“Wenn es um empirische Methoden ging, wurde Adorno grundsätzlich misstrauisch, 
denn eine Wissenschaft die auf Zählen, Messen und Wiegen reduziert wurde, 
machte für ihn den Triumph der Verdinglichung perfekt.” Jörg Später (1)

Data, the raw material from which information is derived, is stored, copied, 
moved and modified more easily than ever. This quantum leap reaches levels 
outside our imagination. Surrounded by sensors, recommendation systems, 
invisible algorithms, spreadsheets and blockchains, the ‘difference that makes 
a difference’ can no longer be identified. Big Data is a More Data ideology, 
driven by old school hypergrowth premisses. As Nathan Jurgenson once observed: 
“Big Data always stands in the shadow of the bigger data to come. The 
assumption is that there is more data today and there will necessarily be even 
more tomorrow, an expansion that will bring us ever closer to the inevitable 
pure ‘data totality.” (2) Nothing symbolizes the current hypergrowth obsession 
better than Big Data. Let’s investigate what happens when we apply degrowth to 
data and reserve datafication–as a decolonial project, a collective act of 
refusal, an ultimate sign of boredom. We’re done with you, data system, stand 
out of my light.

“Bigness is sameness,” Katherine Behar argues. (3) As a result, we’re facing a 
declining return on difference. With ever more data—both the good and 
evil—we’re no longer gathering new insights. Peak data is ahead of us. The 
vertical axis is not an endless plateau and one day we’ll reach its summit. (4) 
There are awakenings, also to the wet dream of the technology of limitless 
petabytes of storage and computing power. Soon, the maximizing of the data 
flows is reaching its upper limit, much like the cosmic speed limit. This may, 
or may not be a technical limit. Following the definition of peak oil, we can 
state that peak data will be the moment when the maximum rate of extractivism 
is reached and the platform logic implodes, after which a steep decline sets in 
until systems and their users are outside of the entropy danger zone.

Let’s define peak data as the moment at which data extraction reaches a rate 
greater than any time in the past and then starts to decline. When the 
territory is already drawn and the costs of ever-more detailed maps are simply 
no longer worth it, the data gathering machine eventually falls silent. Peak 
data is related to the distinct concept of data depletion when the moral cost 
of ‘surveillance capitalism’ outweighs the economic benefit for the few and 
society as a whole starts to decline because of an excess of social disparity. 
Once the peak is reached, the presumption that the better the information, the 
better the decision-making process can no longer be maintained. Dataism itself 
is a paradigm and the end of its authority is near. Meaningful data chunks no 
longer provide us with significant differences and we are looking right into 
the abyss of bit rot. Can we think of peak data in a similar way to the 
post-digital, or post-data, when excitement over data is now historical, and we 
no longer associate it with narratives of progress. Today data has become our 
collective problem.

In a variation of Marx, we could speak of the tendency of the rate of meaning 
to fall. After the peak, the degradation of data will grow exponentially and 
databases are compromised beyond repair. This is worse than data rot as the 
religion itself falls apart. But what happens when we can no longer gain a 
competitive advantage of the gathered data and the crisis of the ‘informed 
decision’ sets in? Is there a sick logic where peak data produces ever more 
global rulers who have openly abandoned reason and technocratic process in 
favour of gut (or phallic) instinct? When everyone has all information, the 
only surprise is the deliberately uninformed decision. Correlation inflation is 
real. So is the issue of redundancy. The signal to noise level has never been 
as low; but then, ever higher computational power can squeeze out more drops of 
significance… Manipulated at the moment of its capture, fueled by subliminal 
behavioral interventions and filtered through algorithms, users can no longer 
easily be fooled. However, many still feel fooled and it’s harder than ever to 
determine who is the fool. It was for everyone to see, and feel, that life is 
governed by numbers. People are aware that the academic funding darling called 
data science is a racket. After the manic, restrictive Covid years, the big 
data hype lost its innocence for good.

As a result of the current platform stagnation, indifference, cynicism, denial, 
boredom and disbelief are on the rise. We are caught in a turbulent whirlwind 
of dialectical forces and can no longer make a distinction between drastic 
techno-determinist forces (such as automation) and the collapse of human 
awareness, leading to mass depression, refusal and uprises driven by anger, 
fear and resentment. In a good cybernetic tradition, the technical tipping 
point of peak data will be both attributed to an out of control army of 
(ro)bots and the rebel wisdom of a dissident intelligentsia that is both local 
and planetary.

