| You Are Not a Gadget: A Manifesto |  | Author: Jaron Lanier Publisher: Knopf Category: Book
List Price: $24.95 Buy New: $14.09 as of 3/18/2010 01:53 CDT details
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Rating: 22 reviews Sales Rank: 1,296
Format: Deckle Edge Media: Hardcover Edition: 1 Pages: 224 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.8 Dimensions (in): 8.2 x 5.6 x 1
ISBN: 0307269647 Dewey Decimal Number: 303.4833 EAN: 9780307269645
Publication Date: January 12, 2010 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| • | ISBN13: 9780307269645 | | • | Condition: NEW | | • | Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark. |
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Amazon.com Review Amazon Best Books of the Month, January 2010: For the most part, Web 2.0--Internet technologies that encourage interactivity, customization, and participation--is hailed as an emerging Golden Age of information sharing and collaborative achievement, the strength of democratized wisdom. Jaron Lanier isn't buying it. In You Are Not a Gadget, the longtime tech guru/visionary/dreadlocked genius (and progenitor of virtual reality) argues the opposite: that unfettered--and anonymous--ability to comment results in cynical mob behavior, the shouting-down of reasoned argument, and the devaluation of individual accomplishment. Lanier traces the roots of today's Web 2.0 philosophies and architectures (e.g. he posits that Web anonymity is the result of '60s paranoia), persuasively documents their shortcomings, and provides alternate paths to "locked-in" paradigms. Though its strongly-stated opinions run against the bias of popular assumptions, You Are Not a Gadget is a manifesto, not a screed; Lanier seeks a useful, respectful dialogue about how we can shape technology to fit culture's needs, rather than the way technology currently shapes us.
A Q&A with Author Jaron Lanier Question: As one of the first visionaries in Silicon Valley, you saw the initial promise the internet held. Two decades later, how has the internet transformed our lives for the better? Jaron Lanier: The answer is different in different parts of the world. In the industrialized world, the rise of the Web has happily demonstrated that vast numbers of people are interested in being expressive to each other and the world at large. This is something that I and my colleagues used to boldly predict, but we were often shouted down, as the mainstream opinion during the age of television’s dominance was that people were mostly passive consumers who could not be expected to express themselves. In the developing world, the Internet, along with mobile phones, has had an even more dramatic effect, empowering vast classes of people in new ways by allowing them to coordinate with each other. That has been a very good thing for the most part, though it has also enabled militants and other bad actors. Question: You argue the web isn’t living up to its initial promise. How has the internet transformed our lives for the worse? Jaron Lanier: The problem is not inherent in the Internet or the Web. Deterioration only began around the turn of the century with the rise of so-called "Web 2.0" designs. These designs valued the information content of the web over individuals. It became fashionable to aggregate the expressions of people into dehumanized data. There are so many things wrong with this that it takes a whole book to summarize them. Here’s just one problem: It screws the middle class. Only the aggregator (like Google, for instance) gets rich, while the actual producers of content get poor. This is why newspapers are dying. It might sound like it is only a problem for creative people, like musicians or writers, but eventually it will be a problem for everyone. When robots can repair roads someday, will people have jobs programming those robots, or will the human programmers be so aggregated that they essentially work for free, like today’s recording musicians? Web 2.0 is a formula to kill the middle class and undo centuries of social progress. Question: You say that we’ve devalued intellectual achievement. How? Jaron Lanier: On one level, the Internet has become anti-intellectual because Web 2.0 collectivism has killed the individual voice. It is increasingly disheartening to write about any topic in depth these days, because people will only read what the first link from a search engine directs them to, and that will typically be the collective expression of the Wikipedia. Or, if the issue is contentious, people will congregate into partisan online bubbles in which their views are reinforced. I don’t think a collective voice can be effective for many topics, such as history--and neither can a partisan mob. Collectives have a power to distort history in a way that damages minority viewpoints and calcifies the art of interpretation. Only the quirkiness of