http://newleftreview.org/II/92/emilie-bickerton-culture-after-google

New Left Review 92, March-April 2015

Emilie Bickerton

CULTURE AFTER GOOGLE

Literature on the social impact of the internet has always struggled
to keep up with the breakneck pace set by its subject.
First-generation thinking about the net took form in the early 1990s,
when usage was rapidly expanding with the dissemination of early
browsers; it grew out of a pre-existing thread of technology advocacy
that ran back to 60s counter-cultural consumerism. [1] Wired magazine,
founded in 1993, was its chief vehicle; key figures included
tech-enthusiasts Stewart Brand, Kevin Kelly and Howard Reingold, with
their ‘patron saint’ Marshall McLuhan. This euphoric perspective
dominated throughout the ‘new economy’ boom: the internet was changing
everything, and for the better, heralding a new age of freedom,
democracy, self-expression and economic growth. Grateful Dead lyricist
John Perry Barlow’s 1996 ‘Declaration of the Independence of
Cyberspace’, delivered from Davos, set the tone: ‘Governments of the
Industrial World, you weary giants of flesh and steel, I come from
Cyberspace, the new home of Mind. On behalf of the future, I ask you
of the past to leave us alone.’ Pitted against this, there had long
existed a minor current of critical left writing, also running back to
at least the early 70s; this included ‘left McLuhanite’ figures such
as The Nation’s Neil Postman. More overtly political, Richard Barbrook
and Andy Cameron’s classic 1995 essay, ‘The Californian Ideology’,
skewered Wired in its early days, while on the ‘Nettime’ listserv and
in the pages of Mute magazine, writers such as Geert Lovink attempted
to forge a real ‘net criticism’. But these voices were mostly confined
to the dissident margins.

With the 2000–01 dot.com crash there came something of a discursive
shake-out. It was in the early post-crash years that Nicholas Carr’s
Does it Matter? (2004) was published, puncturing ‘new economy’ hype.
But with the Greenspan bubble and massive state-intelligence funding
after 9.11, American tech was soon on its feet again. Tim O’Reilly’s
coining of the ‘Web 2.0’ buzzword in 2004 captured the returning
optimism. The blog craze, Wikipedia and the first wave of social media
all came into play during these years, and it was now that the
landscape of tech giants was consolidated: Google, Facebook, Amazon,
Apple, Microsoft. The technology discourses of this phase echoed the
developing shape of the Web: with ‘open source’ (another O’Reilly
buzzword) and Wikipedia, it was argued that undefined crowds could be
superior producers of content and code than named (or paid)
individuals.

When a second, much deeper crisis erupted in 2008, American tech was
one of the few sectors to remain relatively unscathed, already moving
into new lines of production: smartphones, tablets, e-readers. The
uptake of these devices brought a qualitative expansion of internet
use, blurring the boundary between everyday life and a ‘cyberspace’
that had hitherto been conceptualized as a separate sphere. Suddenly
it was evident that all the talk of the internet’s capacity to
instigate far-reaching social change was no mere talk. It was in these
years that a set of more pessimistic and critical voices started to
come to the fore, worrying about the dangers of the Web’s expanding
use: Nicholas Carr’s The Shallows (2010), Jaron Lanier’s You Are Not A
Gadget (2010), Sherry Turkle’s Alone Together (2011), Evgeny Morozov’s
The Net Delusion (2011). Carr’s book in particular became the key
expression of a mounting anxiety, even before the Snowden revelations
in June 2013 brought home some of the darker implications of these
developments. But now that the internet was so plainly entangled in so
much of everyday life, and so much of the structure of capitalist
society, it was becoming increasingly meaningless to isolate a
singular technological entity, ‘the internet’, as either simply good
or bad. The main object of net criticism was increasingly coextensive
with society itself, thus making a more social mode of critique
plainly the most pertinent one.

