karaite on 7 Dec 2000 21:05:43 -0000 |
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[Nettime-bold] Re: <nettime> They came, they surfed, they went back to the beach |
> Even more rare is the recognition of the possibility > that people might make an informed choice not to > continue to use the internet. While I agree that the way in which people oscillate around access to the internet over time is an important area to look into, I am happy to be completely mystified by the usefulness of recognising such a possibility as this 'informed choice not to continue to use the internet'. Such a concept is up there with the rarely recognised possibility that a person might make an informed choice not to read any more books, not to make any further use of the French language, the telephone, or the wok, or not to listen to any more music in the key of E. It is a rarely recognised possibility because it is almost entirely devoid of meaning and as the points of access become more widespread, becomes still less meaningful. Quite apart from anything else, how would an informed ex-internet user ensure that they remained so informed, lest they accidentally use the internet again? Does it count if someone else uses the internet on their behalf? (Has an offline friend never asked you to look this or that thing up for them, or, instead, asked you something or other that you could only answer via Google...) What constitutes 'use' on this periphery? And, bluntly, who cares? There are no more informed ex-internet users than there are informed ex-book readers or informed ex-newspaper readers. With any technology that is centered around information and information flow, you cease to be informed at the point that you cease to use it and to keep yourself informed about it. Ceasing to use the internet because it is 'boring' is *exactly* like ceasing to read books because they are 'boring'. It is hard to argue with such a view - obviously, if all books are boring there is no point in suggesting that perhaps *this* book is interesting, since the decision has already been made that all books are boring, so *this* book too must be boring. Similarly, anyone who has decided that anything reached via the internet is boring is not going to be interested in nettime, slashdot, kuro5hin, the onion, amazon, whatever, since they already know that these things are all boring. Must be. After all, how hard is it to make an informed decision not to use that boring internet world comprised of nothing but smelly dysfunctional frustrated young white men? The headline that springs to mind is along the lines of 'Dull Unimaginative People In Can't Find Interesting Material Online Non-Shock' but any research into this matter is likely to end up in the JoStBO (Journal of Stating the Bleeding Obvious). Surely it's far more interesting and worthwhile to look at ways of getting access for the remaining many millions of intelligent informed people who are not yet online than it is to look at why unintelligent closed-minded people who find the online world 'boring' so do. Such people presumably also find books and newspapers intrinsically boring, tabloid or otherwise, and switch TV channels away from news and documentaries religiously. It is possible that there are intelligent literate people out there who cannot get their heads around the concept of a genuine candidate for the nearest real-life thing to Borges' library ever, but there aren't many and their number diminishes all the time as the lightbulbs finally click on one by one. It all reminds me of another (much shorter and equally imaginary) JoStBO article - 'Heart Of Nothing - Encounters With The Marginalised Voices Of People With No Ideas Of Their Own And Nothing To Say'. *sigh* wayne http://www.waz.easynet.co.uk/ __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Yahoo! Shopping - Thousands of Stores. Millions of Products. http://shopping.yahoo.com/ _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list [email protected] http://www.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold