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is the
internet a rhizome?
mute #7, winter 97
"Cyberspace. A consensual
hallucination experienced daily by billions of legitimate operators, in
every nation, by children being taught mathematical concepts... A graphic
representation of data abstracted from the banks of every computer in
the human system. Unthinkable complexity. Lines of light ranged in the
nonspace of the mind, clusters and constellations of data. Like city lights,
receding..." (William Gibson, Neuromancer)
Before it even existed, cyberspace
was being hijacked. The US Federal Government's need to work out a way
to allow all the incompatible computers being used for government research
to communicate with each other - a task which they set ARPANET to solve
- was hijacked by the myth of protecting computer networks against nuclear
attack. When packet switching came to California on the back of the PC
industry, it was hijacked first by the "hackers", who wanted
a temporary autonomous zone, then by the WELL and its denizens (including
an infant Wired magazine), who wanted a new space for "true"
democracy and Enlightenment ideals - for a new American frontier. As soon
as it became apparent that people were into it, the burgeoning Internet
was hijacked by the politicians and their "information superhighway",
then by Microsoft with their "Internet strategy", and now -
as online transactions become a reality, and as the Net melds with the
mass media - by corporate culture in general.
None of this should be particularly
surprising to us. After all, what is all that different about Cyberspace?
It is a space, an arena, a milieu. It affords the possibility of interaction
and communication. It presents evolutionary and expansionary opportunities.
It is open to the thermodynamics of power, of resistance, of control.
It has levels of apparency and levels of indeterminacy; it affords various
possibilities for movement and interpretation; it is complex and unquantifiable.
Whilst cyberspace functions very differently from the spaces we are used
to, that does not make it somehow more real, less real, hyperreal. It
has an environmental impact (the total material cost of a car during its
lifetime is 25 tonnes of matter; that of a PC is 19 tonnes (Wupperthal
institute)). Electrons must travel down wires; must whip through processors
and, most importantly, must be accessed by humans - in order for it to
exist. To give in to thinking of cyberspace as solely a consensual hallucination
is precisely to give in to thinking of cyberspace as a product of modernity
- something of which Gibson is more or less guilty, and which has led
him to the conclusion that the rise of cyberspace necessarily entails
the promotion of the "mind" and the denigration of the "meat".
Yet cyberspace is a consensual hallucination in much the same way that
the game of chess is: it exists in myriad minds to a greater or lesser
extent as a series of moves, power plays, possibilities for interaction,
but it still needs a physical interface, even if that physical interface
is a computer screen, even if a computer is playing one side of the game.
And just as chess is more than the logical sum of all possible moves,
so cyberspace is more than the logical sum of all possible computer connections.
This is why it terrifies (post)modernity, because (post)modernity can
only see it as precisely that: instant, logical, mental - hence Baudrillard's
notion of the "hyperreal". It cannot see that cyberspace is
real because of the fact that it has outgrown its logical parameters.
It may be a human artifact, but part of its fascination is due to the
fact that it is one which demands that we invent the concept of "artificial
life".
This is as much to say that cyberspace
is invested from the start with a set of libidinal energies. It is not
about being analogue or digital - a dubious distinction at the best of
times - but about the new speeds and possibilities becoming available
as we construct ourselves an infosphere, an infosphere which will not
only envelop computers as we think of them today, but all forms of media
- from the telephone and the mail to CCTV networks and spy satellites.
The marriage of television with the Internet through the set-top box and
the digital satellite delivery system is the thing that will really bring
cyberspace to the "masses"; what we need to understand about
this development is not just what the psycho-social impact will be, not
just whether it's arrival is a good or a bad thing, not just whether it
threatens existing moralities and micro- & macro-political structures
- although these questions have their place and are worth the asking -
but: what are the new flows which are being opened up, how are people
organising themselves around these flows, what are the new configurations
of power and control which are becoming possible as a result?
As Virilio has pointed out, there
is a powerful relationship between speed (and cyberspace is in many ways
simply an increase in speed) and the state. But speed does not entail
the state; for that to happen, speed needs to be catured, channelled and
controlled. This means that during periods when new vectors and speeds
are being introduced into society we need to be aware that it is then
that we are then at our most vulnerable. A fable: the discovery and development
of the technology of irrigation in the Nile basin introduced a new series
of vectors and speeds into the the society of the time. It is obviously
impossible to say for sure but one would imagine that the farmers concerned
welcomed this development: it gave them more control over the growing
of their crops, reduced their dependency on the elements, freed them from
the back-breaking toil of carrying water. But whilst liberating them on
the one hand, it laid them open to a new kind of oppression on the other.
The priest class which which controlled the technology also controlled
the flows of water and, by extension, the farmers, who had become dependent
upon those flows. On the back of this new configuration of control a new
state formation came into being, one which eventually enabled the awesome
power of the Pharoahs and all the horrors of their rule.
At the end of the twentieth century,
speeds are changing even more rapidly, and cyberspace is the plane upon
which the new vectors are operating. To be banal, cyberspace is a new
irrigation system, and governments and nations - the key statist power
formations that we have lived with all our lives - are as tribal formations
strung out along the Nile basin, waiting for the priests to arrive. Already,
there are potential pharoahs waiting in the wings - Bill Gates, Rupert
Murdoch. We know their names. They may or may not be evil men; that is
not the point. But when the dust settles and the pipelines are in place
and we're all using them because it's easier for us and more fun that
way, suddenly we're going to find that these people control what we need
to survive and that the option we had way back when to get along without
them is no longer there.
What we need, right now - not in
10 years time, because by then it will be too late - is our own set of
tools. We need to be able to reengineer cyberspace as quickly as it is
manufactured by the corporate entities. We need to find a vocabulary in
which we can discuss these changes and these new terrains apart from the
overcodings supplied for us by governments, media giants, software hegemonies.
We don't need a perfect overview - let the pharoahs chase their tales
seeking that. We need strategies of blockage and avoidance, ways to diffuse
and short-circuit the state when the state begins to instantiate itself
amongst us. Mounting a direct challenge may not be possible and it may
not be what we want - we do not want to try to found a state system of
our own. What we need to do is what we can do: cut new channels, create
new temporary autonomous zones, defuse cathecting power.
What's all this got to do with the
work of Deleuze and Guattari? Simply this: that they have provided us
with the best toolbox around. I don't have space here to explain why that
is; it would take a whole book, so you might as well go and read one of
theirs, rather than one of mine, and make up your own mind. How long will
those tools be effective? It's difficult to say. But at the moment they
are clearly superior to anything the molar organisations have got, or
for that matter to anything else that other theoreticians have offered
up. Most of academia is only just getting over the loss of their precious
authenticities; they still think that Hegelmarx is going to give them
an economic strategy, and that a botched humanist politics will do the
rest. But it won't do; these conceptual structures are not capable of
thinking about transnational capital in an information age. Deleuze and
Guattari's are; that is why they're what we need to think about cyberspace
in the closing years of the twentieth century.
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