From: Eugene Leitl (Eugene.Leitl@lrz.uni-muenchen.de)
Date: Thu Jul 05 2001 - 09:21:35 MDT
-- Eugen* Leitl leitl
______________________________________________________________
ICBMTO : N48 10'07'' E011 33'53'' http://www.lrz.de/~ui22204
57F9CFD3: ED90 0433 EB74 E4A9 537F CFF5 86E7 629B 57F9 CFD3
---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Thu, 5 Jul 2001 10:54:00 -0400
From: mann@eecg.toronto.edu
To: wear-hard@haven.org
Subject: Curatorial Essay for tonights Wearable Computing Exhibit
Resent-Date: Thu, 5 Jul 2001 10:54:28 -0400
Resent-From: wear-hard@haven.org
Tonight's Wearable Computing borgfest will be online
http://eyetap.org/tpw/
starting at 7:00pm Toronto time,
transmitting live video from 4 to 6 cyborgs, and also there will be
vote buttons to select my action (i'll be wearing remote body control
to cause my body to move in response to the tally of votes).
Video feed from the other 3 cyborgs will also be present but without the
connection of the corporate body of voting for body control.
Curatorial statement is in
http://existech.com/tpw/index.html
Hopefully, there will be a re-enactment of Mann's 1975 piece entitled
"My Manager" in which the body is liberated of its agency, and becomes
a functionary in an obfuscational surveillance hierarachy. "My
Manager" explores issues of agency, freewill, surveillance, and
accountability, and brings us to think about the dangers of localized
agency in a networked world. By receiving electric shocks from a
body-worn computer, wirelessly connected to the Internet, the body is
controlled by a "board of directors" who monitor remotely by way of a
tap into the right eye of the body, making the body's agency
complexified in the same manner that corporations are complexified.
Just as corporate policy might have been enacted by committees
comprised of members who no longer sit on these committees (or even
work for the company anymore), the body can be liberated and set free
by being bound to freedom. Thus the human body becomes a corporate
body, responsive to its board (of directors) rather than to its brain.
This "board over brain" performance momentarily allows the body to
escape from the freedom implicit in a potential for any moral
complicity. Because the board decides on the body's actions by vote,
the result calls into question the freedoms implicit in democracy
(e.g. voting). In particular, the body is compelled to take pictures,
and therefore becomes a mere computer peripheral, and functionary, its
right eye becoming an involuntary element of a surveillance society.
See http://wearcam.org/itti/index.htm
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