This is the context for Astra Taylor’s The People’s Platform: Taking
Back Power and Culture in the Digital Age. Taylor presents herself as
neither a ‘cheerleader of progress at any cost’ nor a ‘prophet of
doom’, condemning change and lamenting what has been lost. She aims to
provide a more nuanced mode of net criticism than either of these
standard rhetorical poles. She is by no means the first to do so:
Evgeny Morozov is another figure who would locate himself here, taking
up a third rhetorical position that distinguishes itself against the
other two and offering less techno-determinist, more socio-political
modes of explanation. But if the occupants of this third position are
right to place themselves here, it might be said that it is easy
now—in the third decade of the Web’s existence—to be right in this
way. What matters is the detail of the diagnosis and what we can do.

Taylor’s ambition, as her subtitle suggests, is to make the case for a
new cultural politics of the digital age. How Web 2.0 affects the
production and distribution of culture touches her in a direct sense.
She is a documentary filmmaker and editor of two books, one on
philosophy, the other on the Occupy movement in the us. She has no
parallel university job to shield her from the growing structural
inequalities she describes; nor for the most part do the musicians,
film-makers, photographers and investigative reporters whose stories
she recounts, working at the coal face of a culture industry that has
been transformed by the internet—but not in ways that Wired predicted.
Taylor’s personal background might make her seem an ideal candidate
for Web enthusiasm. She has written in n+1 magazine about her
enlightened home-schooling by counter-cultural parents. The People’s
Platform opens with the story of how in 1991, the twilight of the
pre-Web era, the 12-year-old Taylor brought out her own
environmentalist magazine, copying it with the help of a friend’s
father who managed the local Kinko’s and distributing it to bookstores
and food co-ops around Athens, Georgia, in her parents’ car. She notes
how much easier it would have been to get her message out today, when
‘any kid with a smartphone’ has the potential to reach millions of
readers with the push of a button. In 2011 Taylor helped produce five
crowd-funded issues of the Zuccotti Park broadsheet, Occupy! Gazette,
distributed free in print and online. This background is important;
she is coming from a position of high expectations and dashed hopes,
not sceptical resistance to technological change.

The People’s Platform looks at the implications of the digital age for
cultural democracy in various sectors—music, film, news,
advertising—and how battles over copyright, piracy and privacy laws
have evolved. Taylor rightly situates the tech euphoria of the late
90s in the context of Greenspan’s asset-price bubble, pointing out
that deregulated venture-capital funds swelled from $12bn in 1996 to
$106bn in 2000. Where tech-utopians hailed the political economy of
the internet as ‘a better form of socialism’ (Wired’s Kevin Kelly) or
‘a vast experiment in anarchy’ (Google’s Eric Schmidt and the State
Department’s Jared Cohen), she shows how corporations dominate the new
landscape: in 2013 Disney and TimeWarner’s shares were up by 32 per
cent, cbs’s by 40 per cent and Comcast’s by 57 per cent. The older
tech and culture-industry corporations have ‘partnered’ with the new:
at&t with Apple, Disney and Sony with Google. The major record labels
have stakes in Spotify, as has Fox in Vice Media, while Condé Nast has
bought up Reddit. In contrast to the multiple distribution grids that
once purveyed telephony, tv, radio and film, nearly everything is now
carried on cable or wireless ‘unichannels’, monopolized in the us by a
handful of giants: at&t, Verizon, TimeWarner, Comcast.

Their scale is matched by the newcomers. Google, which accounts for 25
per cent of North American consumer internet traffic, has swallowed up
a hundred firms since 2010. With over a billion users, Facebook has
enrolled more than a seventh of the world’s population. A third of
global internet users access the Amazon cloud on a daily basis. As
Taylor pointedly notes, the main source of Facebook’s and Google’s
profits is other firms’ advertising expenditure, an annual $700bn in
the us; but this in turn depends on the surplus extracted from workers
who produce ‘actual things’. The logic of advertising drives the tech
giants’ voracious appetite for our data. In 2012 Google announced it
would be collating information from its multiple services—Gmail, maps,
search, YouTube, etc.—to combine the ‘knowledge person’ (search
queries, click-stream data), the ‘social person’ (our email and social
media networks) and the ‘embodied person’ (our physical whereabouts,
tracked by the phones in our pockets) into a single ‘3d profile’, to
which advertisers can buy access in real time. Facebook, which is now
bundling users’ offline purchases with their profiles, ‘to make it
easier for marketers to reach their customers’, as Mark Zuckerberg put
it, had a market value of $104 billion on the day of its ipo. Without
our ‘likes’ and comments, our photos and tweets, our product ratings
or restaurant reviews, these companies would be worth nothing.

