the death of email


The short history of email is the history of the Internet’s ‘killer application’; an application that couldn’t upscale to the commercial realities of the global stage. Spam killed email, volume killed email, chat killed email, RSS feeds, social software, wikis, and blogs killed email. For most people, what was once a tool that promised a networked conviviality, became the mind-bog of the information age.
RIP Email 2006

Dead Email

lectures

Date: Fri Dec 17 10:47:58 2004
lectures

Hi all,

I am not sure if people have seen this but as part of the Federation
Festival next month a number of international and national speakers will
bee in Melbourne talking about topics as broad as globalisation,
e-democracy and IT innovation. Some of the speakers include Edward Said,
Amartya Sen, and Susan Greenfield.

Some of the more relevant sessions for individuals from this list may
include the session on globalisation and the session on e*democracy and IT
innovation. Perhaps people could go to these sessions and be “democratic”
and “innovative” and introduce the speakers to more immediate and
challenging forms of democracy.

Dead Email

CHOGM

Date: Fri Dec 17 10:48:11 2004
CHOGM

Hi all,

I don’t know if I am missing something here, if the corporate media sphere
has fried my brain, but here are some of the democratically elected
governments that will attend CHOGM in Brisbane.

Bangladesh (I think the world’s poorest country)
Swaziland
Tuvalu
Tonga
Ghuna
Fiji
Lesotho

CHOGM has only 4 developed countries (5 if you count New Zealand :) out of
its 53 members.

I note that on the http://www.stopchogm.org/workers.htm Stop CHOGM web
site, that it says that CHOGM is “no different than the WEF or the WTO?” Am
I missing something here, how are they the same? I think that something
else looks mysteriously the same here (baaaaaaaaaarrrrrrrrrrrrrrr) Sorry,
I am more interested in what the elected government of Tonga has to say
about the world than
some Australian radicals.

I wonder, since when has being misinformed been radical? And what is
British Imperialism, sorry what Century are we in?

My grandmother from Lesotho is going to be at the meeting, talking about
the good old days in 1907 when she could spank naughty boys and girls on
the bottom for targeting the wrong people. CHOGM is one of the very
institutions that is and can be used to manage globalisation. Is the truth
too hard to engage with, or now we have ’self-publishing’ we are so much
better informed?

have a fine day old Chaps,

Dead Email

The New Frontier

I just found this article in Spark Online. It is about the shifting the
focus from cyberspace to cyberplace, (something that I have been grapeling
with over the past few months). Spark Online is an excellent journal if you
are not familiar with it. It has as sections on ESociety and a gallery,as
well as other stuff.

http://www.spark-online.com/issue22/fraim.html

“One of the main reasons cyberspace was chosen over local place was the
existence of the belief in its vast, seemingly boundless market. But this
market proved to be based mostly on ad click-throughs and banner
advertising. When the click-through model proved a failure much of the
cyberspace Internet became a failure also”.

Thanks for the comments, on the piece I posted. Will
think about it after I polish my gun.

Dead Email

The New Frontier

> Without having done the necessary thinking or research, and
hence
> setting myself up for pretty fast invalidation!, I’m inclined to
> think national sovereignty is not undergoing a crisis so much as
a
> transformation, one that indeed has had, as you outline,
devasting
> affects for many of those under the rule of sovereign power - but
> this is different from sovereignty itself having a crisis.

With the same caveat -I would tend to agree. One can suspect that
even globally operating multi-nationals need some body “on the ground”
to organize local infra-structure. In fact many modern “nation-states”
were formed as a result of colonial governmental structures which were
apparently developed in order to organize and stabilize the
activities of internationally “free” operating “colonial companies”
-such as the Dutch and British (East and West) “India Companies”.

On the other hand, there is also the relationship between (local)
ruler and ruled. This has been historically justified (in some theories)
by claiming an (implied) contract of mutual protection and support. In
a society of free individuals (the bourgeois ideal) this relationship
becomes problematic as the individuals become self sufficient and do
not wish to serve.

In this context, the concept of “insurance” is interesting -because
it is a purely monetary relationship. The company “cares” for the
insured party in times of need -but there is no “service” (outside the
payment of premium) in return.

Perhaps as an (unconscious?) extension of this purely monetary
economic relationship -many local governments seem to be considering
themselves to be geographically based “local companies” who provide
infra-structure in order to create conditions which are intended to
attract companies to participate. Although at present local populations
are probably largely formed on historical grounds -with freedom of
movement (such as for “members” of the European club) -then populations
will presumably gravitate to where conditions are most satisfactory
(probably upsetting the conditions as a result). Maybe (in some cases)
even large “transfer fees” will be needed to attract key personnel -just
as with the “local” football club (or university?). In key locations
where competition is high -then “fringe benefits” (such as landscape,
climate, culture, entertainment, etc.) may be essential elements in
attracting the desired participants/staff.

Survival of the nation-state (as economic player) may not be a
problem. The main problem could concern which logic should determine the
extent of the geographic location. The recent history of ethnic wars
shows that this is an extremely difficult and dangerous question.

As some nation-states fall apart -others are building conglomerates.
The question of Cathedrals and Bazaars apparently remains central -both
between the players and (as Ned points out) even within them.

