Dear nettimers,

The moment when someone close and dear passes away is always a confrontation 
with mortality. Something, I guess, most of us banish from our minds. Steve was 
both a hugely inspirational figure to me (and many many others as is already 
apparent from Geert’s, David’s, and Andreas’s posts here), and an uncommonly 
nice, sympathetic person. So, I’m shocked and saddened by his passing and 
somewhat at a loss for proper words.

There are so many things to mention: CAE’s seminal understanding of the Data 
Body - the total collection of files connected to your existence, and how that 
is more real to ‘officialdom’ than your biological body. 

His pioneering with CAE of participatory performances that introduced the 
politics of biotechnology to a much wider audience and allowed them to get a 
first hand, demystified, experience.

As Andreas mentioned, in 2004 he became the object of an overzealous 
prosecutor, following the death of his wife Hope. It brought a big collection 
of artists, curators, theorists / critics together to protest this absurd and 
painful four year ordeal in the CAE Defense Fund 
<http://www.tacticalmediafiles.net/campaigns/6412>. Steve somehow managed to 
get through that period, standing his ground, but the scientist he had worked 
with, Robert Ferell, caved in, settled with the prosecutors and passed away 
shortly after, dying of cancer - a condition certainly exacerbated by this 
groundless prosecution.

In the CAE book Digital Resistance Steve and his collective celebrated the 
figure of the amateur in such contested knowledge spaces. The amateur who is 
not invested in funding and reputation hierarchies, who is not delimited by a 
particular disciplinary domain, who is motivated only by ‘love’ of their 
subject, as the latin root of the word Amateur already indicates. This notion 
to me is indispensable in thinking and actualising critical knowledge practices 
outside of the sanctified confines of academia.

And we're just scraping the surface here..

We lost, I lost, a dear friend, but there is so much he and CAE left behind for 
all of us, for coming generations in particular to draw upon. We can be 
eternally thankful to him and his fellow travellers for that.

Onward indeed Steve!

-eric 
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