Online and offline are not separate worlds, Taylor insists; the
internet in her account has a distinctly ‘earthly’ reality. Broken
down into its three different layers—physical infrastructure (cables
and routers), software (code, applications) and content—it turns into
something more controllable, potentially vulnerable to harnessing. The
current battle over ‘net neutrality’ in the us is a marker of this—a
struggle over the dilution of regulation preventing cable companies
and service providers from slowing traffic down to stifle competition,
or charging extra fees to speed it up. A further question is whether
the principle of equal access could be extended from wired broadband
to wireless connections—not just mobile phones but cars, watches,
fridges, clothes, as the internet-of-things looms ever closer.

If the corporations have prospered in the digital age, what of the
relationship between creative labour and technological innovation? For
the tech-utopians, the Web would be a paradise of collaborative
creativity, with art and knowledge produced for sheer pleasure.
Richard Florida’s Rise of the Creative Class (2002) hailed the advent
of the ‘information economy’, in which workers already controlled the
means of production, as these were inside their heads. The tension
between Protestant work ethic and Bohemian creativity would be
dissolved, as profit-seeking and pleasure-seeking, mainstream and
alternative morphed together. In reality, Taylor notes, the ideology
of creativity has become increasingly useful for a profit-gouging
economy. In a cruel twist, the ethos of the autonomous creator—the
trope of the impoverished but spiritually fulfilled artist—has been
repurposed to justify low pay and job insecurity. The ideal worker
matches the traditional profile of the creative virtuoso: inventive,
adaptable, putting in long hours and expecting little compensation in
return. ‘Money shouldn’t be an issue when you’re employed at Apple’,
shopworkers are informed. Graduate students are encouraged to think of
themselves as comparable to painters or actors, the better to prepare
themselves for impoverishment when tenure-track jobs fail to
materialize.

In Henry James’s ‘The Lesson of the Master’, a young writer listens
with growing alarm to the future mapped out for him by his mentor,
pursuing the path of total dedication to his art. No children, no
material comforts, no marriage—all this would tarnish ‘the gold’ he
has the capacity to create. He resists: ‘The artist—the artist! Isn’t
he a man all the same?’ Taylor’s investigation of ‘free culture’
arrives at a similar, if gender-neutral, position. She recognizes that
‘the fate of creative artists is to exist in two incommensurable
realms of value, and be torn between them’: on the one hand, cultural
production involves ‘the economic act of selling goods or labour’; on
the other, it entails ‘that elevated form of value we associate with
art and culture’. What she shows is that, for cultural workers,
conditions in the first realm have worsened quite drastically, while
the promise of the digital era—a level playing field of universal,
democratic access—turns out to offer scant compensation; to add one’s
shout to the digital cacophony doesn’t create an intelligible debate.
A songwriter tells Taylor that it takes 47,680 plays on Spotify to
earn the royalties of the sale of one lp, while iTunes can take a cut
of 30 per cent or more. The ‘free culture’ internet ideology disguises
sharply unequal social relations: the digital giants offer free apps,
email and content as bait to hook an audience to sell to advertisers;
struggling independent artists are supposed to provide their work on
the same terms.

Taylor ruefully describes the experience of discovering that her
documentary film, Examined Life—interviews with philosophers, two
years in the making—had been posted online by strangers before it had
even opened in theatres. When she wrote to those responsible,
explaining that she would like a few months to recover the film’s
costs before it went free online, she was told (with expletives) that
philosophy belonged to everyone. ‘I had stumbled into the copyright
wars.’ She has no doubt that existing us copyright law is
indefensible. In 1978, authors’ exclusive rights to their work were
extended for seventy years after their death, making a mockery of the
original principle of copyright as a reward or incentive for cultural
production. Instead, she argues, it gave a handful of conglomerates an
incentive ‘not to create new things, but to buy up tremendous swathes
of what already exists’. The People’s Platform argues strongly for a
reformed copyright system, in essence as a defence of labour, and
calls for a relationship of ‘mutual support’ between ‘those who make
creative work and those who receive it’. Taylor quotes Diderot’s
splendid fulmination:

What property can a man own if a work of the mind—the unique fruit of
his upbringing, his studies, his evenings, his age, his researches,
his observations; if his finest hours, the most beautiful moments of
his life; if his own thoughts, the feelings of his heart, the most
precious part of himself, that which does not perish, that which makes
him immortal—does not belong to him?