Perhaps it is interesting to speculate how -free from real practical
restraints, we might organize a global system: What kind of
“players” would be required to create a viable and acceptable social and
economic environment? Do we require one (or more) super-powers to
preserve the balance of power -or can we really survive with a probable
power struggle among competing equal players? Could we survive
(economically) without competition? Considering the behaviour of some
local governments -what could we expect from a global government -how
could it be democratically organized and how can we protect ourselves
from it? Is representational (parliamentary), economic (consumerism) or
participatory democracy (activism) preferable -how should (enivitable)
conflicts be resolved? Should it be centrally organized, locally
organized or totally unorganized? Minority, majority, consensus or
conflict based rule?

Dead Email

The New Frontier

Nice to read of something kind of  familiar for a change, like Fitzroy. I’d be interested in reading  your next instalment though, because your title and a number of points raised offer much … and leave us waiting for the delivery!

The United States defines the ideology of globalisation and
Corporations are the main catalyst.

Here, I’m not sure. For a start, and as others on ::fc:: have raised
previously with respect to your gun-in-the-head swipes at the US,
your argument is not consistent. If, for instance, national
sovereignty has declined with the onset of globalisation - and this,
I think, is an argument that needs careful theorising and empirical
work - then surely the ‘US’ is a diverse, asynchronous
socio-political entity that is also subject to such changes? What
you’re hedging at is quite specific institutions I suspect, and I
think your argument would do better to name them upfront. It’s
pretty hard to argue that nation-states are defined by hegemonic
unity.

As for Corporations as the main catalyst - this too, I think, needs
to be tempered by considering other forces at work. Castells is one
among many (and indebted too many!) that recognises a prehistory to
corporate power predicated by the internationalisation and history of
communcations media & transport technologies - arguably the hardware
that makes possible the transnationalisation of corporations along,
of course, with that other key catalyst: the mobilisation of labour
and the attendant mingling of cultures.

So, in short, too short a take on what could be called the economic
sovereignty, as distinct from the popular sovereignty, of US
corporations and supranationally governed institutions (UN, IMF,
World Bank, etc).

Capitalism has always been international and relied on
internationalism to expand, but this has entered a new stage.

Here, I’m curious as to how you see the figurations of this ‘new
stage’. And, more than anything, I’m eagerly awaiting how you go
about articulating the historical everydayness of Fitzroy with
globality, beyond the waves of migration outline as characterising
that suburb.

> As Morley argues ?maintenance of national sovereignty and identity
>is becoming increasingly difficult, as the unities of economic and
>cultural production and consumption become increasingly
>transnational?.

Morley, of course, is reiterating a common line (one of many that
make up a close to plagiarised book, if you’re drawing on Home
Territories: Media, Mobility and Identity. Try and find a few lines
in there that aren’t a quote or paraphrase! Very handy for his
footnotes and synthesis of debates though.)
And it’s too simplistic a line, in my view. National sovereignty,
in its *modern* form, is closely articulated with institutions of the
state and the territory of the nation. This said, I think it’s
dubious for any post-colonial nation-state to assume ever to have
extinguished the sovereignty of the colonising power. While
currencies, populations, industries, legal systems and so forth may
be regulated by the nation, the residual power of a colonised or
displaced colonial imaginary is not to be underestimated and still
commands considerable authority: the cringe factor has still not
evacuated this nation’s culture. (And as Keating knew so well, for a
politician of this country, the relationship between culture and
economy is a mutually constitutive one.) In this respect, I think
it’s dubious to assume a history of absolute sovereignty for a nation
state like Australia. We still have monarchical rule, after all.

Without having done the necessary thinking or research, and hence
setting myself up for pretty fast invalidation!, I’m inclined to
think national sovereignty is not undergoing a crisis so much as a
transformation, one that indeed has had, as you outline, devasting
affects for many of those under the rule of sovereign power - but
this is different from sovereignty itself having a crisis.

National sovereignty is articulating itself through and with a
different informational and cultural architecture, in both material
and immaterial ways. The media event of the Sydney Olympics
demonstrated that national difference is as important as ever in the
quest to turn the wheels of capital accumulation, which has always
depended upon the differentiation of commodity objects - something
the unity-under-negotiation of the nation has managed to do since its
inception .

So, while the corporations that own the mode of production may have
become subject to transnational corporate usurptation, the identity
representations (if not interpellations - and there, sure, is a bit
of a key difference, though one might argue that representation is
conditioned by the possibilty of interpellation…) are still very
much about national difference. While the nation-state (with the
hyphen) as an entity aligned with national institutions and
geographic territory has lost some of its grasp of sovereignty with
the advent of, as you point out, the floating of the dollar and
corporatisation of public institutions, the sovereignty - as a
‘victory of one side over the other, a victory that makes the one
sovereign and the other the subject’ (Hardt & Negri) - of the
postmodern nation state still takes on national forms. The cultural
life of industries within the imaginary realm of the nation are
still, and necessarily, embedded in the empirical & aesthetic
multiplicity of social practices, and I’d hazzard to suggest a sort
of sovereignty of phenomenology is occurring at this level - or, more
simply, the rule of perception bounded by the materiality of
everydayness.