considered individual expression can cut through the nonsense of mob--and that is the reason intellectual activity is important. On another level, when someone does try to be expressive in a collective, Web 2.0 context, she must prioritize standing out from the crowd. To do anything else is to be invisible. Therefore, people become artificially caustic, flattering, or otherwise manipulative. Web 2.0 adherents might respond to these objections by claiming that I have confused individual expression with intellectual achievement. This is where we find our greatest point of disagreement. I am amazed by the power of the collective to enthrall people to the point of blindness. Collectivists adore a computer operating system called LINUX, for instance, but it is really only one example of a descendant of a 1970s technology called UNIX. If it weren’t produced by a collective, there would be nothing remarkable about it at all. Meanwhile, the truly remarkable designs that couldn’t have existed 30 years ago, like the iPhone, all come out of "closed" shops where individuals create something and polish it before it is released to the public. Collectivists confuse ideology with achievement. Question: Why has the idea that "the content wants to be free" (and the unrelenting embrace of the concept) been such a setback? What dangers do you see this leading to? Jaron Lanier: The original turn of phrase was "Information wants to be free." And the problem with that is that it anthropomorphizes information. Information doesn’t deserve to be free. It is an abstract tool; a useful fantasy, a nothing. It is nonexistent until and unless a person experiences it in a useful way. What we have done in the last decade is give information more rights than are given to people. If you express yourself on the internet, what you say will be copied, mashed up, anonymized, analyzed, and turned into bricks in someone else’s fortress to support an advertising scheme. However, the information, the abstraction, that represents you is protected within that fortress and is absolutely sacrosanct, the new holy of holies. You never see it and are not allowed to touch it. This is exactly the wrong set of values. The idea that information is alive in its own right is a metaphysical claim made by people who hope to become immortal by being uploaded into a computer someday. It is part of what should be understood as a new religion. That might sound like an extreme claim, but go visit any computer science lab and you’ll find books about "the Singularity," which is the supposed future event when the blessed uploading is to take place. A weird cult in the world of technology has done damage to culture at large. Question: In You Are Not a Gadget, you argue that idea that the collective is smarter than the individual is wrong. Why is this? Jaron Lanier: There are some cases where a group of people can do a better job of solving certain kinds of problems than individuals. One example is setting a price in a marketplace. Another example is an election process to choose a politician. All such examples involve what can be called optimization, where the concerns of many individuals are reconciled. There are other cases that involve creativity and imagination. A crowd process generally fails in these cases. The phrase "Design by Committee" is treated as derogatory for good reason. That is why a collective of programmers can copy UNIX but cannot invent the iPhone. In the book, I go into considerably more detail about the differences between the two types of problem solving. Creativity requires periodic, temporary "encapsulation" as opposed to the kind of constant global openness suggested by the slogan "information wants to be free." Biological cells have walls, academics employ temporary secrecy before they publish, and real authors with real voices might want to polish a text before releasing it. In all these cases, encapsulation is what allows for the possibility of testing and feedback that enables a quest for excellence. To be constantly diffused in a global mush is to embrace mundanity. (Photo © Jonathan Sprague)
Product Description Jaron Lanier, a Silicon Valley visionary since the 1980s, was among the first to predict the revolutionary changes the World Wide Web would bring to commerce and culture. Now, in his first book, written more than two decades after the web was created, Lanier offers this provocative and cautionary look at the way it is transforming our lives for better and for worse.
The current design and function of the web have become so familiar that it is easy to forget that they grew out of programming decisions made decades ago. The web’s first designers made crucial choices (such as making one’s presence anonymous) that have had enormousâand often unintendedâconsequences. What’s more, these designs quickly became “locked in,” a permanent part of the web’s very structure.
