McKenzie Wark on Sat, 2 Nov 2002 13:15:49 +0100 (CET)


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Re: <nettime> From Tactical Media to Digital Multitudes



Lovink and Schneider ask the right question in 'A Virtual World is
Possible'. What is to be done? Unfortunately, they have not done it. Yes,
there is a need for a political position outside of the dialectic of the
street and cyberspace. Yes, there is a need for a new position for new
media outside of the dialectic of the media market and the art market. And
yes, the place to look is in deconstructing the techno-libertarian
ideologies of the 90s. But what is required at this juncture is a tool
with which to prise it open to discover how it worked.

He was wrong about a lot of things, but Marx did enjoin us to ask what he
called "the property question", and insisted that it was where the
critical spirit begins and ends. And what if we ask the "property
question" of the jumble of symptoms with which Lovink & Schneider confront
us? The network of power starts to reveal itself more clearly.

Did the new movements arise out of thin air? Or did they arise out of a
new stage in the development of the commodity economy? At both the level
of the tools it had at its disposal, and the range of issues it
confronted, the new movement confronts a new class power. Only rarely is
this class power named and identified at an abstract level. The symptoms
of its (mis)rule have been charted by brave advocates and actvists. But we
are all merely blind folks touching different parts of an elephant and
trying to describe the totality from the detail we sense before us, in our
fragment of everyday life.

So let's ask the property question of all the fragments of resistance that
appear to us in everyday life. Start in the underdeveloped world. How is
it possible that the productive engines of commodity society find
themselves shipped, by and large, out of the overdeveloped world and into
the under- dveloped world? What new power makes it possible to consign the
manufacturing level of production to places deprived of technical and
knowledge infrastructure? A new division of labour makes it possible to
cut the mere making of things off from all of their other properties. The
research, design and marketing will remain, on the whole, in the over-
developed world, and will be protected by a new and increasingly global
regime of property, intellectual property. As for the rest, whole
continents can compete for dubious honour of mere manufacturing.

What makes this separation possible is at one and the same time a legal
and a technical distinction. Information emerges as a separate realm, a
world apart as Lovink has perceptively argued for some time. But he has
not stopped to inquire is to how or why, and without first asking how or
why we cannot get far with the big question,: what is to be done. So let's
look closely at the way the development of a *vectoral* technology has
made possible a relative separation from its materiality. Which is not to
say that information is immaterial. Rather, it has an *abstract* relation
to the material. It no longer matters to its integrity as information
whether it is embodied in this cd-rom or that flashcard or that stack of
paper.

A virtual world is indeed possible, precisely because of this coming into
existence of abstract information. But what is information? The product of
a labor of encoding and decoding. Just as the commodity economy made
manual labor abstract in the machine age, so too it has made intellectual
labor abstract in the information age.

But the virtual world finds itself constrained by a form of property alien
to it. No longer confine to a particular materiality, information really
does yearn to be free. But it is not free, it is everywhere in chains. It
is forced into the constraint of a very new creation -- intellectual
property. On the ruins of the commons that copyright and patent were once
supposed to guarrantee arises an absolute privatisation of information as
property.

And so, with a whole new -- virtual -- continent to claim as its own,
class power finds a new basis, and remakes that other world, the everyday
world, in its image. The abstraction of information from materiality as a
legal and technical possibility becomes the shape of the world. A world in
which the mere embodiment of a concept in a commodity can be consigned to
bidding wars between the desperate.

This bifurcation affects both the agricultural and the manufacturing
economies. The patents on seed stocks are of a piece with the copyrights
on designer logos. Both are a means by which a new class power asserts its
place in the world, based not on the ownership of land or of physical
maunfacturing plant, but in the concepts and designs on which the world
will be set to labour.

In the overdeveloped world, one discovers symptoms of the same emerging
totality. Workers in manufacturing struggle to hang on to jobs in an
economy that they alone are no longer the only ones equipped to do. So
called 'state monopoly capital' is a mere husk of its former self. The
emerging class interest has a very different relation to the state.

Meanwhile, there are the various phenomena of the 'new economy'. While the
bubble may have burst, there is a risk in too low an evaluation of the
significance of the media and communication revolution as an over reaction
to the excessive optimism of the 90s. Just as railways and the telegraph
created a boom and bust, but also created an enduring geography of
economic and strategic power, so too has the latest, digital, phase in the
development of the vector.

One should not right off the military dimension to the new class power
quite as readily as Lovink and Schneider do, either. On the one hand it is
the old oil-power politics. But there is a new dimension, a new confidence
in the ability to use the new vectoral military technologies as a cheap
and efficient way of achieving global redistirbutions of power. The same
abstraction of information from materiality that happens in technology and
is sanctioned by intellectual property law is happening in military
technology. The military wing of the new class interest wants a 'new' new
world order to ratify its exercise.

This is not your grandparents ruling class we are confronting here. It is
a new entity, or a new entity in formation. Perhaps it is a new fraction
of capital. Perhaps it is a new kind of ruling class altogether. Remember,
there have been two, not one but two, phases to rule in the commodity
econmy era. It has already passed through an agricultural and a
manufacturing phase. In each case it developed out of the a distictive
step in the abstraction of property law. First came the privatisation of
land, and out of it a landlord class. Then came the privatisation of
productive resources, a more mobile, labile kind of property, and a new
ruling class -- the capitalist class proper. And perhaps, with the
emergence of the new global regime of intellectual property, we witness
the emergence of a new ruling class, what I would call the vectoralist
class.

As each ruling class is based on a more abstract form of property, and a
more flexible kind of vector, than its predecessor, its mode of ruling
also becomes more abstract, more intangible. Its ideologues would love to
persuade us that the ruling class no longer even exists. And yet its
handiwork are everywhere, in the subordination of the underdeveloped world
to new regimes of slavery, to the slow motion implosion of maunfacturing
economy in the overdeveloped world, to the deployment of ever faster, ever
sleeker vectors along which ever more abstract flows of information
shuttle, making the world over in the abstract image of the commodity.

And what is to be done? One does not confront the new abstract totality
with rhetorics of multiplicity alone. Rather, one looks for the
abstraction at work in the world that is capable of producing such a
multiplicity of everyday experiences of frustration, boredom and
suffering. One asks the property question, and in asking it is lef toward
a practice that constitutes the answer.

This is where so-called new media art has proven to be both so useful at
times, but so willing to cooperate in its own cooptation. When artists
explore not just the technology, but its property dimension as well, then
they create work that has the capacity to point beyond the privatisation
of information that forms the basis of the power of the vectoral class.
The new media art that matters is counter-vectoral. It offers itself as a
tool for prising open the privatisation of information.

"Information merely circles in a parallel world of its own", as Lovink and
Schneider say, precisely because of the abstraction it undergoes when it
becomes vectoral. The counter-vectoral reconnects information to the
multiplicity by freeing it from the straightjacket of private property.
Indeed, there can be no talk of 'multitude' until this aspect of its
existence is properly understood. Multitudes do not exist independently of
their means of communication. The freeing of that means of communication
from the abstraction of the commodity form is the necessary step towards
realising the counter-abstraction that is latent in the formal concept of
the multitude. A virtual world -- virtual in the true sense -- is indeed
possible. It is what is to be done.

McKenzie Wark
see also:
A hacker manifesto
http://subsol.c3.hu/subsol_2/contributors0/warktext.html






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