In the paper I posted to ::fc:: a few weeks back, I was starting
work that sought, in ways perhaps similar to yours, to demonstrate
that sovereignty is something up for grabs, but still something that
takes on figurations within the nation. Processes of deregulation
and so forth have freed up the space of sovereignty within the
nation. It’s what I’d call the materiality of virtuality. Something
that is highly contingent upon the loosening up of otherwise
sedentary variables. This may sound like a neoliberalist apology,
but there are possibilities for alternatives within such a
transformative space. Education is one. The legitimacy granted to
denationalised political subjects at a supranational level might hold
a symbolic authority, but this remains illegitimate until it is
successfully articulated with the symbolic and actual structures and
lives within the nation. The future of representative democracy, if
it isn’t a complete historical farce, is dependent on such processes
of recognition *within* the nation. Herein lies the present
condition for a future democracy, at least in its representative form.

Dead Email

The new frontier

The New Frontier

Hi Fibre, I have finally written something serious for once. If you have
any comments, then they would be more than appreciated. It is about
Australia and globalisation and Fitzroy and technology. It is a little
rough, but then again so are you lot.

(sorry no footnotes in email)
The New Frontier

It is perhaps surprising for rest of the world to learn, and for some
Australians, that in the industrialised world, Australia is one of the most
urbanised societies. Most Australians live in large cities with 64% of the
population in the capitols cities, 17% live in rural areas, and the rest in
large towns. At the time of Federation, it was almost exactly the opposite
with most of the population living in rural areas. During the 20th Century,
rural employment dramatically declined and industry and people flocked to
the cities. The cities became vibrant booming industrial hubs that
attracted immigrant workers from all around the world. In the post-war
period, Australia doubled its population in a generation, bringing migrants
from England and Ireland, Greece and Italy, and later Asia, creating
perhaps the most multi-cultural society of all the advanced industrial
economies.

The demographic realities of Australia are often in stark contrast to our
resilient popular identity. This identity, which circulates in our popular
media and press, is one that insists that we are a still a masculine,
Anglo-Saxon, and laconic people who live an idealic and relaxed lifestyle
in wide-open spaces. From Patrick White to Frederick McCubbin, from Banjo
Patterson to the movies that spectacularly broke into the US and European
markets in the 70’s and 80’s, the mythology of an Australia connected to
the bush is as resilient as a frill necked lizard baking itself in the sun.

In the late 80’s and early 90’s under Federal Labor with Paul Keating and
Bob Hawke, the ‘idea of Australia’ became a vigorous national debate that
centred on multiculturalism, deregulation, republicanism, and the dalliance
with ‘the world stage’. We opened our industries to international
competition, deregulated our currency and financial system, sold off nearly
all our public industries and through our arts bodies and galleries,
attempted to foster a new more inclusive national culture that recognised
the many faces that make up our national neighbourhoods.

What resulted is an Australia of the late 20the and early 21st that is
radically different to the country that characterised us for most of the
last century. It resulted in a much more ‘global nation’, one that no
longer seemed to suffer from a ‘tyranny of distance’ much more open to the
rest of the world and one with a number of new domestic frontiers.

The frontier, as articulated in the Bernard Salt Report, The Big Shift, is
no longer the great post-war middle suburbs based on material and social
egalitarianism. The middle suburbs are where masses of people settled
during the long post-war boom, from the second world war to the early 70’s.
The long boom, so well articulated by one of the great historians of the
20th Century, Eric Hobsbawn, was a period of growth that the world had
never known. The output of manufactures quadrupled between the early 1950’s
and the early 1970’s and world trade in manufactured items grew tenfold.
Australia became during this time perhaps the world’s most middle-class
society with over half our population situated in the middle strata.
Working people for the first time had a disposable income and skills that
could afford them a place in the middle class. An income that could buy
cars and a brick-veneer house in the suburbs, clothes and even luxury food
items imported from half way across the globe. In another generation, this
would have only been a dream.

“What had once been luxury, became the expected standard of comfort, at all
events in rich countries: the refrigerator, the private washing machine,
the telephone”.

The image of Australia in the long boom of 1950’s and 60’s is one of
prosperity and comfort, of conservatism and ‘wake in fright’ conformity, of
high-tariffs, restrictive censorship, and extraordinarily bad public
architecture. It is a time when people moved out of the inner suburbs in
their droves, from the damp and cramped houses of the inner-city ’struggle
towns’ so well documented in Janet McCalman’s oral history of Richmond, to
the spacious comfort of the suburbs.

However, in the Australia of this century, the frontier is no longer the
middle suburbs of Barry McKenzie or the bush of Paul Hogan. The new
frontiers are at the fringes (or the ‘edge city’, as described by Joel
Garreau)) and the inner-cities. Bernard Salt goes as far as to assert that
we are entering a ‘third Australian culture’ or a country defined by the
new demographic of the beach, the inner-cities, and the fringes.

This project in a small way seeks to comprehend one of these new frontiers.
This frontier is in the oldest suburb in one of the countries largest
cities. The suburb is Fitzroy in Melbourne, the cities first suburb.
Fitzroy, like Sydney’s Marackville, or the West End in Brisbane, is
arguable one of the country most diverse in terms of lifestyle, income
distribution, and ethnicity. They are areas with stark contrast between old
economies and new, between small ethnic business’s described in Jock
Collins (et.al.) seminal study of small business in Marackville A Shop Full
of Dreams, to the new middle classes living in the perfumed remains of the
industrial era.

