Biella Coleman (one of our list.lurkers) is uniquely qualified to write
about the anthropology of the hacking underground. In her current paper,
she asks an interesting question: why are hackers/crackers so much more
political than people in other lines of work?

Thoughts?

Udhay

http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/pdfplus/10.1086/688697

<q>

Hackers and their projects have become routine, authoritative, and public
participants in our daily geopolitical goings-on. There are no obvious,
much less given, explanations as to why a socially and economically
privileged group of actors, once primarily defined by obscure tinkering and
technical exploration, is now so willing to engage in popular media
advocacy, traditional policy- and law-making, political tool building, and
especially forms of direct action and civil disobedience so risky that
scores of hackers are currently in jail or exile for their willingness to
expose wrongdoing. Why and how have hackers managed to preserve pockets of
autonomy? What historical, cultural, and sociological conditions have
facilitated their passage into the political arena, especially in such
large numbers? Why do a smaller but still notable fraction risk their
privilege with acts of civil disobedience? These are questions that beg for
nuanced answers—beyond the blind celebration or denigration offered by
popular characterizations of hacker politics. In this article I will
provide an introductory inventory—a basic outline of the sociocultural
attributes and corollary historical conditions—responsible for the
intensification of hacker politics during the last 5 years.

</q>

-- 

((Udhay Shankar N)) ((udhay @ pobox.com)) ((www.digeratus.com))

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