(Engels)

At this moment, we are in a transition of conventional analog identification to digital virtual identification. Hereby, a mutual trust between government and civilians plays an essential role. The lack of a pure form of identification can result in an emergence of many restrictions and legislation based on movement in the physical and virtual space.

In this paper, personal information is defined as “all the information that is possibly available of one person”. This information encompasses things such as: name, address, location, income, expenses, depths and biometrical- en DNA information, but also information like eating habits, sexual orientation, political opinion, religious beliefs and physical appearance. For short, it reveals intimate, private, economic en political issues in the life of a person. All the unique features that can be registered will form the identity of a natural person.

Within social studies, identity is considered a process of becoming. Stuart Hall (1994) makes a distinction between two influences on the production of identity. Firstly, he states that [1994:394] identity is being produced by differences between cultures based on similar histories; like slavery, colonization and migration. Secondly, he states that [1994:394] a cultural identity is formed by a reproduction of the past. Thus, the telling of stories and myths. So, when is stated that “All the unique features that can be registered will form the identity of a natural person.”, we have to keep in mind that the (virtual) identity is never fixed, but rather dynamic: it is continuously becoming (completed by unique elements).

Computers have brought several advantages to cope with these issues. These advantages do not necessarily apply to the privacy of civilians nor to the control of the government. Thanks to technology, the government can enforce tons of complicated legislations upon civilians, which is only possible within a process of fast decision making and calculation power. When somebody is speeding for example, the authority will take notice by means of technology (speed sensors). Which will lead to a punishment (speeding ticket). For the authority it seems impossible to grasp total control, though. Technology works both ways (Spam, internet piracy, hacking).

Due to the lack of control for both civilians and government, they have to cope with the following issues: it has been more difficult to (1) discover what personal information is stored where and by whom and (2) what it is used for. The Dutch legislation on the protection of personal information elaborates on these issues. It states [WBP, 2006], in a nutshell, that personal information can only be used for the purpose the civilian has meant it to be used for. And, if this is the case, it should be accurate and complete. The appearance of a digital virtual identity has a tendency to bring fear upon us. Fear of big brother and anarchy. Based on the impact that exposing your digital identity could potentially unveil. Based on what bad things might happen.

The digital virtual identity can be thought of in terms of a body, which incorporates a collection of personal information. The ‘founder’ of this data body is Steve Kurtz (2006), who is a member of the Critical Art Ensemble (CAE). He writes in Utopian Promises – Net Realities an essay, where a virtual body is considered as one of five utopian promises. Kurtz (2006) states: “The virtual body is a body of great potential. On this body we can reinscribe ourselves using whatever coding system we desire. We can try on new body configurations. We can experiment with immortality by going places and doing things that would be impossible in the physical world.” (Kurtz, 2006) The data body is a ‘fascist sibling’ of the virtual body. “(…) a much more highly developed virtual form, and one that exists in complete service to the corporate and police state.” (Kurtz, 2006) One could define the data body as an embodyment of (personal) information, which is linked to one person.

Haggerty and Ericson (2000) elaborate on a body that is similar to that of the data body. “The observed body is of a distinctively hybrid composition. First it is broken down by being abstracted from its territorial setting. It is then reassembled in different settings through a series of data flows. The result is a de-corporealized body, a ‘data double’ of pure virtuality.” (Haggerty and Ericson 2000:613) They mention the concept of the data body again when they state: “It is not so much immediately concerned with the direct physical relocation of the human body […], but with transforming the body into pure information, such that it can be rendered more mobile and comparable.” (Haggerty and Ericson 2000:613)

evolutionary step

Figure 1. Evolutionary step

The notion of completeness in relation to data bodies has inspired the idea behind this concept. The data body, which is illustrated in figure 1 has a rather negative image, because its troubled relationship with man, technology and society. Troubled, because man could be seen as the shadow of the data body. The shadow connotes the lack of agency over the data body within the realms of control, surveillance, and discipline. The evolutionary step illustrates the evolution of the data body. As shown, the evolution of the data body starts later. It is therefore less evolved, less sophisticated and less complete than that of man. This unsophisticated (caveman) property could be inconvenient for man, because of its impact on daily life. For example, a data body is corrupt, which is the equilivant of an error in a database. As a consequence, the person who is linked to this database is prohibited to travel across boundaries.

There is a theoretical solution to fear of the impact that data bodies could have. The completion of the data body. How? There should be a mutual trust between government and citizens. On the one hand, should the government agree to full transparency towards the aggregation and recording of personal information. On the other hand, should the citizen agree to partly give up his/her privacy. Technology should be the key for making sure the data body is complete and in that way sophisticated enough to resemble man.