If the paradigm still holds that data is the new oil, the next obvious question 
should be: when do we arrive at peak data? The thesis here is that peak data 
will neither be reached because Moore’s Law (the doubling of chip capacity 
every two years) no longer holds, nor because of a technical ceiling in terms 
of storage capacity. While it is tempting to hold on to scientific evidence for 
technological stagnation, peak data will be reached because of inner exhaustion 
which slowly reaches a critical mass after which the implosion of data hegemony 
unfolds.

According to Katherine Behar data is like plastic. “Big data’s pathological 
overaccumulation symptomize capitalist excess, like plastic, and big data 
threatens to bloat a naïve profile into a totality.” (5) Behar uses the obesity 
metaphor for the never-ending surplus production, one that Jean Baudrillard 
also used. In The Fatal Strategies, Baudrillard states: “The world is not 
dialectical – it is sworn to extremes…not to reconciliation or synthesis…we 
will fight obscenity with its own weapons… we will not oppose the beautiful to 
the ugly, but will look for the uglier than ugly.” In Baudrillard’s vision, the 
postmodern subject sits back and enjoys the implosion of big data 
infrastructure. This simultaneously occurs on the user level when checking 
routines get forgotten, leaving the hundreds of search results,  product 
recommendations and social media friends for what they are. This is the 
supremacy of inaction. The problem is that hardly anyone has the guts aka 
mindfulness to not click, swipe and like.

This is not merely a problem of ‘overload’ that can be solved with a periodic 
reset aimed at the self-imposed diet of the data-gathering agencies. The 2018 
Data Prevention Manifesto <https://dataprevention.net/> is a programmatic 
statement in this respect. Instead of aiming for ‘data protection’ the solution 
should be allocated at the source: do not collect data in the first place, 
dismantle the collection devices, delete the software and uninstall the 
databases. Then reclaim the royal time/space need to make proper decisions. We 
have the right to refrain and do not need to be told to forget. Don’t be 
impressed with the legal Gutmenschen that claim to protect privacy. Leave the 
data for what they are: symbolic waste. Stop data production from happening in 
the first place.

Big data critique had its moment. And it didn’t really come from the media 
theorists. It was mostly coming from concerned scientists and the enlightened 
managerial class: pragmatic, reasonable, harmless and predictable. It was big 
data critique 101: data are not objective, data comes with interests, and so 
on. The first mistake was to accept the  framing: big data. Rarely it was about 
the size and more about a widespread datafication and the unspoken new grand 
narrative it supports.

Should we use terms such as ‘overcoming the empirical turn’? Can critique enter 
the inner life of technology or will it be condemned to observe from a 
distance? This is the key dilemma of radical data critique. Is the ultimate 
adversary of data-as-such oracles like Byung-Chul Han that work in the 
tradition of Martin Heidegger? Or should we rather look for 21st-century 
versions of the Frankfurt School, despite their own involvement in the radio 
research project and the study on the authoritarian personality? The challenge 
today is rather banal: tackle the ethics industrial complex. The reformist 
opposite of data refusal is framed as ‘responsible ethics’. What’s wrong with 
‘engaging with actuality’? Whose facts?

Let’s shape how the engaging way of becoming critical can be brought into 
existence in the context of ‘data’. Conditional mediations? Do we need to argue 
‘from the inside’? Can we, and should we, make (our view on) data more 
ambiguous or should we dismiss data as such altogether? Is it possible to 
transcend data? Ignore? Subvert? Undermine? Sabotage, erasing data with 
magnets, ransomware? Why is ‘hacking’ not enough? An additional problem is the 
claim of cognitivism. Not everything is calculable. Let’s not ignore the real 
existing entropy. How to undermine or prevent the obliteration of life? Why 
should we optimize our lives in the first place and voluntarily participate in 
predictive systems that can only create more polarization, anger and anxiety? 
What’s to be done to escape this machine logic?

