Datafication, Phantasmagoria of the 21st Century

Category: Communication

Musings On A Post-Truth World

I was reading the French news. The first page there was a title which read « en direct : la guerre en Ukraine », of course nowadays nobody bats an eyelid when they see that kind of title in a newspaper. We have come to see the direct reporting of wars, atrocities, tragedies or death as a completely natural phenomenon. But if you sit for a second and reflect upon this very simple title, you open a whole new way to understand our civilisation.

Browsing the titles in the French press spurred a reflection about how in just one century, our media have moved from the certainty of modernity to a post-modern world of radical contextualisation. Hundred years ago, mainstream valid knowledge was scientific, linear, and absolutistic (I say “mainstream” because of course Quantum Physics opened a whole new realm in terms of ways of knowing, but the science that was taught in schools was still newtonian). I say this in the sense of Clare Graves level four (blue level), there was one truth. Today we have opened to diversity in such a way that we have gone to the other extreme. Anything goes. The notions of right and wrong have been fully turned into contextual assessments. At the peak of modernity’s trust and faith in the so-called scientific method, which in fact was really a mechanistic worldview and a belief in positivism, the world was a simple aggregation of cause and effect. In this context of course, it became necessary to counterbalance with post-modernity, the view that things were not so straightforward (to put it simply) and that context actually played a major role in the complexity of life. Today we have moved to the other extreme, when universal laws don’t exist anymore. Moving into the extreme of post-modernity has led to the tribalisation of societies, and social platforms largely contributed to this phenomenon.

I was also thinking about the vital importance of explaining that we need to become aware of how we frame what we see. What I mean is if we started to really see and experience social platforms not as neutral means of communication or connection but as environments, therefore highly designed architectures, we would probably naturally behave in different ways when we are online. In fact, we can do this as we lead our life online and off-line. Proprioception and phenomenology, i.e. awareness of self and experience (or rather knowing the world through an embodied experience), are tools to help us do this. The awareness of how built environment carry with them a manipulative agenda is the crux of the matter in this case.

I am not using the word manipulative, in a deprecating sense. Design by nature is a manipulative discipline. But manipulation happens at all levels of communication. To live as a social being means to manipulate in one way or another, “manipulate” our environment, “manipulate” others. Understood in the most primal sense of the word (the Latin term “manus” means “hand”), this kind of manipulation can also be called relationship. Manipulation can imply to “manipulate” someone so they take their medicine every day, thereby enabling them to live their life with increased well-being. The question is: what is the intention behind the design, or the architecture, or the manipulation? As I am writing this, I’m thinking that another word for design could be manipulation. Architecture and the architectural choices represent manipulation and the intention behind the manipulation.

So I was thinking that maybe an interesting provocation could be to reflect on the passage from modernity to post-modernity, and how each of us is positioning ourselves in this very long term trend in the evolution of knowledge production. Are we aware of what’s going on; what meaning do we give to what’s happening in the world at the moment?

A Not-So-Dematerialised Internet? Undersea Cables (from “The Conversation”)

Undersea cables are the unseen backbone of the global internet.

Special ships lay data cables across the world’s oceans. Stefan Sauer/picture alliance via Getty Images

Robin Chataut, Quinnipiac University

Have you ever wondered how an email sent from New York arrives in Sydney in mere seconds, or how you can video chat with someone on the other side of the globe with barely a hint of delay? Behind these everyday miracles lies an unseen, sprawling web of undersea cables, quietly powering the instant global communications that people have come to rely on.

Undersea cables, also known as submarine communications cables, are fiber-optic cables laid on the ocean floor and used to transmit data between continents. These cables are the backbone of the global internet, carrying the bulk of international communications, including email, webpages and video calls. More than 95% of all the data that moves around the world goes through these undersea cables.

These cables are capable of transmitting multiple terabits of data per second, offering the fastest and most reliable method of data transfer available today. A terabit per second is fast enough to transmit about a dozen two-hour, 4K HD movies in an instant. Just one of these cables can handle millions of people watching videos or sending messages simultaneously without slowing down.

About 485 undersea cables totaling over 900,000 miles sit on the the ocean floor. These cables span the Atlantic and Pacific oceans, as well as strategic passages such as the Suez Canal and isolated areas within oceans.

a map of the world showing many lines connecting the continents
Undersea cables tie the world together. TeleGeography, CC BY-SA

Laying cables under the sea

Each undersea cable contains multiple optical fibers, thin strands of glass or plastic that use light signals to carry vast amounts of data over long distances with minimal loss. The fibers are bundled and encased in protective layers designed to withstand the harsh undersea environment, including pressure, wear and potential damage from fishing activities or ship anchors. The cables are typically as wide as a garden hose.

The process of laying undersea cables starts with thorough seabed surveys to chart a map in order to avoid natural hazards and minimize environmental impact. Following this step, cable-laying ships equipped with giant spools of fiber-optic cable navigate the predetermined route.

