Hyperpolitics (American Style)

46
Hyperpoli tics (American Style) Mark Pesce Honorary Associate University of Sydney [email protected] twitter: mpesce

description

My closing plenary presentation at the 2008 Personal Democracy Forum, Tuesday 24 June 2008.

Transcript of Hyperpolitics (American Style)

Page 1: Hyperpolitics (American Style)

Hyperpolitics(American Style)

Mark PesceHonorary Associate

University of [email protected]: mpesce

Page 2: Hyperpolitics (American Style)

Part One:

Hyperconnected

Page 3: Hyperpolitics (American Style)
Page 4: Hyperpolitics (American Style)
Page 5: Hyperpolitics (American Style)

‘the sapient paradox’

Page 6: Hyperpolitics (American Style)
Page 7: Hyperpolitics (American Style)
Page 8: Hyperpolitics (American Style)
Page 9: Hyperpolitics (American Style)
Page 10: Hyperpolitics (American Style)
Page 11: Hyperpolitics (American Style)
Page 12: Hyperpolitics (American Style)

‘halfway there’

Page 13: Hyperpolitics (American Style)
Page 14: Hyperpolitics (American Style)
Page 15: Hyperpolitics (American Style)

43,000,000,000

Page 16: Hyperpolitics (American Style)
Page 17: Hyperpolitics (American Style)

Part Two:

Hypermimesis

Page 18: Hyperpolitics (American Style)
Page 19: Hyperpolitics (American Style)

“Basically, if a way of changing, fixing or improving a popular model of mobile phone is discovered by any of the hacking communities around the world on Monday, by Friday it’s on the streets of Ghana.”

Jan ChipchaseNew Scientist, 12

June 2008

Page 20: Hyperpolitics (American Style)

fluid, flexible, mobile,

pervasive and inexorable

Page 21: Hyperpolitics (American Style)

“It has been repeatedly proved that information

blocking is like walking into a

dead end.”

Wang GuoqingVice-Minister of Information, PRC

Page 22: Hyperpolitics (American Style)
Page 23: Hyperpolitics (American Style)
Page 24: Hyperpolitics (American Style)

‘find the others’

Page 25: Hyperpolitics (American Style)
Page 26: Hyperpolitics (American Style)

altruism trumps the ‘virtue of selfishness

Page 27: Hyperpolitics (American Style)
Page 28: Hyperpolitics (American Style)

‘holding the line’

Page 29: Hyperpolitics (American Style)

Controversy has erupted among the encyclopedia's core contributors, after a rogue editor revealed that the site's top administrators are using a secret insider mailing list to crackdown on perceived threats to their power.

Many suspected that such a list was in use, as the Wikipedia "ruling clique" grew increasingly concerned with banning editors for the most petty of reasons. But now that the list's existence is confirmed, the rank and file are on the verge of revolt.

The Register, 4 December 2007http://www.theregister.co.uk/2007/12/04/wikipedia_secret_mailing/

Page 30: Hyperpolitics (American Style)
Page 31: Hyperpolitics (American Style)

Part Three:

No Governor

Page 32: Hyperpolitics (American Style)
Page 33: Hyperpolitics (American Style)

‘made her nervous’

Page 34: Hyperpolitics (American Style)

Sharing is the threat.

Page 35: Hyperpolitics (American Style)

Bullshit.

Page 36: Hyperpolitics (American Style)
Page 37: Hyperpolitics (American Style)
Page 38: Hyperpolitics (American Style)
Page 39: Hyperpolitics (American Style)

‘Um...”

Page 40: Hyperpolitics (American Style)
Page 41: Hyperpolitics (American Style)

Hyperconnectivity

begetshypermimesis

begetshyperempowerme

nt

Page 42: Hyperpolitics (American Style)
Page 43: Hyperpolitics (American Style)
Page 44: Hyperpolitics (American Style)

nothing like

democracy

Page 45: Hyperpolitics (American Style)