down appropriation of student freedoms via neo-liberalist agendas. This kind of invasion, not only should be challenged by the parents, and civil lawyers, and any other decent human being - but, I would also be interested in finding any art works out there dealing with this kind of thing. Of course, this directly relates to concerns relating to the shift from ideas of Panopticon into the world of the Netopticon, networked global surveillance. Some hacktivism projects may be onto this already. PLease let me know if you may know of some works you think I may not be aware of... I have been studying different forms of hacktivist art exploring in their 'contexts' issues involving networked surveillance. But, in respect of taking on the theme of the Netopticon directly. I think Heath Bunting has been the closest. In an article I wrote on Heath's work earlier this year called 'Heath Bunting, The Status Project & The Netopticon' (http://www.furtherfield.org/features/articles/heath-bunting-status-project-netopticon), He deals with the concept of status value - where a precise codification of class is iniatialized through a variant of data systems. "Currently, he defines three classes of identitiy: human being, person and corporate." So, in regard to the texas students for instance; they become part of a corporate networked system of ownership. These RFID tracking devices, brand the students as 'official' items whilst it checks out that the student is not out-stepping the 'scripted' behaviours imposed by the 'John Jay High School' protocols. "Yet, as this ever-creeping surveillance culture grows and attaches its all seeing eyes onto us all. Whether we are referring to domestic interactions, organizational or deliberate, this is not the main issue. Neo-liberalism has developed so much now, we are all part of the Netopticon. English philosopher and social theorist Jeremy Bentham in the late Eighteenth Century designed the Panopticon. It allowed officers in institutions, particularly in prisons, to observe (-opticon) all (pan-) inmates without them knowing whether or not they are being watched. In the end it was not built, but the French philosopher Michel Foucault in his publication Discipline and Punish: The Birth of the Prison,[10] in 1975 said that we are not only monitored in prisons, but in all hierarchical structures like the army, schools, hospitals and factories. This process has evolved through history to resemble Bentham's Panopticon. The up-dated version of Panopticon, can now be thought of as the Netopticon - where individuals are complicit in feeding their own forms of collective co-surveillance, as well as being traced by corporations, governments and spammers." More context here... A Family’s Fight for Freedom: Lawyers Move to Block RFID Expulsion. Preliminary Injunction Sought in School RFID Tracking Badge Case. http://www.infowars.com/preliminary-injunction-sought-in-school-rfid-tracking-badge-case/ A Texas school district has come under legal fire after a student was expelled for failure to comply with the “School Locator Project,” an RFID chip tracking program currently being piloted in a San Antonio middle and high school. Letter from John Jay High School withdrawing Andrea Hernandez for not submitting to the RFID tracking ID badges. John Jay High School sophomore Andrea Hernandez was involuntarily withdrawn after protesting her school’s tracking badge policy for months. When appeals to respect her rights were repeatedly ignored, the family decided to fight back, seeking legal council. Related: Student Expelled for Refusing Location Tracking RFID Badge http://www.infowars.com/student-expelled-for-refusing-location-tracking-rfid-badge/ In a just-released statement, civil liberties organization The Rutherford Institute, which represents the Hernandez family, has announced it will immediately seek a preliminary injunction against the district to prevent Andrea from being moved to another school. _______________________________________________ NetBehaviour mailing list [email protected] http://www.netbehaviour.org/mailman/listinfo/netbehaviour
