is 376 resisting technology: issues and effects dr. kapatamoyo 09/12/2013 1

21
IS 376 Resisting Technology: Issues and Effects Dr. Kapatamoyo 09/12/2013 1

Upload: brittany-ashmead

Post on 31-Mar-2015

215 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: IS 376 Resisting Technology: Issues and Effects Dr. Kapatamoyo 09/12/2013 1

IS 376Resisting Technology: Issues and

Effects

Dr. Kapatamoyo09/12/2013

1

Page 2: IS 376 Resisting Technology: Issues and Effects Dr. Kapatamoyo 09/12/2013 1

Technology Determinism

Technological determinists view technology as an autonomous force, beyond direct human control, and as the prime cause of social change (Chandler, 1995).

Determinists view the expansion of technology as Discontinuous, Technological growth not as a gradual, evolutionary process, but as a series

of revolutionary leaps forward (McCormack, 1994).

Determinists commonly have either a radically utopian or radically dystopian opinion on technology (Kaplan, 1996).

2

Page 3: IS 376 Resisting Technology: Issues and Effects Dr. Kapatamoyo 09/12/2013 1

Utopia vs. Dystopia Utopian determinists believe that technology is

a positive and uplifting force that will, over time, mitigate or eliminate most or all of the ills that afflict humanity.

That technology is leading society towards an ever more utopian existence.

Dystopian determinists believe that technology is an inherently evil, or dehumanizing, force that will

lead, inevitably, to the moral, intellectual, or physical destruction of humankind3

Page 4: IS 376 Resisting Technology: Issues and Effects Dr. Kapatamoyo 09/12/2013 1

Dystopia Cases

4

Collective Individual

• Ned Ludd• Neo Luddites (collective)

• Ted Kaczynski

• Amish (collective)

• Greenpeace (collective)

• Anarcho-Primitivism

• Open Source Movement (collective)

• Wikileaks • Chelsea (Brad) Manning• Ed Snowden

Page 5: IS 376 Resisting Technology: Issues and Effects Dr. Kapatamoyo 09/12/2013 1

The Hacker A hacker is ”a person who enjoys exploring the

details of programmable systems and how to stretch their capabilities" and one who is capable of "creatively overcoming or circumventing limitations”.

5

Page 6: IS 376 Resisting Technology: Issues and Effects Dr. Kapatamoyo 09/12/2013 1

The Hacker Ethic The hacker ethic formulated by Steven Levy in his 1984 book "Hackers: Heroes of the

Computer Revolution" outlines the hacker tenets:

1. Access to computers should be unlimited and Total.

2. All information should be free.

3. Mistrust authority - promote decentralization.

4. Hackers should be judged by their hacking not bogus criteria such as degrees, age, race, or position.

5. You create art and beauty on a computer.

6. Computers can change your life for the better.

6

Page 7: IS 376 Resisting Technology: Issues and Effects Dr. Kapatamoyo 09/12/2013 1

Trespass, Unauthorized Access

and Hacktivism Neil Patrick and six Milwaukee teenagers

(1983) called the 414s. Convicted of computer trespassing Claimed “we were just playing a game.” The “Game” involved hacking into Los Alamos National

Laboratory and the Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in NY Neil Patrick testified in US Congress. Laws against computer

crimes where then created.

Many people do not see an exact parallel between trespassing on a computer system and physical trespass.

7

Page 8: IS 376 Resisting Technology: Issues and Effects Dr. Kapatamoyo 09/12/2013 1

Hacktivism Hacktivism:

A fusion of politics and activism.

A policy of hacking, phreaking or creating technology to achieve a political or social goal.

“Forges conscience with technology and girds us against the disagreeable nature of conflict. It allows us to mount better arguments, rally unseen allies, and take on any tyranny” (by Oxblood Ruffin of the Cult of the Dead Cow).8

Page 9: IS 376 Resisting Technology: Issues and Effects Dr. Kapatamoyo 09/12/2013 1

What is CyberActivism?

Use of ICTs, e.g. e-mail, list-serv, and the Web, by individuals and groups to

Communicate with large audiences,

Galvanizing individuals around a specific issue or set of issues

And attempt to build solidarity towards meaningful collective actions.