Contrary to tech-enthusiasts’ hopes for new forms of creative
collaboration, the majority of online cultural content is produced by
commercial companies using conventional processes. The internet has
steepened the ‘power curve’ of cultural commodities, Taylor notes,
with a handful of bestsellers ever more dominant over a growing ‘tail’
of the barely read, seen or heard. Netflix, which occupies 40 per cent
of us bandwidth most evenings, reports that the top 1 per cent of its
inventory accounts for 30 per cent of film rentals; YouTube’s ten most
popular videos get 80 per cent of total plays. Taylor laments the
hollowing of the middle strata—less conventional works that
nevertheless resonate beyond a specialist niche.

The ‘missing middle’ is particularly relevant when she turns from film
and music to journalism. The news industry is another ravaged
environment in the digital age, with local and rural papers in the us
hit especially hard; the number of reporters covering state capitals
halved between 2003 and 2009. Even in the booming Bay Area, the
Oakland Tribune shrank from two hundred reporters in the 1990s to less
than a dozen today. As Taylor points out, while you can now access the
nyt, British Guardian and Canadian Globe & Mail with a single click,
your home-town papers have likely shut down. Her defence of the
profession is a classic one, based on the idea that journalists should
act as democracy’s watchdogs against ignorance and corruption, calling
politicians to account and bringing events from around the world out
of potential obscurity and onto front pages—paper or digital. In
modern newsrooms, however, in-depth international reporting is all but
extinct: by 2006, she writes, American media, both print and
broadcast, supported a mere 141 foreign correspondents overseas.
Budgets are channelled into developing digital editions and online
magazines, like The Huffington Post; news aggregators such as Gawker
or ‘contagious media’ sites like Buzzfeed proliferate. Yet the
time-bomb hanging over foreign correspondents was ticking long before
the Web. Here again, new problems are generally old problems with a
different face: trends already evident in the 90s underwent a dizzying
acceleration as the digital era took hold. The original newspaper
model had used profits from print advertising to fund its most
expensive but often least read international pages by bundling
audiences together—crossword aficionados and business-page readers
with sports and celebrity-gossip fans. Online, a newspaper’s sections
are split and audiences unbundled, allowing readers to go directly to
the news they want without having to glance at—or pay for—anything
else.

aol’s guidelines for the new-model Huffington Post suggest the
orientation of the future: editors are to keep their eyes glued to
social media and data streams to determine trending topics, pairing
these with search-engine optimized titles—often barely literate, but
no matter if they top results lists—and drawing on thousands of
bloggers as well as staff writers to push out a non-stop stream of
condensed, repurposed articles. Those determining the content of the
magazine are already locked in a ‘most popular’ feedback loop.
Meanwhile, the rapid-fire output of news agencies that run to a
‘hamster wheel’ tempo—wire-copy writers may be expected to churn out
ten stories a day—is becoming the only source from on-the-ground
reporters around the world. Agency journalists may be good reporters,
but their remit is to stay faithful to the neutrality commitment of
their employer and only say what someone else, usually in an official
position, has said already.