It is claimed that data have taken over the predictive ability, theory, essays 
and poetry once possessed. The answer can only be one of radical negation and 
resistance (‘friction’) against this managerial technological violence. In 2020 
Miriam Rasch published Friction–Ethics in Times of Dataism 
<https://www.debezigebij.nl/boek/frictie/>, published in Dutch by De Bezige 
Bij. In an English summary 
<https://www.eurozine.com/friction-and-the-aesthetics-of-the-smooth/> of her 
book written for Eurozine Rasch criticizes the desire for optimization in data 
science. Data are seen as the next step in science. According to Rasch, this 
belief is nowhere better exemplified than in Harari’s Homo Deus: A Brief 
History of Tomorrow. In his pancomputationalism “the universe, plant and 
animal, human and machine all work in the same way. In comparison with a 
machine, human beings are hopelessly inefficient and lacking in organization.” 
Dataism is framed as a religion all subjects of the socio-technological regime 
believe in. We live inside the data cosmology. The data sphere is here 
described as a natural monade: dataism is the inevitable paradigm of our times. 
Rasch believes that “in this mechanistic worldview, extrapolated into a 
not-so-distant future where we will all function as a computer. In this vision, 
downfall and progress go hand in hand. Inefficient human faces a certain 
destiny. Dataism is a cynical faith depicting today’s world as a deplorable 
intermediate stage on the path to something better.”

Data as such are numb, muddy and silent by default. Information does the 
[not?]talk. The tendency of data to accumulate inevitably ends up in obesity. 
In line with Vincent van Gogh’s “Real painters do not paint things as they 
are…They paint them as they themselves feel them to be,” we need impressionist 
data approaches. In opposition to the current data regime the Institute of 
Network Culture (INC) has focused on the production and support of ‘rather not’ 
theories and critiques of internet culture. One cannot expect that such data 
scepticism is met with enthusiasm. The untimely continental-European 
perspectives aim to build autonomous, interdisciplinary research networks on 
topics such as search, Wikipedia, social media alternatives and revenue models 
for the arts. INC does not believe in ‘data science’ and explicitly aims to 
undermine its core belief system: the data religion itself. This is not merely 
done out of resentment as decades of sadist neo-liberal budget cuts under the 
flag of the ‘creative industries’ have all but diminished the arts and 
humanities work. In this respect, we have not forgotten the loud silence of the 
so-called ‘hard science’ communities over the cruel policies that ultimately 
crippled the arts. We unapologetically believe in the subversive power of 
theory, philosophy, literature and the arts and the ultimate victory of poetry 
over bean-counting. Measurement is in the process of orchestrating a power 
grab, aimed to destroy critical thinking as such. There cannot be peace or 
mutual understanding in a world where data are explicitly utilized to eliminate 
culture.

There is plenty of criticism of the capitalist data regime. We do not lack 
investigations of its implications, from David Beer’s The Data Gaze to Steffen 
Mau’s The Metric Society. In this context it is important to go beyond the—in 
itself convincing—US ‘bias’ studies of racist algorithms and post-colonial AI 
and focus on data as such, not just how they are optimized to discriminate 
along lines of caste, class, gender or ethnicity. The thesis here is that there 
is no ‘big data for good’. There is no positive telos. There is no progressive 
ranking and rating. While it is tempting to portray ordinary users as victims 
of ‘data colonialism’, as Couldry and Mejias do in The Costs of Connection 
<https://colonizedbydata.com/>, the ‘decolonize the internet’ metaphor may be 
misused.

The key notion here is the continuing mechanism of extraction throughout the 
centuries. But this is where the comparison between colonial rule and platform 
realism ends. What is essentially different is the subject configuration. 
Colonialism is a form of violent rule while platforms are driven by the 
performative desire for comfort and social life among ordinary users. Adorno’s 
wrong life that cannot be lived rightly will have to be applied to the messy 
platform reality. There is no data ethics inside a wrong system. Facing the 
exclusion logic of the current data regimes, what’s needed is a relentless 
immanent critique and a halt to constructive collaborations. (6)

What are the so-called ‘sciences’ doing to uphold the unfolding data-driven 
educational disaster? Are they ready to repair the damage done and dismantle 
their own datacenters? As we do not hear anything regarding the disastrous 
takeover of dataism, we recently started to argue for a defunding of all data 
sciences and AI research (including its ethics washing operations), calling for 
an immediate redistribution of research funds. The frustration in society with 
algorithms, artificial stupidity and facial recognition systems is already 
spilling onto the streets. Data have not been able to debunk antivaxers and no 
longer legitimize lockdown regimes. There is an urgent need to unmask the 
‘neutrality’ of the libertarian male-geek computer science system, and take a 
stand: dismantle Facebook and Google now, ban Booking, Uber and Airbnb, build 
firm peer-to-peer (payment) systems and create one, two, many local non-profit 
cooperatives that focus on distribution as alternatives to, for instance, 
Amazon. The ultimate aim of dataism is becoming clear: to undermine the 
emergence of a new self that is no longer paranoid, depressed and insecure. 
What characters emerge once the performative quantified self metamorphoses?