Lanier discusses the technical and cultural problems that can grow out of poorly considered digital design and warns that our financial markets and sites like Wikipedia, Facebook, and Twitter are elevating the “wisdom” of mobs and computer algorithms over the intelligence and judgment of individuals.
Lanier also shows: How 1960s antigovernment paranoia influenced the design of the online world and enabled trolling and trivialization in online discourse How file sharing is killing the artistic middle class; How a belief in a technological “rapture” motivates some of the most influential technologists Why a new humanistic technology is necessary.
Controversial and fascinating, You Are Not a Gadget is a deeply felt defense of the individual from an author uniquely qualified to comment on the way technology interacts with our culture.
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Showing reviews 1-5 of 22
A Manifesto For Cyber Humanization March 15, 2010 Barry Linetsky (Ontario, Canada) Lanier was an early developer and designer of computer software, including virtual reality. In this "Manifesto" he takes aim at the dehumanizing aspects of computer technology and warns that designers must be careful that the infrastructures they build are flexible enough to promote and encourage, rather than stifle, human individuality and creativity.
For me, his explanation of "lock-in" - the ease by which later software developers build on early foundations thereby forcing users to adapt to their structures - was interesting. Instead of encouraging creativity across digital culture, lock-in results in overwhelming blandness. This has a pernicious effect on society, and, along with a developing ideology, is a contributing factor to what Lanier sees as an emerging cybernetic totalism.
It is against this totalism that his manifesto is primarily aimed.
Lanier puts forward some interesting observations about how an anarchist anti-man/pro-machine ideology permeates the high ranks of digital and web culture. Many believe he web to be a living force - a conscious mind - giving it the status of being god-like, while actual living human beings are but a collective and undifferentiated mass. Lanier calls it the hive-mind. A pack mentality replaces the phenomena of individual intelligence.
Like Marxists of old, these new-age sci-fiists who consider themselves enlightened to the new world order act to promote the coming meta silicon consciousness and thereby strike out at naive individualism. It is the new religion of a collectivist "singularity" in which people "hope to become immortal by being uploaded into a computer someday." This active ideology in which artificial intelligence replaces human intelligence does not require human morality. From this wacky metaphysics rises what Lanier calls an "ideology of violation."
This ideology of violation, says Lanier, is promoted and encouraged at the highest levels of the cybernetic totalist movement - the university professors - and promotes and encourages online anonymity and online bullying, harassment, hacking, and even murder. It is an ideology of anarcho-nihilism that promotes an unadulterated hatred for mankind through a repudiation of natural rights necessary to protect individualism and freedom.
Those aspects of Lanier's book in which he discusses the anti-humanizing effects of techno-ideology and it's emerging movements are insightful, making this an important book. Other aspects are over my head and likely of interest only to those to whom the name Jaron Lanier is recognizable.
There is a n excellent interview with Mr. Lanier on his amazon.com book page here:
http://www.amazon.com/You-Are-Not-Gadget-Manifesto/dp/0307269647/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1268665604&sr=8-1
Slightly naive but nevertheless insightful March 15, 2010 Marcin Wyszynski (Dublin, Ireland) Lanier certainly has a different vibe than most famous technologists. Since late 1980s he was warning us that the cult of databases would lead us to a limited notion of personhood, that through binary choices we will start to think about ourselves in a more mechanized way. This makes his line of thought close to that of Sherry Turkle and -if we dig deeper - with the foucauldian concept of grids of specifications and grand narrations. Very insightful and profound thinking, a valid critique of all things Web 2.0.
Alas, Lanier is hardly an accomplished scholar in the field of social sciences - he is a technologist and an artist but neither a sociologist or psychologist. As such, he lacks the perspective which could help him see how his own rant assumes a certain vision of personhood and human 'nature' which came to being with the rise of Western individualism - not more than 100-150 years ago. While Lanier's voice is valuable as one of the very few enlightened luddites, he still fails to join a broader discourse about changing frameworks of human knowledge and self-identification.