Like the broader city and country in which it is situated, Fitzroy is a
suburb with many beginnings and many identities. For many new migrants,
Fitzroy is the initial encounter with Australia. First, it was the Italians
and Greeks, and then it was the Vietnamese, Chinese, and Africans. During
last century, the idea of Australia became one as a destination for all
comers from all parts of the globe. Stuart McIntyre one of the countries
most pre-eminent historians claims that a multiplicity of beginnings
“further undermined the foundational significance of 1788″.

“The blurring of origins turned Australian history into a story of
journeyings and arrivals, shared by all and endlessly repeated”

Fitzroy is a suburb with many beginnings, now in its third century. It has
changed from its roots as a somewhat rough and insular working class suburb
into one of the countries most diverse, tolerant, unequal, and curious
suburbs. Dennis O’Rourke in his recent documentary Cunnamulla (2001)
portrays an outback town as the very embodiment of Australian contemporary
history. In another generation, perhaps this was true. The bush and rural
economies have taken an inordinate share of domestic economic restructuring
linked to globalisation. This has resulted in rural decline and the rise of
the far right in the Australian political scene. The inner cities are
another country, a country for better or worse that increasingly looks like
the rest of the world.

What is Globalisation

It is perhaps a long bow to draw, to leap between local experiences within
an inner-city Australian community to the global discourses that are the
historical definitive ideas of our time: to leap between local economies
and day-to-day human interaction, to that which effects a good deal of
humanity. However, the argument could also be made that it is impossible to
do one without the other, it is impossible to understand the global without
understanding to some degree your own relative cultural and geographical
viewpoint. It is within local communities in which most of us live and
globalisation needs to be understood in human dimensions.

As the meta-structures of the history of a nation slowly erode, we are left
with small histories and a myriad of voices. As Richard Falk, the author of
Predatory Globalisation asserts, the long period of Westphalia
international relations is nearing an end, and we need to understand the
forces beyond the nation state. Globalisation is not one thing, nor is it
mono-directional; it is a convergence of forces, both local and national,
both policy driven and technological driven, both corporate driven and
community driven.

This is not of course the first time the world has witnessed large global
movements as there was the free-trade movement emanating from Britain in
the late nineteenth and early twentieth century, and colonialism and
socialism were enormous globalising forces. Before the first world war,
Western Europe controlled most of the world’s landmass, and after the
second world war; communism controlled two thirds of the world’s people.

The dominant characteristic of today’s globalisation is free trade, the
liberal democratic, capitalist mode of production, new communication
technologies, and the ascendancy of large multi-nationals. Globalisation is
heavily driven by the developed world’s private sector, and a shift from
the nation-state sovereignty to transnational actors from both
non-government and the private sector. The United States defines the
ideology of globalisation and Corporations are the main catalyst. Many of
these corporations are involved in cultural production thus creating their
own world culture and value system. This value system is based on
consumerism and the triumph of the individual over society. There is
likewise a growing interdependence between nations as they are drawn into a
global economy and culture.

It must be reiterated that globalisation is not an umbrella term, but is a
very specific thing that is the direct result of a number of government
policies and technological innovations. The policies by national
governments from the early 70’s helped the spread of globalisation and many
argue that this has resulted in a number of the sovereign powers of the
state being supplanted by transnational forces. Capitalism has always been
international and relied on internationalism to expand, but this has
entered a new stage. As Morley argues “maintenance of national sovereignty
and identity is becoming increasingly difficult, as the unities of economic
and cultural production and consumption become increasingly transnational”.

<stop>

Dead Email

ethics?

I have an ethical question for a utopian Libertarian or an “anarchist”.

I have a friend who is Labour Lawyer. She often deals with disputes between
workers and their bosses, most notably in small business. There are often
incidences where the boss feels as though they own their employees and can
treat them as they please. There have been incidences of sexual misconduct
and wages not being paid. We all collectively know that this is not the
right thing to do. Why is this? What would a Libertarian do in this
situation, I am curious.

A) Smash the window of the shop.

B) Say that it was OK because it is autonomous.

C) Make a web page and tell the world

D) Start up your own small business as competition

E) ?

Radically yours,

Dead Email

ethics?

> As Genoa approaches, I have an ethical question. There are a lot of
> anarchists at Genoa, waiting in the front line. From my brief
> historical understanding of anarchy, every society that let anarchy
> reign has resulted in large groups of people murdering each other.

Dead Email

uninstructive thinker

>So much unchallenged racism on this list against americans. Is that OK? I’m
>not saying microsoft doesn’t piss me off, but my impression is of list
>members attempting to create their own private virtual Ivanhoe.
>
>Maybe this list was always defined as being concerned with australian
>issues. that’s OK. But as I have been struggling with in another context,
>it’s not possible to be just Australian any more … We have to have dual
>identities as local and global and I don’t see how relying on outmoded
>concepts of national identity as a basis for a flippant critique is a
>progressive move.


