The Internet Fosters Collectivism

The way the internet has gone sour since then is truly perverse. The central faith of the web’s early design has been superseded by a different faith in the centrality of imaginary entities epitomized by the idea that the internet as a whole is coming alive and turning into a superhuman creature.

[...]

he way we got here is that one subculture of technologists has recently become more influential than the others. The winning subculture doesn’t have a formal name, but I’ve sometimes called the members “cybernetic totalists” or “digital Maoists.”

[...]

The central mistake of recent digital culture is to chop up a network of individuals so finely that you end up with a mush. You then start to care about the abstraction of the network more than the real people who are networked, even though the network by itself is meaningless. Only the people were ever meaningful.

[...]

The same thing is happening again. A self-proclaimed materialist movement that attempts to base itself on science starts to look like a religion rather quickly. It soon presents its own eschatology and its own revelations about what is really going on—portentous events that no one but the initiated can appreciate. The Singularity and the noosphere, the idea that a collective consciousness emerges from all the users on the web, echo Marxist social determinism and Freud’s calculus of perversions. We rush ahead of skeptical, scientific inquiry at our peril, just like the Marxists and Freudians.

Notes:

The internet was supposed to empower individuals, but instead we see it as a collective, central point of all culture.

Folksonomies: culture internet

Taxonomies:
/science/weather/meteorological disaster (0.576696)
/religion and spirituality/christianity (0.571546)
/art and entertainment/music/music genres/hip hop (0.571081)

Keywords:
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Entities:
Freud:Person (0.743652 (negative:-0.346097))

Concepts:
World Wide Web (0.984330): dbpedia | freebase | yago
Philosophy (0.862428): dbpedia | freebase | opencyc
Sociology (0.823299): dbpedia | freebase | opencyc
Computer network (0.735106): dbpedia | freebase | opencyc
Internet (0.592859): dbpedia | freebase | opencyc
English-language films (0.585681): dbpedia
Marxism (0.551413): dbpedia | freebase | opencyc | yago
Determinism (0.536446): dbpedia | freebase

 You Are Not A Gadget
Books, Brochures, and Chapters>Book:  Lanier, Jaron (2010-01-28), You Are Not A Gadget, Penguin, Retrieved on 2012-01-03
  • Source Material [books.google.com]
  • Folksonomies: