Has
Digital Age spawned its own values?
By Doug Esser ASSOCIATED PRESS
in CC Times
Sunday 10/1/2000
Now that the computer has revolutionized business and communications, here's a
look into the soul of the machine, to see what cultural values lurk behind the
digital curtain.
Paulina Borsook takes a highly personalized look in "Cyberselfish: A
Critical Romp Through the Terribly Libertarian Culture of High Tech"
(Public Affairs, 256 pages, $24).
What one hopes when reading a first-person account of something as vague as
high-tech culture is that individual impressions can be generalized into
something meaningful for the wider audience. "Cyberselfish" falls
short on that leap from the personal to the general, and the reader is left
mostly with Borsook's anecdotes.
That can be entertaining. Borsook writes in creative, frothy style,- stringing
together images and descriptions that create a heady sense of her subject.
Here's part of her take on hacking:
"The cypherpunk-criminal elements of high tech-hackers, crackers, and
street users of technology-are but more madcap manifestations of other, better
known, individualistic and asocial qualities that are already present in
techno-culture: not giving a damn about conventional notions of dress or
grooming; keeping vampire hours; amping out for workaholic or recreational
overextended stretches of time at the computer; breaking into computer
networks and systems in an impish, playful, Kilroy-was-here, and definitely
not malicious way...."
Borsook's point of view is that computer culture lacks the human touch and
fails to recognize the value of government underpinnings.
"So although programmers fancy themselves sky pilots, they are taking
advantage of mass labor and social organizations, whose handiwork is almost
entirely invisible as they seek to create wealth where they sit. And the
government's part in all this (R&D, for example) is similarly out of
sight."
A reader already inside the wired world will probably get more out of "Cyberselfish"
than the outsider trying to get up to speed. The issues are there, but it's
hard to distinguish between them and Borsook's perception of them.
Dealing more in impressions than in ideas, expanding on her own Wired magazine
stories about conferences, meetings and even dates, Borsook invites the reader
to have feelings rather than thoughts. That's one way to look at computer
culture: a subjective way.
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