Since when was “American’ a race? And when haven’t we dealt with the
local/global. My own work is centred around this question. Sorry, but I am
just Australian and being just Australian is a complex thing, strewth,
always has been. We need to think carefully about what a nation is, it is
more than just a theoretical construct. There is nothing new with seeing
‘Australian’ as being beneath us. It is beneath us, it was built by people
who now prop us up. The middle class in Australia has always seen
“Australia” as beneath them, at least since the 19th Century. We now have
this new-class of cyber-colonials who are part of the brain-drain with out
even leaving home.

Dead Email

CHOGM

Hi all…some radical thoughts on radicals,

Yer, this following stuff stresses me to no ends. How about CHOGM and how
the self-appointed ‘radicals’ are now planning to attack democratically
elected governments of some of the World’s poorest countries. Sure, I was
at S11, I backed the blockading of the WTO and I even supported the
activists are Genoa. But now they have lost the plot. Since when have the
grandmothers of the commonwealth been part of the global elite? Maybe in
1910. It was this institution that was the main cause that apartheid was
defeated in South Africa.

The WEF and the WTO are not democratically elected, but governments are.
They are representative, they are not corporations and to say that they are
is nihilistic stupidity, we should target the things beyond governments.
Australia was one of the few (or even only country) in the world that
through referendum actually voted to be a democracy. Sorry, I like
democracy, it has served us well.

It is not government and corporations that are the same thing, it is some
servile activists who are pawns in the global game plan. Many activists now
are just doing what the corporates want them to do, attack democratically
elected governments, be ‘deregulated’ citizens only out for them selves,
clocking Blair’s ‘Third Way’ politics in anarchist drag.

Many citizens are interested in the globalisation debate, problem is that
it has been hijacked by the Nike brownshirts, the hitler McYouth, the bored
undemocratic political margins who think that kicking the grandmothers at
CHOGM is somehow radical. The corporate elite want us to attack our
governments because they will ultimately profit from it. Since when has
being misinformed and targeting the wrong people been radical? Targeting
CHOGM is just a cynical attempt to keep the show on the road by a section
of bored activists that need a good spanking by their grand mothers. The
GDP of all the CHOGM countries is about the same as the US’s top 5
corporations, but these activist 60’s throw backs wouldn’t dare think about
attacking the real mutha country would they?
Rehashed American elite baby-boomer radicalism from the 60’s used to target
our own democratic institutions, this smells like imperialism to me.

radically yours,

Dead Email

post-information age

Thanks
>The enormous amounts of information available to us all thanks to the Net
>is a wonderful thing, it is not a problem. It is how we deal with the
>anxiety it can create that can be a problem. Perhaps the cure for
>information obesity is simply a sensible diet…

Perhaps we are entering a post-information age, or a time when too much
information is as disabling as not having enough. It was only in the 60’s
(so I am told), that the Communist part had a printing press hidden in a
shed in Bendigo waiting for the revolution. And the crusty old bloke that
had the skills to run the thing, was one of the most important people in
the organisation. Perhaps now we are going too far in the other direction.
We have so much information, that we are disabled by it. Disable the
illusion, go to the library.

When I grew up in Tasmania in the 80’s, we only had two television
stations, the ABC and a commercial station. There were also only two radio
stations, the ABC and another station that played near-death reflective
tunes. Both stations ended at 11.00PM each night. The only newspapers were
the Advocate, a parochial Christian luvin rag, and the mainland Herald Sun.

Tasmania is also perhaps one of the most democratic parts of the nation,
certainly one of the more politicised regions (I love the way they nail the
election candidates portraits to the gum trees). I grew up through the
Franklin Dam debate as well as the Wesley Vale Pulp mill. The later was a 2
billion dollar development in one of the most economically depressed
regions of the country. There were pro-mill advertisements on television
every 10 minutes or so on television for weeks, and almost no opposition
media. The mill was never built, the people didn’t want it. They used the
political tools at their disposal to stop it. The media didn’t matter.

I also remember that we used to have a media black out a couple of day
before an election. This was so people could stop and think about their
choices. They made these choices in a number of ways, who they trust, the
policies that were important, the party that most supported their class or
had looked after them in the past.

We live in a culture, it is bigger than us. America has just taken over the
surface of Australia (and the superficial). We have our own hierarchies
based on our own history and meritocracies. We are importing McDemocracy,
the cheap popularist 5 minute version of the US (thorough its media), the
the veneer of democracy. It resembles democracy like McDonalds resembles food!

There are a lot of globalisations happening, the media is just one of them.
People have personal, and cultural, and family histories. The media doesn’t
understand this. Media people deal with daily generalisations, this is
their craft. I see a world in the future when there is just so much media,
where everyone knows everything about all the evils of the world, but it
changes nothing. Media subversion is very important now, but only for the
next five minutes. We also need to understand our democratic tools.

There has been a lot or research done that supports the thesis that
advertising is not cost effective: that the media only exists because of
its duopoly relationship with advertisers (in which we all pay for in the
products that we buy). Perhaps we could also find our selves in a similar
situation with media and subversive information. A duopoly between
corporate main-stream media and subversive information. We are all so
tied-up with cold-war ideas of restricted information flows, that we have
become obsessed with the process of subversion rather than the outcomes. We
only understand the popular surface of democracy, rather that its inner
workings. I am not sure where all this goes, but just get the vibe that
things are a changing man. I’m an educated bloke, I have always filtered
information. Perhaps the key is more education, not more information.
Information is making us stupid, it is oppressing us. My life is a series
of media releases with a string through the middle.