References:

  • Haggerty, K.D., Ericson, R. V. (2000). The Surveillance Assemblage. British Journal of Sociology, 51,(4),(pp. 605-622).
  • Hall, Stuart (1994). Cultural Identity and Diaspora in Colonial Discourse and Post Colonial Theory. Patrick Williams and Laura Chrisman (Eds). Cambridge: Harvester Wheatsheaf. (pp. 394).
  • Kurtz, S. (2006). Essay: Utopian Promises – Net Realities (http://www.well.com/user/hlr/texts/utopiancrit.html), 14 mei
  • WBP, Wet Bescherming Persoonsgegevens. (Dutch Privacy Act of personal data) (2006).http://www.cbpweb.nl/downloads_wetten/WBP.PDF?refer=true&theme=purple
Latent control on the distributon of music

Latent control on the distributon of music

(Engels)

In the early days, photography was solely predestined for the Photographer. This skilled worker governed both the analogue camera as the development of its negatives. The dawn of the digitale age introduced a less labor intensive way to produce a photograph. Anyone who could handle a digital camera, computer and a printer is able to be a photographer and reproduce art.

The conventional developing process is replaced by a digital one and the barriers of the complex analogue process are gone. Digitalizing infrastructures and universalizing protocols will result in the fact that numerous devices can communicate with one another. An universal language which is based on binary code. This has advantages for distribution, speed and the amount of information send, but has also implications. A reduction of an analogue to binary code will influence form, purpose and content of the archetype. From 2003 to 2008, Sony BMG had to deal with different lawsuits regarding a policy to secretly implement rootkit software for customers of their content to prohibit its reproduction. Secretly implementing information which alters its manifested purpose is related to what I have coined: ‘latent remixability’. Issues that I am going to scrutinize in my thesis are the layers behind latent remixability. How does latent remixability fit into contemporary society? Which roles do new cultural forms play? What does copyright and original content actually mean within the era of endless reproductivity and endless remixability? How does this fit into a Foucauldian or Deleuzian perspective, or both, and where does Alexander Galloway come in?

Download here my paper on the topic of latent remixability. (still in Dutch)

(Dutch)

Vorig jaar is er een onderzoek gedaan naar de toereikendheid van de Nederlandse wetgeving omtrent digitale persoonsgegevens. Hierin wordt gesteld (Bisseling, 2007) dat we op dit moment in een overgangsfase zitten van conventionele, analoge identificatie naar digitale virtuele identificatie. Daarbij speelt het wederzijdse vertrouwen tussen de overheid en de burger een centrale rol. Dit vertrouwen wordt problematisch als de identiteit niet met zekerheid kan worden vastgesteld. De technieken kunnen immers nog steeds niet aantonen dat ‘jij wel diegene bent die je beweert te zijn’. Het ontbreken van deze zuivere identificatie kan veel gevolgen hebben voor het vrij bewegen in de virtuele en fysieke ruimtes.

De persoonsgegevens die aan verschillende instanties of organisaties worden verstrekt, worden in databanken opgeslagen. Daarmee zijn ze gemakkelijk te verwerken en voor verschillende instanties of personen beschikbaar te stellen. Dankzij computers kan de overheid tal van ingewikkelde wetten doelmatig uitvoeren en de burger optimaal van dienst zijn. Ook particuliere organisaties en bedrijven kunnen door geautomatiseerde gegevensverwerking efficiënter werken. Maar tegelijkertijd is het moeilijker geworden om te achterhalen welke persoonsgegevens door landen, organisaties en bedrijven zijn vastgelegd, waar die gegevens voor worden gebruikt en aan wie ze worden doorgegeven. Dit is in de wetgeving vastgelegd. De persoonsgegevens die worden gebruikt, moeten juist en volledig zijn. Ze mogen ook alleen worden gebruikt voor het doel waar de burger ze voor verstrekt heeft. Sommige gegevens zijn vertrouwelijk en moeten zodanig worden behandeld, dat ze uitsluitend worden vastgelegd door de persoon of instantie die ze nodig heeft. Ze mogen niet verder worden verspreid dan noodzakelijk is. Het zijn immers persoonlijke gegevens.

Een voorbeeld waarin de privacy van de burgers in het geding komt is de ophanden zijnde overeenkomst tussen de Verenigde Staten en de Europese Unie. Er wordt onderhandeld over het verstrekken van Personal Name Records (PNR) door luchtvaartmaatschappijen aan Amerikaanse autoriteiten in het kader van terrorismebestrijding. Drie belangen komen samen; de financieel-economische belangen van de luchtvaartmaatschappijen; de uitwisseling van persoonsgegevens in het belang van de veiligheid en de handhaving van de principes van de bescherming van persoonsgegevens in de wet bescherming persoonsgegevens. De passagiers dreigen essentiële rechten te verliezen als er geen controle meer kan zijn op het gebruik van de passagiersgegevens door de Amerikaanse autoriteiten. Als de belangen van de luchtvaartmaatschappijen en de Amerikaanse autoriteiten zwaarder wegen dan de privacy van een passagier, dan kunnen de passagiers ook geen beroep meer doen op de rechtsbescherming in geval van foutief gebruik van hun persoonsgegevens [PNRdossier 2007].

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