Showing posts with label the web. Show all posts
Showing posts with label the web. Show all posts

Thursday, January 19, 2012

Then End of a Conversation and the Death of Creativity


If SOPA/PIPA gets passed in the US Congress next week, we could face an unprecedented violation of our creative agencies, face criminal charges for the vaguest definitions of piracy and face new levels and dimensions of discrimination.

The acts which the US Congress claims will put a stop to piracy through several provisions (read about it here, here and here) but the act fails to ignore the deeper, more critical effects it will have culturally and socially for the coming digital generations.

First, it will affect how people communicate online. If our conversations offline are peppered with references to media and pop cultural artifacts, our online dialogues go a step further and provide links to these very media. Some writers claim that, because of the ambiguity and broadness of the provisions, licensing companies like Disney may invoke these provisions for the sharing of these media links in comment boxes by people in social networks.

This points to a second consequence -- that of sharing. Ideas, projects, even businesses were created through the conversations online, through the exchanging of materials and media. People on the web contribute to programming projects online, remix audio-visual materials and create new artforms. This involves building on previous creations, thoughts, reactions (see Lawrence Lessig's Freeculture) that people willingly share in the spirit of cultural growth. Is SOPA and PIPA do become laws, that freedom to speak one's mind and share ideas may be curbed, out of the fear of overstepping the (vague) lines that define online piracy. The web itself was born because of Sir Tim Berners Lee's idea that the web, and people's access to it, should be unhindered. There are provisions in SOPA and PIPA that imply immunity for those who voluntarily "squeal" on suspected "pirates." Trust is broken. Sharing stops. Knowledge disappears.



The US Congress thinks passing these acts into law only apply to their citizens, or those who live in the US. They forget that boundaries crumble on the web, and everyone, anywhere they are are all citizens on the web. Because many servers are housed in the US, most, if not nearly all of us who have made virtual homes on the web, are affected by these policies. How will the US implement measures that do not discriminate against non-US ISPs? If the acts are strictly for US companies and entities, how do they get past the glocal expressions of their media products?

This discriminates, in my view, user-producers in developing countries. Without the same physical and capital muscle countries like the Philippines will be at the mercy of these provisions. Most of the Philippines' ISPs offshore servers are in the US, server space shared with US companies. As one of the most prolific content generators on the web, Filipinos find expression by remixing material from the West through parody or just plain fun. But we learn because we share and without that freedom and agency they suppress further the ability to access more knowledge.

With the web and social media now an inextricable part of our lives, we are in a constant conversation, one that does not end and didn't begin at any particular point in time. While some may argue that this becomes a nuisance and a time sucker, our asynchronous and tethered-ness to one another is the reason why the knowledge base of humanity can now be accessed through simple dialogue, link-passing and collaboration.

This is a new age of creativity. The most fecund of ideas find expression no longer housed in material goods but in ongoing conversations through time and across physical space. Putting up nets and traps around the web only means killing some of the most basic skills that has brought humanity this far in history -- thinking, creativity and collaboration. It's a new model for survival in the digital age and if SOPA and PIPA are given the go, and if the US Congress fails to change their paradigm, we can be sure we will see the beginning of the end of human innovation in our lifetimes.

Thursday, January 13, 2011

Clickety click

I'm feeling the pressure to be online.

Because of my self-proclaimed ambition to build an expertise about the web and new media, I have been hearing the familiar critical, nagging voice in my head berating me for not posting more often, reading more often, exploring more often. In a world that is increasingly wired and where information is exchanged and is accessible in a snort, I am constantly on edge when I am not online. It's as if there are a million things to do that don't get done -- that's in addition to the things that don't get done in the offline world.

It's a shame I'm not online more often to do some substantial work and writing. Real life gets in the way, not to mention the laundry, sleeping and and having coffee. Instead I browse FB, then find myself going off to other sites when a thought hits me. I end up not finishing what I started. Most of the time I forget what I started. THus, more things end up not getting done.

Take for instance my application to a university in the US. I have been staring at my laptop for the past three weeks, trying to finish the dang application essay. I've typed something, but it's far from being acceptable. And so off I go checking samples online. I hop and hop til the time I allotted for the task has run out. Oh world wide web. Why do you tempt me so?

But I suppose it's not because of the Web, but because I procrastinate and compare what I have with the others have. I am locked into a cycle of analysis paralysis because of all the information that overwhelms me. And all of these are available as long as I type the right word.

Ka-Ching! Another reason to stall.

Sometimes all the options at our fingertips can make it harder to decide. While we benefit from the access we suffer too from information glut. There has to be a way to get over the addiction of searching and clicking hyperlinks. While the offline world presents many viable options, I think the most effective one is to simply turn of the wi-fi router, and remember there's still an analog world to deal with, and a life to live, outside of the web.

It's 2011. I hope to write more, be distracted less, love more, criticize less, explore more, berate myself less. Smile more, hug more, give thanks. And it will all start with this happy medium.