Anyway, I am going to the Napier Hotel now in Fitzroy, it is 10.30 on
Friday. If anyone is in the area, drop in and have a beer.

warm regards,

Dead Email

SALO Showdown

OK, now I am on this free flow of information vibe here, I find shit-eating
really boring. Sorry, always have. The bad old government is stopping us
from seeing shit-eating, there for they are fascists…great connection.
More shit-eating, more democracy. I thought that fascism was a popular
movement anyway, I saw the Nuremberg rallies on telly! I will send you some
vid I have of my own shit-eating, but then this would only be crude, hardly
democratic :)

devilishly yours,

Dead Email

uninstuctive thinker

I have a few thoughts on email lists, and email, and information, and too
much of all the above. I wonder just how ‘democratic’ the world will become
when everyone has email and everyone can publish? If everyone talks at
once, then no one can hear. There are already too many books, too many web
sites, and too many lists. Too much information means no time to think and
no time to think means no knowledge. Just cause someone publishes, does it
means that we all have too? This is the American individual view of
democracy. There are just so many assumptions being made about the Internet
and democracy that we need to sit down and have a glass of whiskey and
think about it. Sure, it doesn’t take a genius to ask who decides who
publishes, but it is also equally naive to assume that the free flow of
information is leading towards a more equitable existence. The opposite
true. The world is more unequal now than it has ever been in history,
perhaps 200: 1 from richest country to poorest country (say Switzerland and
Mozambique).
Now that I told you this (I am not a theorist so it is true, I have
evidence :( What are you going to do about it?

Information obesity is like hamburger obesity. It is American.

Dead Email

6 Reasons I’m glad I live in the McDemocracy

dear craig and list, anti-americanism is particularly pronounced up here in queensland. there has been a lot of military intervention. my heart hurts as a citizen of satan, only recently relocated to australia.
i have to comment however, as someone who eschews the exploitative and sappy ideology of mainstream “American” capitalism, that australian capitalist- nationalism is about as screwed up as american capitalist- nationalism when it comes to anglo-centric ways of approaching social
space and nationhood. key word here is capitalism. without capitalist media would australia be coopted? without capitalism would nations need to protect themselves with vast military?

unfortunately, as america builds up a defence system again in the asia-pacific - all day the news of satellite missile testing - my country forces the hand of other countries to behave more nationalistically. sickening. yet, i’m american-born, and i can say, that american democracy
has a very rich intellectual history as limber and revolutionary as anywhere. it’s unfortunate to me
that the image that most australians have of americans is some kind of amalgam of jerry seinfeld,
the simpsons, ronald mcdonald, southpark, brady bunch, and so forth. surely
these stereotypes are as much a product fo the limitations of “information” about the Other, as they are its evil excesses. would have loved a beer in Fitzroy, but david and i are now back in
brisbane. lovely to meet you. stay well and keep on’ keepin’ on

Dead Email

6 Reasons I’m glad I live in the McDemocracy

> We live in a culture, it is bigger than us. America has just taken over the
> surface of Australia (and the superficial). We have our own hierarchies based
> on our own history and meritocracies. We are importing McDemocracy, the cheap
> popularist 5 minute version of the US (thorough its media), the the veneer of
> democracy. It resembles democracy like McDonalds resembles food!

Dead Email

random thoughts

I tend to agree with your comments. It would be great to hear stories from
the dot.com world. I have a story from a friend who just got fired form a
job in Silicon Valley that I will forward to people individually if they
wish. Also, I tend to agree with more contributions apart from academic or
new-media arts. It would be great if other individuals could respond to
this discourse in their own voice because it all get a bit slippery
sometimes. Context is King and most of the problems that we as individuals
and citizens exist out side of the technology and the technology merely
replicates this. The only way to understand power and how power is used and
abused is to understand context.

I think that we need to define a few key issues, political issues and
power-contexts that we can depart to a broader public so that they can
challenge and engage with the world in which we live. Information rich and
information poor is not that helpful, we need to move beyond this. What is
information and why does it make you rich? What are we as the middle-class
political elite getting from this medium that makes us rich that our fellow
citizens at Footscray meat works aren’t?

Sovereignty in Australia (where equality is negotiated) is in decline and
it is partly our fault. Sorry, I don’t have my sovereignty meter on me, but
I am taking a punt here. Middle-class people have always hated Australia,
if they weren’t sucking up to the English they were sucking up to
west-coast libertarians. There is nothing new about this. There are two
Australias’ and this medium is merely replicating this. Quiet nationalism
is the enjoyment of lots of every-day people and it has served us well. If
we understand a few of the broad strokes that make up the set of ideas that
we call Australia, then we can understand this medium and our political
goals a little more. There is nothing global about the Internet, it is
American. Every bit of this medium reeks of Yankee propaganda. Yanks are
technically sophisticated and socially stupid. We need to civilize the
bastards and their Yankee technology.