“If a vehicle accident occurs, you can call up the images that the vehicles 
involved recorded to decide what caused the accident and which algorithms need 
improvements.” This Forbes quote exemplifies dataism. Ethics commissions will 
not be able to make a difference and will only prolong the data regime. What we 
need is a ‘public stack’ of civic technologies that are truly sovereign monads, 
no longer based on the Brussels enforcement of interoperability between ‘open’ 
data clusters. What we need is data prevention, not protection [this is also 
really good]. Let’s design different protocols that end up in the collection of 
fewer data. Destroy data at the source, and no longer capture, let alone 
preserve them. This is the real ‘de-automation’ design challenge Rushkoff’s 
Team Human is facing, in line with Katherine Behar’s ‘deceleration’.

What’s to be done after the deconstruction of the data cult? Often a void is 
felt after a rigorous exposure to the colonial core of today’s data practices. 
(7) Dismantling data colonialism will need to stress the invisible aspect of 
structural violence. And deal with the attractive side of ‘free’ apps and 
connectivity. This is offered, for instance, by Facebook, in places where mass 
poverty is used as a pretext for large scale extrativism in exchange for free 
services. Will ‘peak data’ in this context mean infrastructural breakdown? 
There must be an exit strategy developed, otherwise there is little else to do 
than resting on imperial ruins while still locked inside geo-political 
confinements. Users are not slaves, we need more precise categories here. 
Racism and discrimination are very real. Yet, they may not happen on the spot, 
on the visual interface level. Data are sold and stored and sorted, to be used 
later. Such delay and reframing can cause an unexpected revenge act where users 
are surprised by data that suddenly pops up and is used against them.

One day, soon, people will wake up in disbelief, realizing that data is dead. 
The point is not to overcome the dark side of data, regulate IT giants and 
establish ‘responsible’ governance but to lay networked data amassing aside. 
Once system maintenance subsides, data gathering regimes fall in disrepair. 
Relational databases may still exist but one day they will simply stop 
bothering us. Fuelled by organized unbelief the invasive, sneaky, manipulative 
side of the measure mania fades away. Rarely anyone will remember the data 
religion.

—

1. Jörg Später, Siegfried Krakauer, Eine Biographie, Suhrkamp Verlag, Berlin, 
2016, p. 504.

2. https://thenewinquiry.com/view-from-nowhere/ 
<https://thenewinquiry.com/view-from-nowhere/>
3. Katherine Behar, Bigger Than You: Big Data and Obesity, Punktum Books, 
Earth, Milky Way, 2016, p. 39. This is also the argument of Wendy Chun’s 
Discriminating Data, MIT Press, Cambridge (Mass.), 2021.

4. Reference in friendly dialogue with 
https://www.digitalearth.art/vertical-atlas 
<https://www.digitalearth.art/vertical-atlas>.

5. Katherine Behar, p.10.

6. This line of thought is inspired by Sunny Dhillon’s valuable analysis of the 
role decolonization rhetoric is playing inside the neoliberal university: 
https://convivialthinking.org/index.php/2021/09/25/critique-of-decolonisation-projects/
 
<https://convivialthinking.org/index.php/2021/09/25/critique-of-decolonisation-projects/>.
 Slightly adjusted to the context here, he writes: “The theorist and activist 
entangled in the neoliberal university must resist piecemeal approach to a 
neatly packable, commodified rendering of supposed decolonial data practice. 
They must, instead, expend their energies on a relentless immanent critique of 
the discourses surrounding data decolonisation.”

7. Respect to the work of Nick Couldry and Ulises Ali Mejias. In particular 
their article The decolonial turn in data and technology research: what is at 
stake and where is it heading? 
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/1369118X.2021.1986102 
<https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/1369118X.2021.1986102>. The 
authors mention the principles of the Non-Aligned Technologies Movement, which 
are close to the ‘peak data’ exhaustion/data prevention agenda presented here: 
“Boycotting of extractivist technologies and the use of alternative tools; 
divestment at local and national government levels from Big Tech (by not buying 
or accepting their ‘free’ products); the re-appropriation of data (and the 
products of data) on behalf of those who generate it; the implementation of 
taxes and sanctions against  Big Tech to repair the damage done by their 
technologies; the bolstering of public education – in the form of citizen 
research, literacy campaigns, decolonial thinking – to understand the dangers 
of data colonialism (..).”


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