The ascendant model for news in the advertising-driven digital era is
to offer us what we’ve read about before, whether this is the price of
oil or the latest tennis results; major internet services shape
content according to algorithms based on past behaviour. We can
personalize the news, ‘curate’ and share content, but in the process,
‘what we want winds up being suspiciously like what we’ve got already,
more of the same—the cultural equivalent of a warm bath.’ News
aggregation is about ‘capturing eyeballs’. As one young toiler in ‘the
salt mines of the aggregator’ explains: ‘I have made roughly 1,107
times more money linking to thinly sourced stories about Lindsay Lohan
than I have reporting any original news.’ Independent online news
sites can be starved of funds. After the Baltimore Examiner shut down
in 2009, journalists tried to set up a web-based in-depth reporting
site, Investigative Voice, along the lines of Voice of San Diego,
MinnPost or ProPublica. It seemed, Taylor writes, ‘a shining example
of what many hope our new-media future will be’, combining ‘the best
of old-school shoe-leather journalism’ with the internet as ‘a quick
and affordable distribution platform’. The reporters pioneered
‘episodic investigative journalism’, posting and updating revelations
of government and police department malpractice, inviting reader
input. After barely a year, they were broke. Taylor’s contact took a
job with a local Fox affiliate, so he could see a doctor.

The People’s Platform ends with a manifesto—in itself a more ambitious
move than those of most books on digital culture, even if Taylor’s
demands seem disappointingly limited after what has gone before. She
shrinks from the thought of nationalization—there is no equivalent
here to Evgeny Morozov’s ‘Socialize the data centres!’—and disparages
the free-software movement pioneered by Richard Stallman and others as
‘freedom to tinker’. Instead she calls for more regulation of the
service providers and major platforms; improved broadband provision;
introducing a kind of Glass–Steagall of new media, to force a
separation of content creation from communication and thus prevent a
new round of vertical integration; levying a tax on the advertising
industry; pressuring Silicon Valley to pay tax at higher rates; more
public spending on the ‘cultural commons’, the arts and public
broadcasting (the education system gets no mention). In the ‘copyright
wars’, she opts for reform rather than abolition or ‘copyleft’. More
broadly, Taylor argues that the ideology of ‘free culture’ promoted by
Web enthusiasts has centred on distribution, obscuring and ultimately
diminishing the people and social supports that underlie cultural
production. She seeks to redress the balance by way of a more
‘ecological’, long-term mentality, drawing on the politics of ethical
consumption and ‘fair trade’ to call for culture that is ‘sustainable’
and ‘fair’, as opposed to ‘free’.

In many ways, The People’s Platform is strongest on the detail,
nailing highly specific targets (such as the myth that e-readers are a
boon to the environment; according to a New York Times report, one
Kindle consumes the resources of four dozen books and has the carbon
footprint of a hundred). Taylor provides a valuable and demystifying
account of the current American cultural landscape. Strong on
empirical documentation, the book is weaker on conceptualization or
structural analysis. There is a sense that much of the material here
remains on the surface. Though her stated aim is to uncover ‘the
socio-economic forces that shape technology and the internet’, all we
are given on this front by way of explanatory causes is a passing
mention of shareholder value. Politically, Taylor situates herself as
‘a progressive’—the book abounds in phrases beginning ‘progressives
like myself’—which would seem to refer to that section of American
opinion located around the left of the Democrats, The Nation and
Democracy Now!. She shares its strengths—a powerful sense of moral
indignation and hatred of injustice—and weaknesses, not least a
parochialism that can be blind to the world beyond America’s borders
and a failure to analyse the Democratic Party’s functional role for
Wall Street and Silicon Valley.

The People’s Platform never confronts the fact that the Obama
Administration has not only presided over the continuing expansion of
the global surveillance state but has been exceptionally cosy with the
Valley elite. While Google, Facebook et al. have been enthusiastic
backers of the Democrats, a revolving door has seen staff and ideas
continue to pass between tech and intelligence ‘communities’. There is
surprisingly little in Taylor’s book on the digital heroes who have
incurred the Silicon President’s wrath: Manning, Snowden, Swartz. Yet
their actions have done more than most tomes of net criticism to
reveal the power relations of the digitalized world. Similarly,
Taylor’s manifesto might have been stronger had she looked across the
Rio Grande. That so much of the global infrastructure of the Web, both
hardware and software, is owned by American corporations has different
implications outside us borders. In pursuit of what Stallman has
called ‘computational sovereignty’, the Lula government in Brazil
began funding free-software projects—‘free’ in the sense of libre,
rather than gratuit—over a decade ago. The Correa government in
Ecuador has taken the same path. A more comparative, internationalist
approach might also have shed greater light on what conditions allow
online investigative journalism to succeed; in France, the
subscription-based Médiapart has flourished since its foundation by
former Le Monde editor Edwy Plenel in 2007, breaking some of the
country’s biggest stories of political corruption.