As the ship moves, the cable is unspooled and carefully laid on the ocean floor. The cable is sometimes buried in seabed sediments in shallow waters for protection against fishing activities, anchors and natural events. In deeper areas, the cables are laid directly on the seabed.

Along the route, repeaters are installed at intervals to amplify the optical signal and ensure data can travel long distances without degradation. This entire process can take months or even years, depending on the length and complexity of the cable route. https://www.youtube.com/embed/yd1JhZzoS6A?wmode=transparent&start=0 How undersea cables are installed.

Threats to undersea cables

Each year, an estimated 100 to 150 undersea cables are cut, primarily accidentally by fishing equipment or anchors. However, the potential for sabotage, particularly by nation-states, is a growing concern. These cables, crucial for global connectivity and owned by consortia of internet and telecom companies, often lie in isolated but publicly known locations, making them easy targets for hostile actions.

The vulnerability was highlighted by unexplained failures in multiple cables off the coast of West Africa on March 14, 2024, which led to significant internet disruptions affecting at least 10 nations. Several cable failures in the Baltic Sea in 2023 raised suspicions of sabotage.

The strategic Red Sea corridor has emerged as a focal point for undersea cable threats. A notable incident involved the attack on the cargo ship Rubymar by Houthi rebels. The subsequent damage to undersea cables from the ship’s anchor not only disrupted a significant portion of internet traffic between Asia and Europe but also highlighted the complex interplay between geopolitical conflicts and the security of global internet infrastructure.

Protecting the cables

Undersea cables are protected in several ways, starting with strategic route planning to avoid known hazards and areas of geopolitical tension. The cables are constructed with sturdy materials, including steel armor, to withstand harsh ocean conditions and accidental impacts.

Beyond these measures, experts have proposed establishing “cable protection zones” to limit high-risk activities near cables. Some have suggested amending international laws around cables to deter foreign sabotage and developing treaties that would make such interference illegal.

The recent Red Sea incident shows that help for these connectivity challenges might lie above rather than below. After cables were compromised in the region, satellite operators used their networks to reroute internet traffic. Undersea cables are likely to continue carrying the vast majority of the world’s internet traffic for the foreseeable future, but a blended approach that uses both undersea cables and satellites could provide a measure of protection against cable cuts.

Robin Chataut, Assistant Professor of Cybersecurity and Computer Science, Quinnipiac University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Raising Consciousness & Spiral Dynamics®

Sunday Morning Musings on Raising Consciousness and Spiral Dynamics®.

I always have a problem with the term “raising consciousness”; first because there’s something subtly arrogant and hubristic about it, it presupposes that A) I, as a person, know exactly at what level everybody else is (rather unlikely), and that B) some are below me and they need to be lifted to my level. 😅😔 This is the vertical hierarchy of values underlying the mentality of colonisation, eugenics and commodification. God at the top, me and those like me just below, and the rest needing to be enlightened (or exploited) below me.

But also because it implies a view of the world that is imbued with the idea of infinite progress. This idea is so deeply pervasive to the western civilisation that we do not even question its validity. It’s important to do so though, because infinite progress is also the idea that validates a related concept: infinite growth. But while a beautiful concept, infinite progress is as unlikely as infinite growth. Progress is not a core idea to eastern philosophies or indigenous wisdom.

This goes back to the core of the Spiral Dynamics® model and how it’s been incorporated in philosophies and ideologies that have progress as their core value. As I understand it, Clare Graves developped his ECLET model not out of a concern with moving humanity up the hierarchy of values. He was more concerned about alignment within each level. His enquiry happened during a period of time when Maslow’s work became mainstream and the pyramid became an icon, but his question was very different. His driving metaphor was not the pyramid (a useful but somewhat basic shape). He was focusing on complexity, and more precisely, on the alignment between complexity in the environment and the capacity to deal with that level of complexity in one’s mind.

To reflect this balance, he did not use colours (which simplify but obfuscate important aspects of the purpose) but a set of two letters to describe the levels. AN for beige, BO for purple, CP for red, DQ for blue, ER for orange, FS for green, GT for yellow and HU for turquoise. One letter represented level of complexity in the environment and the other ability to handle complexity. “Capacity to handle complexity” is absolutistic for DQ (either-or, good/bad, us/them), pluralistic for ER (there is a range of different possibilities and I choose what’s the best one for me), contextual for FS (it all depends on context) and probabilistic for GT. He also said that from his research (and the research of some of his students after his death) very (VERY) few people were truly aligned at the second tier although higher tiers are attraction points for personal projections from lower levels. In other words, from an ER point of view, GT looks extremely sexy, and DQ will tend to see oneself as FS.