I note that this list was started with a goal of building a critical
discourse in Australia about the Internet. But what does this mean in
reality? Don’t you have to at least like Australia first and a few of the
values and achievements of this nation-state? I am not sure about what
direction to go in, there are just so few people I trust who use this
medium and every one I seem to meet is a shonkey, self-serving cretin who
sold their soul to the devil and don’t even seem to know it. Just some
ideas, perhaps self-reflexive.

Dead Email

ECAI

I went to the Electronic Cultural Atlas Initiative conference at the
University of Sydney last week. For those who don’t know about ECAI, I have
enclosed a brief description.

www.ecai.org

The Electronic Cultural Atlas Initiative is a time and placed based
collaborative project led by UC Berkeley and to a lesser extent,
Archaeology at the university of Sydney. ECAI is a GIS based project that
plans to build a global atlas that will link projects from around the world
through time/place interfaces. At the core of ECAI’s innovations are the
ECAI Information Technology Architecture and its central unifying feature,
the ECAI Metadata Clearinghouse. The Metadata Clearing house will allow
data-sets to be re-purposed on other web-based projects on a global scale.

http://www.timemap.net/

The Time-map project is an initiative from Sydney Uni’s Archaeology
Computing Lab and is an attempt to map cultural data through a time-based
GIS interface. One of the time-map projects is the attempt to map the
historical growth of Sydney through digitising all the known historical
maps of the period and layering them with historical images.

Dead Email

call for action: ICANN comes to Melbourne

call for action: ICANN comes to Melbourne

Hi,

I an a disbarred historian working on the
history of Fitzroy and milkbars to help understand things that effect the
whole world! I also don’t understand what ICANN does, but we could always
ask them. Someone once described democracy to me as hanging out with a
bunch of cretins who you don’t really like but you will try and get on with
then anyway in the name of some bigger picture. Can’t we hang out with them
when they come here? A Palestinian also told me that ICANN’s twelve
employees will become a world government really soon. Perhaps after they
string up all the Arabs, and torture all the Hindu’s, and free all the
Chinese from the tyranny of being Chinese. Anyway, trying not to be a
devil’s advocate here, but before we spiral into some narrow determinist
argument about DNS being the new world order, lets contextualise what
ICANNDY does in a larger circulation of ideas and power. Am I missing
something?

Dead Email

networked pasts

Lift up your faces, you have a piercing need
For this bright morning dawning for you.
History, despite its wrenching pain,
Cannot be unlived, and if faced
With courage, need not be lived again.

Lift up your eyes upon
This day breaking for you.
Give birth again
To the dream.

Maya Angelou

Dead Email

corruption

Close to home, there is a program on 4 Corners tonight about potential corruption with The University of Melbourne’s float of its MelbourneIT division. MelbourneIT had the greatest “stag profit” in Oz history of any company to be floated. (offered at $2 opened at $8)


The upcoming listing of AIM (ASX: AIM) is next week, so be quick. Doogle still has a limited number of prospectus left and AIM students have been allocated 3 shares each. Shares are offered at $2 and are predicted to open at $10. for more information, contact….


all the best,

Dead Email

CHOGM

> have a fine day old Chaps,

> Craig esq.
> Commoner

oh fuck off with that~)

ben

Dead Email

CHOGM

Fri Dec 17 10:48:12 2004
CHOGM

Hi, this is what CHOGM says about itself in relation to globalisation and
trade. I belive the focus of the ‘99 meeting in S.Africa was
‘globalisation’. The group does seem to have a trade liberalisation agenda,
but within a ‘realistic’ framework that not all states have the capacity to
participate, thus it seeks to moderate this.

Remember that the Commonwealth used to be an exclusive trading block only
25 years ago, but now seems to have a more social agenda.

Also, perhaps a banal comment, but in the past people thought differently
to us. The British form of imperialism was based on racism and exploitation
yes, but arguably they invested much more in less-developed nations than
the present system does. British Imperialism was driven by ‘the white man’s
burden’, or imperialism from above.

The present system is driven by dare I say, American ‘egalitarianism’ and
popularism, which is so close to the Australian form, that we dare not
attack it. The “battler” has become the most elite form of cultural
expression in US and Australian cultural life, silencing those who cannot
participate in our systems of cultural production. It is almost like the
obverse of British notions of cultural class, except the American led class
of cultural imperialists convince us that we are all individuals and
individual actors, we are all equal, and any one who tries to culturally
intervene is a 19th Century snob. The best way to control a people is
separate the people from its democratic institutions of collective
decision making (like their government).

Globalism is an ideological war, and in my mind we need to understand power
more in this century than ever before, not just attack ‘authority’
(government) because it impinges upon out individual (American) rights and
freedoms.

Dead Email

Third Way

Date: Fri Dec 17 10:48:12 2004
Third Way
Message-ID: <5.1.0.14.2.20010805180905.009f6d30@mail.milkbar.com.au>

Hi all,

I found this article on third way politics that may be of interest. I am
not sure if there is a debate in this country as yet, but perhaps it is
inevitable.

