This book is a too lyrical and scattered meditation on the
effect information technology and the computer ‘revolution’ is having on human
society. It challenges the
techno-utopianism of Silicon Valley. It undermines the cheery corporate commodification of
information overloads, software upgrades and endless gadgets. It challenges the idea that pure
‘computation’ will make us free. It makes
a point that humans have to use technology and not let technology or
information use them. This book will remind most computer users of the flaws in software, which we are all familiar with. This is why computers are tools like any other, but anyone
who takes them as fail-safe systems – like self-driving trucks and cars – will
find out soon enough the darker consequences.
Medieval Times Are Back Again? |
For the capitalist computer companies or many
governments, they are busy using the technology of the digital age to profit
and to control. Some bourgeois tech thinkers see ‘information as the new oil.’ Bridle
thinks it is the new ‘nuclear power’ – with all its radioactive dangers.
Bridle sees the internet now as a world-wide ‘mass
mind’ that shows all the weaknesses and strengths of human beings - their
uncontrolled lizard brains and their amazing intelligence. This is guided by robot algorithms and
corporate and government needs, which is at the root of ‘the cloud.’ In a way,
he’s warning us that films like The
Matrix or Terminator’s Skynet
are not so unreal.
Bridle discusses ‘computational thinking’ (which some have called cybernetics, others artificial intelligence - AI) as a danger without any analytic context. Machine thinking substitutes for human
thought as the path of least resistance.
This is his ‘dark age,’ where the
positivist “Moore’s
law” is a fraud. Instead pure massive data is driving propaganda, advertising, surveillance,
profits and human thinking in ways that mold citizens into obedient servants,
even if they think otherwise. He grounds
the history of the computer in the development of weather forecasting and nuclear weapons done
by the U.S.
government in the 1940s. The weather
forecasting system ultimately became SABRE, which is now used to book travel. GPS systems came out of this, so
you can now be led down a dirt road to save distance - if you are not paying
attention.
Bridle looks at how this relates to the failing
climate. Big Data actually requires
enormous amounts of energy to run server farms, along with all the technology
connected to them – cell phone towers, fiber optic cables, the ‘internet of
things,’ satellites, internet phones and computers. Bitcoin alone is a huge
user of energy, as is AI.
Bridle touches on many software and hardware subjects,
including the increasing number of retractions in scientific studies because of
computer-driven ‘brute force’ data fails.
Or why more data has led to less development in capitalist drug
research. He covers the same ground
Michael Lewis did in Flash Boys about the increasing speed of technology, leading to financial market
crashes and extreme stock price swings. Even technology’s relation to
inequality is addressed. Bridle says “Complexity
itself is a driver of inequality.”
We Have Your Number... |
Artificial intelligence, Friedrich Hayek, facial
recognition software, Stuxnet, computer chess, government secrecy, drones and
the NSA, Amazon and Uber – it’s all here.
Oddly, he comes out against whistle blowers, who he thinks feed the idea
that there is a smoking-gun conspiracy secret that ‘we’ don’t know. He continues this with a long discussion of
how ‘chemtrail’ conspiracy theories are riffing off the very real 'contrails’
left by high-flying jets. Conspiracy theories themselves are enabled by fact-free suppositions that spread on the internet. He is shocked by
the terrible quality of very popular children’s ‘entertainment’ on YouTube,
much of which is moronic, repetitive, violent and probably created by robot
algorithms. Even the Ashley Madison scandal shows up, as husbands looking for affairs plunked down money to talk to 70,000 AI 'bots' that seemed to be real women.
At the end of the book, if you were not familiar with
the computer’s dark side, you will be.
But he never addresses the key role computers have in replacing human labor,
leading to unemployment, deskilling or lower wages, which is odd. He also does not look at the political uses of data. The British Cambridge Analytica data used by the Trump campaign, the Russian troll farms; Facebook, YouTube and Google's banning or hiding many left-wing sites - all missing. In all this, Bridle has no solution except to suggest that
this tool be controlled. But how? Like an untethered air-drill jumping around an auto shop
because it is stuck in the ‘on’ position, the computer itself has to come to
heel. But as long as it is controlled by
capital, the computer’s dialectical dark side can prevail.
Prior archived reviews on this subject: “CypherPunks,”
“Propaganda,” (Bernays);
“Cyber-Proletariat,” “Why People Don’t Buy Books,” “Manufacturing Consent,” “In
Letters of Blood and Fire,” “Creative Destruction,” “The Endless Crisis,” “Time
Wars,” “Flash Boys.” Use blog search box, upper left.
And I bought it at May Day Books!
Red Frog
December 15, 2018
2 comments:
I think that you will want to fix this sentence: “Like an untethered air-drill jumping around an auto shop because it is stuck in the ‘on’ position, the computer itself has to come to heal”. I think you mean to say ...”the computer itself has to come to heel.” Otherwise, thanks so much for your review!
Yes, sometimes I'm a word 'heal.' Thx.
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