While Taylor’s dismissal of free software as ‘freedom to tinker’
captures something real about its prima facie narrowness as a
political programme, she misses the peculiar way in which this very
narrowness gives rise to significant implications when we broaden the
frame and examine a more social picture. While the individual user may
not be interested in tinkering with, for example, the Linux kernel, as
opposed to simply using it, the fact that it can be tinkered with
opens up a space of social agency that is not at all trivial. Since
everyone can access all the code all the time, it is impossible for
any entity, capital or state, to establish any definitive control over
users on the basis of the code itself. And since the outcomes of this
process are pooled, one does not have to be personally interested in
‘tinkering’ to benefit directly from this freedom. With non-free
software one must simply trust whoever, or whichever organization,
created it. With free software, this ‘whoever’ is socially open-ended,
with responsibility ultimately lying with the community of users
itself.

While this issue of trust might have seemed narrowly geeky a few years
ago, as our lives become increasingly mediated by software
infrastructures, and especially post-Snowden, it is quite apparent
that such things can have major political ramifications. For example,
it is not unusual for non-free software to come with secret
‘backdoors’ that can enable third parties to collect information about
users. Intelligence agencies can turn on the microphone or camera on
your phone to find out what you’re doing or saying. With free
software, the problem is significantly reduced, since there is a world
of users out there attentive to such risks, ready and able to fix them
when they are found. These questions—and the ability to avoid
surveillance or subtle forms of technological interference by third
parties—have an obvious relevance for journalists, activists,
committed intellectuals and cultural workers, the subjects at the
heart of The People’s Platform.

It is apparently still quite possible to live mostly beyond the
purview of Big Tech and the surveillance state, and a truly vast
‘commons’ exists that can support that independence. The use of
non-tracking search engines such as DuckDuckGo, instead of Google, can
significantly shorten the trail of one’s data footprints, as can a
security-conscious email provider like Kolab (especially when combined
with encryption), or a free activist one such as Riseup or
Inventati/Autistici, rather than an ad-based service such as Gmail,
which feeds on its ability to analyse your inbox. A federated social
network such as Diaspora can replace Facebook; instead of Google’s
Android, smartphones and tablets can run the free-software Replicant
operating system; Owncloud can provide the same functionality as
Dropbox. The list could be expanded: prism-break.org, run by one Peng
Zhong and based, perhaps only virtually, in northern France, offers a
wealth of suggestions.

The major obstacles to a large-scale exodus in that direction are,
first, the self-reinforcing tendency towards consolidation, which
makes it very easy to join, for example, Facebook, and quite hard to
leave; and second, the straightforward temptation of corporate
services that are free and easily accessible, while the alternatives
tend to cost time or money, or both. Still, a cultural politics of the
internet should be grateful for the work of free-software programmers
and would do well to draw upon the possibilities it opens up. Since
WikiLeaks and the Snowden revelations, there have been signs of an
emerging alliance between hackers and journalists, as evidenced by The
Intercept, the online platform launched by Glenn Greewald, Jeremy
Scahill and documentary-maker Laura Poitras. Taylor is surely right
that we need to address the underlying socio-economic forces that
shape digital technologies. Yet against such powerful foes, an
effective strategy will aim to open multiple fronts; real advances,
however small, should be welcomed. The twist to James’s story was that
the Master, having dispatched his epigone to Switzerland in the name
of art, promptly married the young man’s beloved. The lesson, in other
words, was entirely worldly. Today’s young cultural workers may have
learned that already.


________________________________

[1] Astra Taylor, The People’s Platform: Taking Back Power and Culture
in the Digital Age, Fourth Estate: London 2014, £12.99, paperback 277
pp, 978 0 0 0752 5591


#  distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission
#  <nettime>  is a moderated mailing list for net criticism,
#  collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets
#  more info: http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l
#  archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: [email protected]

Reply via email to