Won't mention some looney ideas like songles or cephalopods. Only the 1st part of the book is readable.
Flawed but important March 14, 2010 dan() possumpalace.org (Sydney, Australia) As much as I disagreed with the bulk of Lanier's argument ins whole or part, I feel that those arguments, and the way in which he makes them, are a useful contribution to the debate.
The good arguments first. Does the polarisation of copyright depate around Creative Commons and traditional copyright obscure a third-way of content licensing? Are license that promote individual, inter-personal contributions what we are missing in our all or nothing approach? Does the worse-is-better approach to standards ignore the lifetimes fo the software systems that they leave us with? Is there any other way of doing it? Useful questions to have coming from an insider.
Other things Lanier could do better - For example, in the discussion about the conflict between the anonymous mass collaboration of Wikipedia, and the intellectual achievement of smaller, more closed academic teams, Lanier makes some interesting points about the boundary between the best of mass collaboration (crowdsourcing) and the worst (design-by-committee). He explores the success of collaborative models in code development, and in creativity projects, and in that tricky zone of user interface design in the middle. This is not new though, it's a thriving field of research that he should probably engage with at least momentarily. I quite like the simulation-based introduction in Miller and Page, but there's a whole crowd-behaviour literature out there across several disciplines that is invisible to Lanier.
Finally, a pet peeve: Lanier, as a musician, fails to credit any musical genre since hip hop as a tradition worthy of the name. Not OK. Maybe genres like UK grime, dubstep, folktronica, plunderphonics, 2step, grunge and post-rock are not as mass market or as long lived as hip hop, but in part that's about how you define genre. Are those downtempo gangster beats even in the same school as west-coast hyphy or Avant-garde Anticon? That kind of sweeping dismissal of the labour of two generations of musicians isn't the sort of thing you can do in a paragraph without sounding either uninformed or arrogant. Definitely the point in the book where he crossed the line from engaging me with interesting arguments over to annoying me with a sweeping generalisation.
Many Personal Conflicts March 13, 2010 Mike Johnson (Victoria, BC) 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
This book provoked many personal conflicts for me. For instance there is a bit of the "mashed" about it which is fine. I am open to the "mashed" approach as it too sparks many unforeseen associations. Mr. Lanier has certainly had many experiences in computing and the sciences that I read about for the first time in this book and for this alone I am immensely grateful. I do not even have a position on synthetic biology! If you are interested in such issues as the role of a cultural elite in guiding society there is much to consider here. I kept thinking about the French Revolution and the tendency of "The Revolution" to consume its own children. One point is that younger people today seem almost incredibly flattened in terms of the depth of their expression and I have been wondering about how this might have happened. Thank You Jaron Lanier.
A vital counterpoint to Web 2.0 hysteria March 8, 2010 Carl Zetie (Virginia USA) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
About once a year I read a book that doesn't merely teach me some new facts or a new technique, but actually changes my perspective on an important topic. I think I found that book for this year: "You Are Not A Gadget" by Jaron Lanier. It's essentially a call to arms against the depersonalizing and ultimately dehumanizing effects of the Web 2.0 aesthetic: the ideas that authorship matters less than aggregation; that crowds and mass consensus always produce better results than individual perspectives; that information "wants to be free", as if information has a life of its own independent of the mind that interprets it.
Lanier eloquently and passionately refutes this entire mindset while demonstrating the subtle, often unforeseen, yet pernicious effects that software design choices have in restricting the ways we are able to think about our relationships to information, the world around us and, most importantly, other people.
Even if you are a passionate supporter of Web 2.0 and disagree with Lanier's thesis, this book is important enough to read to understand how Web 2.0 is coming to be perceived by an important and influential minority. I'm a believer in the value of reading viewpoints you disagree with (as I said in my negative review of The Numerati -- and yes, there's a good reason I bring that up here...). This book is one everybody should read, whether they accept or reject Lanier's premise.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 22
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