Patrice Riemens on Wed, 29 Nov 2017 12:21:55 +0100 (CET)


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Re: <nettime> Critical literature on big tech corps?



Aloha,

And to Ted's brilliant, if very literary (as usual) explanation, one might add Saskia Sassen's rejoinder in a recent interview that ours is not the digital age, as many think, but the age of finance. Plus ca change et ... plus ca change - while staying the same, sortof.

http://kingsreview.co.uk/articles/interview-saskia-sassen/

Cheers to all, and take care
p+7D!

On 2017-11-29 06:27, Zapopan Muela wrote:
Hi Kasper
I wrote this couple of years ago. Chances are you find it interesting
:

Muela Meza, Z.M., 2006. The age of the corporate State versus the
informational and cognitive public domain. _Information for Social
Change_, (23), pp.75-98.
http://eprints.uanl.mx/1740/

Cheers

Zapopan Muela

El nov 27, 2017 5:10 AM, "Kasper Skov" <[email protected]>
escribió:

Wow, so many (lengthy) replies. Did not expects this amount of
references. Will get the books, read and hopefully gain some new
knowledge on the way.

Thanks everyone!

Med venlig hilsen/Kind regards
Kasper Skov Christensen
Phone: 42 41 93 98
Ph.d. Student #digitaldesign @ Aarhus University Denmark

_Design and Tech Consultant,__ Techno DJ and producer, Hacker_

On 26 Nov 2017, at 19:22, t byfield <[email protected]> wrote:

All these suggestions so far seem good, but they mainly focus on
'tech' corporations, as if to suggest that some diffuse idea of
technology is categorically different from everything else that
corporations have been doing for centuries. One big problem with
this is the relationship between these corporations and technology
— say, whether it's a product or service, an instrument, or a
mechanism for some sort of arbitrage. If we lump all those things
together under a category like 'tech,' it's no wonder that the
result seems mysterious. So it's also worth thinking of 'technology'
as yet another potent widget. There have been and are other potent
widgets: uppers (sugar, caffeine, tobacco, coca) and downers
(alcohol), opiates, weapons, ~crops (cotton, indigo), and fuels
(fossil fuels and even wood), 'media' (film, journalism), and of
course human beings (slavery and other forms of peonage). Obviously,
there are brilliant histories of how these other ~widgets have
served, if you like, as arbitrary platforms or media or whatever for
exploiting and distorting societies at every level. Thinking about
technology in this light is helpful for developing a more
articulate, less mystified model of what 'tech' corporations are,
how they work, and their changing place in wider human ecologies.
One benefit of this is that it helps us to recognize the corporation
*as such* as a technology, which opens up another kind of critical
literature — about their history and evolution. I only have a
passing knowledge of that field, but I think the 1970s and early
1980s were a good time for work was both critical and accessible,
like Richard Barnet and Ronald Müller's _Global Reach: The Power of
Multinational Corporations_. If we want to understand current tech
corporations, it's helpful to understand how their expertise in
manipulating jurisdictional and regional disparities regarding data
is rooted in older techniques — for example, technology transfer
arrangements in which a multinational would sell its manufacturing
assets to its foreign subsidiaries in order to exploit multiple
national tax regimes — by writing off the initial capital
investment, depreciating it, 'selling' it at a notional loss,
writing it off as a capital investment, ad nauseam — and profiting
every step of the way. In that sense, as they used to say, data
really is the new oil — not as the supposed 'smart' fuel or engine
of 'new economies,' but as yet another arbitrary dumb commodity that
can be used to exploit relational differences. That's borne out by,
for example, the high-level chicanery of techniques like the 'double
Irish' exemption, in which a few pages of legal documents translate
into billions of profit by companies like Google. This approach to
thinking about corporations is also validated by a few crucial
current developments, mainly the rising power of 'offshore'
jurisdictions and multilateral trade treaties. These two phenomena
aren't at all concerned with the visible specific concerns of
particular corporations — for example, whether they're 'tech.'
Instead, these developments are concerned with corporations as such
— their supposed rights, powers, and obligations relative to
states and societies. Regulating data *on the basis of its
specificity* is important, as Wolfie Christl and Sarah Spiekermann
argue, but we shouldn't confuse it with regulating corporations as
such. The wild claim that 'technology' has changed everything so we
need radically totalizing new laissez-faire regional and global
regimes, masks how little has changed; and it distracts us from the
need to revitalize global regulatory regimes focused on the mundane
procedures and structures that, ultimately, define what corporations
are are do, whatever their business happens to be.

To be clear, I'm not saying technology is the 'same' as tobacco or
whatever — it isn't. But a good rule is to assume that everything
is always different and, on that basis, to try to understand the
effects of those differences in various contexts. Which is why it's
important to demystify 'tech,' rather than treating it as a diffuse
power that enshrouds a handful of corporations.

Cheers,
Ted

On 25 Nov 2017, at 15:04, Vesna Manojlovic wrote:

Hi Kasper,

0. "I Hate the Internet" = a novel by Jarett Kobe
<...>

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