“I have great doubts that policies based on socialist ideology will prove
helpful in meeting the challenges with which we are confronted. The social
democratic “third way” is a halfway house in which the ideas of the old
left remain prominent, and it shows that no full-fledged alternative to
contemporary libertarian thinking has been formed yet.”

http://www.heritage.org/library/lecture/hl634.html

all the best,

Dead Email

Winners and Losers..

Date: Saturday, December 11, 1999, 11:17:55 AM

Subject: Winners and Losers..


===8<==============Original message text===============

In the constructive desire to halt any animosity that I may have created

with Damien by my rather pedestrian concerns that technology

can only be understood within broader social, historical and political

structures, I have decided to log-off and find a less conflicted soap-box.

Sorry if I have offended anyone, just a grumpy young historian in a dying

discipline flogging out-moded ideas in increasingly constricted spaces.


milkbar boy…

Dead Email

The 20th Century

35 days to go…

“There are those who predict that (internationalisation) in its present form will go on and on base their belief in the power of technology, whether in aviation, the computer, the satellite, or a host of other fields. But the biggest single influence on the rapid shrinking of the world is not new technology, vital as it is. More influential is the present relative peace in the world.


This is a period of relative international peace—the Balkans not withstanding–between the big nations. But if international relations become tense and nationalism becomes more aggressive, as will probably happen at lease once in the next 50 years, the latest technology will cease to be so effective in bridging gaps. In times of tension, new technology erects rather than erases barriers. Indeed, much of our new communication technology arose—or was improved—during World War II and the Cold War. It was designed initially to divide: it can do so again”

Geoffrey Blainey July 1999


..or as that intellectual gymnast Marshall McLuhan said thirty years ago about television creating a ‘global village’, it is popular today to see the Internet as permanently making a global community. (This was before 2003 when China re-claimed Taiwan from the pre-1949 Chinese Nationalists and the US bombed Shanghai and Australia sent in all our 16 000 troops and our Medicare levy went up 5000% therefore no one could afford to log onto their ISP anymore).


…more to come…


Dead Email

The 20th Century

35 days to go…

“There are those who predict that (internationalisation) in its present form will go on and on base their belief in the power of technology, whether in aviation, the computer, the satellite, or a host of other fields. But the biggest single influence on the rapid shrinking of the world is not new technology, vital as it is. More influential is the present relative peace in the world.


This is a period of relative international peace—the Balkans not withstanding–between the big nations. But if international relations become tense and nationalism becomes more aggressive, as will probably happen at lease once in the next 50 years, the latest technology will cease to be so effective in bridging gaps. In times of tension, new technology erects rather than erases barriers. Indeed, much of our new communication technology arose—or was improved—during World War II and the Cold War. It was designed initially to divide: it can do so again”

Geoffrey Blainey July 1999


..or as that intellectual gymnast Marshall McLuhan said thirty years ago about television creating a ‘global village’, it is popular today to see the Internet as permanently making a global community. (This was before 2003 when China re-claimed Taiwan from the pre-1949 Chinese Nationalists and the US bombed Shanghai and Australia sent in all our 16 000 troops and our Medicare levy went up 5000% therefore no one could afford to log onto their ISP anymore).


…more to come…


Dead Email

The 20th Century

In 1930 it cost $244.65 for a three minute phone call from London to New York. Today it costs less than $4.00

In 1980 IBM predicted that the world market for personal computers over the next 10 years would be 275 000 By 1990, there were more than 60 million PC users.

Dead Email

The 20th Century

(39 days until the end of the ‘popular elected century’ as opposed to the end of the real 20th century that doesn’t really end until 31 December 2000).

In Freud’s opinion, it is true that women gains nothing by studying, and that on the whole woman’s lot will not improve thereby. Moreover, women cannot equal man’s achievement in the sublimation of sexuality.

Minutes of the Vienna Psychoanalytical Society, 1907.

Dead Email

The 20th Century

Date: Thursday, November 18, 1999, 11:42:46 AM

Subject: The 20th Century

===8<==============Original message text===============

With only 43 days left until the end of the 20th Century it is possibly

important for us, as members of a public institution that is perhaps

reflective of and dogged by late 20th Century nihilism, apathy and

expediency, to think about the road maps that got us here. Most of us

probably wouldn’t be here if it wasn’t for the golden age at the end of the

Second World War (1947-1973) that ended in university education being made

free. This Century started with Western Europe controlling over 80% of the

world’s land mass (that included Australia) and ended in Australians being

tricked into voting for the English establishment by the ‘battler elite’

who called for a popular elected president in a country that doesn’t even

have a popularly elected Prime Minister! Technology fed into the politics

of Nationalism, Fascism, Communism and Colonialism and resulted in two

world wars in which one of the most civilised and advanced Western

societies, Germany, committed on of the most barbaric acts of human

history, the holocaust. In 1949 Von Neuman invented the architecture for

what is today’s most common computer (and arguably not much has happened

since except smaller and faster machines). America was the first and last

county to use Nuclear weapons in aggression and destroyed two Japanese

cities killing hundreds of thousands of people. Twice this century Western

civilisation has thought that this is it, its all over. The first time was

during WWI when most of the world’s countries were at war with each other.

The second was during the cold war and the Bay of Pigs. Communism took over

two thirds of the World’s population, then went away. The Avant Garde dies

as does the industrial working class

Dead Email

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