He wrote that a person would lead a more coherent and more fulfilled life if he or she was aligned at their level, regardless of where that level stood in the hierarchy of value. This model underlies his theory of change: when someone whose ability to handle complexity is thrown into a more complex environment, there is a transition period to adapt to the new levels of complexity. Similarly, one can be thrown to a lesser complex environment by life circumstances (say in the case of civil war for example when survival becomes key), and one’s ability to handle complexity can also go from more to less (as in the case of illness affecting cognitive faculties for example). There was no inkling of the desirability of a vertically upward moving progress in his work, and no mention of consciousness. For him progress was synonymous with alignment. It’s only later that his model was simplified into colours and it became easy to integrate into an integralist view of the world that takes vertical upward progress as its core value.

So, I would propose that we need new metaphors and a new vocabulary to replace “raising consciousness” which presupposes a vertical upward moving hierarchy. Metaphors and language that flatten vertical hierarchies into multidimensional complex networks. Fractals instead of pyramids. And then (and this is where the hard work begins! 😅😜), we need to fully integrate those metaphors and language, to get so familiar with them that they become like a limb, a full part of us and how we see the world. And maybe then, only then, will we have opened our “consciousness” enough to realise that what we projected onto the world was all within ourselves. Until then, it is probably safer to see ourselves on the less evolved side of the spectrum. 🙃

Private Messaging Apps

A good friend sent this link to me today: https://nordvpn.com/blog/most-secure-messaging-app. It’s a good article, you should read it. This however, prompted the thoughts below.

Good Morning! Thank you for sharing this!

It’s true that signal is the most secure messaging app. I use both telegram and signal. They both have pros and cons like all apps.

Since WhatsApp change of T&C there have been many articles that speak about the privacy of messaging apps. And it’s great because the discussion brings awareness to this aspect of communication. However I think it’s also the wrong (first) question to ask because it is reductionist and puts the focus on the wrong thing. Let me explain!

The social web brought about shifts of a magnitude last seen with the invention of the printing press. The economy of the social web is supported by a model (targeted advertising) that is BY DESIGN hostile to our well being, social balance and democratic values. When I say by design it means that the model itself contains in its essence imperatives that are fundamentally hostile to the above. It distorts debates, polarises society, addicts individuals. It can’t work if it doesn’t do that. Those effects are intrinsic to the model.

So what we are witnessing at the moment is nothing less than an ecological crisis. We have a digital social economy based on a model which “side effects” are wrecking havoc in our lives and our societies (whether they are really “side” effects or just effects is another debate for another time).

In 1964 Rachel Carson write a seminal book called Silent Spring, a desperate call for the world to wake up to the large scale slaughtering of our natural environment. Today we are faced with a similar crisis, an ecological crisis of our inner environments.

So to go back to the question about the privacy of messaging apps. I said earlier it’s a good question of course but the wrong question to start with. Apps are not created equal. They are not stand-alone isolated entities. They exist in a larger system. Apps like Telegram and Signal (and a bunch of less popular messaging apps) are not owned by large monopolies which profits rest on targeted advertising. They may or may not be the most secure, but even if they are not, the systemic effect of using them will be very different than those of using an app like WhatsApp or FB messenger which belong to a monopolistic entity that has shown many times it was ready to lie and manipulate with total disregard for the effects of their services on the planet.

So the first question to ask is: by using this technology, whose interests am I serving? To go back to the parallel with environmental ecology, asking whether an app is private is the equivalent of asking whether a good is too expensive without looking at the ecosystem that produces it. Maybe a good is expensive but it is of quality and produced in an ecosystem that favours small producers and benefits the real economy.

To be honest most of us do NOT need messaging apps that absolutely protect our communications. None of what I have ever written to you or on our group chats for example warrants a level of secrecy required to keep state secrets, or to keep investigative journalists in authoritarian countries safe (or these type of things).

And then, what do we mean by “private”? We have been habituated to think about privacy as hiding the content we share from the snooping eyes of government or police etc. This is surely one important aspect of privacy but in the digital age by far not the only one.

To understand why, we need to understand a fundamental difference that the FB and Googles of the world are very careful not to emphasise. It’s the difference between content and meta content. Content (or data) is what we share, the messages, the photos, the emojis etc… meta content is meta data, which is the collateral information that accompanies communication. Targeted advertising companies are meta data hungry not content hungry (see the post below “Why I Am Quitting WhatsApp Part II“).

Meta data is really the gold of the social internet because when aggregated and analysed by the large systems of big data they reveal things about us that we would not dream to share as content. And by the way, those insights are much more valuable than raw data and can be shared with government, police etc.

This is why we need to become conscious digital consumers. Just as we try not to consume plastic straws or make efforts to buy sustainable coffee, we need to make efforts and care for what type of digital technology we consume. Remember that behind the app, there is a whole ecosystem.

I know people who decide to lead a sustainable lifestyle, only buy organic food and walk to their work but who consume technology with the gluttony of a pig and the lack of awareness of a 2 years old (no disrespect to pigs and 2 years old here, this is what they are supposed to do! 😉). This is just not coherent!