9

Page 10: IS 376 Resisting Technology: Issues and Effects Dr. Kapatamoyo 09/12/2013 1

Origins

Changes in patterns of information, knowledge, and cultural production are changing

The way information and knowledge are made available can either limit or enlarge the ways people can create and express themselves.

10

Page 11: IS 376 Resisting Technology: Issues and Effects Dr. Kapatamoyo 09/12/2013 1

Observed Outcomes Successful outcomes transform existing structures

of

Cultural,

Economic, and

Political power

11

Page 12: IS 376 Resisting Technology: Issues and Effects Dr. Kapatamoyo 09/12/2013 1

Success or Failure

Success is not measured in terms of the achievement of absolute concrete goals or concessions from those in power, but rather a transformation of consciousness and a source of moral vision and voice.

12

Page 13: IS 376 Resisting Technology: Issues and Effects Dr. Kapatamoyo 09/12/2013 1

Reach The Web is capacious enough to accommodate

protests with more elongated timelines.

The Web intensifies the Internet’s non-hierarchical structure.

Can mobilize globally.

Web protests are more efficient than text and e-mail based protests.

13

Page 14: IS 376 Resisting Technology: Issues and Effects Dr. Kapatamoyo 09/12/2013 1

New Social Movements

Accompanying the emergence of “post-industrial” societies, in which advanced technology and service-based economies are centrifugal, has been the rise of “new” social movements (NSMs). based on identity-issues and operate at the

grassroots level. consist of networks of relations between a

plurality of actors, a sense of collective identity, and shared conflictual issues.

14

Page 15: IS 376 Resisting Technology: Issues and Effects Dr. Kapatamoyo 09/12/2013 1

New Social Movements

Because the ties between new social movement actors are flexible, participants are able to reach wide and heterogeneous audiences that can organize from different angles to form broad coalitions across various movement domains.

15

Page 16: IS 376 Resisting Technology: Issues and Effects Dr. Kapatamoyo 09/12/2013 1

New Social Movements

Groups that are marginal and blocked by the prevailing institutions can link together and cooperate in ways that transcend these institutions.

Such movements create “subversive invisible connections across state boundaries and the established channels between them…these interstitial networks translate human goals into organizational means”.

16

Page 17: IS 376 Resisting Technology: Issues and Effects Dr. Kapatamoyo 09/12/2013 1

Framing Frames are ways of packaging and presenting

ideas and are used as a source of persuasive communication to convince others to join a particular struggle (McAdam, 1996).

To mobilize support, organizers must create simple and concise yet broad movement goals to attract diverse constituencies – an organizing strategy characterized by a “master frame” (Snow and Benford, 1992; Benford, 1993).

17

Page 18: IS 376 Resisting Technology: Issues and Effects Dr. Kapatamoyo 09/12/2013 1

Framing Gamson, (1992): for a frame to go from

understanding to motivating action it must have the elements of injustice, identity and agency. Framing helps explain

the articulation of grievances, the dynamics of recruitment and mobilization,

and the maintenance of solidarity and collective

identity. 18

Page 19: IS 376 Resisting Technology: Issues and Effects Dr. Kapatamoyo 09/12/2013 1

Framing Acting collectively requires the

development of solidarity and an oppositional consciousness that allows a challenging group to identify common injustices, to oppose those injustices, and to define a shared interest in opposing the dominant group or resisting the system of authority responsible for those injustices (Taylor and Van Dyke, 2003)

19

Page 20: IS 376 Resisting Technology: Issues and Effects Dr. Kapatamoyo 09/12/2013 1

Social Movement Theory

Social movement theory is an interdisciplinary study within the social sciences that generally seeks to explain why social mobilization occurs, the forms under which it manifests, as well as potential social, cultural, and political consequences. More recently, the study of social movements

has been subsumed under the study of contentious politics (e.g. environment, new technology, political economy).20

Page 21: IS 376 Resisting Technology: Issues and Effects Dr. Kapatamoyo 09/12/2013 1

Social Movement Theory

Social movement theory recognizes the implications of globalizing trends and how they affect collective action. One defining feature of the growing number

of transnational movements is that they tend to frame, interpret, and attribute their grievances to global issues, including global standards of justice.

21