Hello,

Well, there is a difference between actual physical control and the propogated 
illusion of control (thanks Brian for bringing Foucault back into the 
discussion - I have the feeling he never left).  If we accept or passively 
follow the various socialising paradigms where mega-companies such as Google 
exercise ‘control’ then we fall into that behavioral abyss charted in 1984 and 
other dystopic works describing the collapse or devolution of democratic norms. 
As, perhaps, (as indicated below) what is important is maintaining, continuous 
invigorating, the terrain upon which the totalitarian nature of the neoliberal 
hyper-capitalist infrastructure can be contested. In this context 
decentralisation of forms/means of communication are an imperative - without 
vibrant discursive social spaces reflective of the social needs and desires 
that permeate daily life we are only so much fodder for the GoogleFacebook 
singularity, one-dimensional, social mechanisms.

"Sonja Buchegger is leading a group of scientists at KTH who are creating 
building blocks that developers could use to launch decentralized, distributed 
networks, which would not only be difficult to interfere with, but would also 
protect people from government snooping.

"The internet itself is not centralized – it would be hard to shut down," 
Buchegger says. "It was built as a robust, decentralized tool to communicate; 
and we can do the same for other services that are now centralized, like social 
networks."

Whether the demand for such networks would go mainstream any time soon is hard 
to tell. Buchegger notes that it is difficult for most people to wrap their 
head around the notion that their personal information is exposed on web-based 
email and social platforms.

"The whole privacy issue online is very young, and the population is not used 
to thinking in this way," she says. "Offline, we know how to protect our 
privacy; we know who can overhear us; we see who is in the room with us and we 
know whether we can trust those people; but online we haven't really grasped 
who the audience is and how that changes over time." 

Buchegger's research is focused on the privacy issues of distributed 
peer-to-peer (P2P) networks, that is, the underlying infrastructure for a 
decentralized system in which people could store their data beyond the reach of 
data miners or government surveillance."


Read more at: http://phys.org/news/2014-05-decentralized-networks-democracy.html

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