|
@@ -1,8 +1,8 @@
|
|
|
\section{A New Perspective}
|
|
|
I think that we can go beyond the setting exposed by \textit{Rachels}, and in doing this I'll base my discussion on the presentation given by Charleyne \textit{Biondi} at the \textit{33rd Chaos Communication Congress}\cite{cccvideo}, which I attended in the last December.\\
|
|
|
The title \textbf{The High priests of the digital age} is someway itself suggestive. \textit{Biondi} tries to make a comparison between the campaign established in the 18th century against onanism and the current digital global surveillance state.
|
|
|
-She starts by identifying the three main actors that concurred in the campaign against masturbation, and by identifying the main actors in that scenario.\\
|
|
|
-The first actor is the category of \textbf{doctors} from which all the crusade started. All started from a study that tried to demonstrate what devastating effects onanism has on the body of a person.\\
|
|
|
+She starts by identifying the three main actors that concurred in the campaign against masturbation.\\
|
|
|
+The first actor is the category of \textbf{doctors} from which all the crusade started. Indeed all started from a study that tried to demonstrate what devastating effects onanism has on the body of a person.\\
|
|
|
The second actor is represented by the \textbf{priests} or more in general by the clergy members that took this studies and contributed in enhancing the campaign, by enlightening all the moral corruption that those sinful behaviors brought. It is thanks to the support of this actor that the campaign against onanism has been possible, thanks to the power that the clergy organizations had on the society.\\
|
|
|
The third and last actor is composed by the \textbf{family} members that should prevent such behaviors in particular by \textbf{supervisioning} the kids that were the category more likely to indulge in such acts.\\
|
|
|
The next step is to map three actors involved in global surveillance on the previous three, and to try to find the similarities between the two phenomena.\\
|
|
@@ -13,4 +13,4 @@ This concludes the mapping of actors between the two scenario. We can see that,
|
|
|
\textit{Biondi} says that in some studies has been enlightened that the birth of capitalism brought with itself the concept of the body seen as a \textbf{tool of performance}, and this also concurred in the crusade against onanism, since the possibility of behaviors that in some way could intact the abilities of the body to perform were seen much more in a negative way.\\
|
|
|
Capitalism also in some way brings the idea that private vice is transformed in \textbf{public good} or virtue through commerce. And in the digital age we may withdraw the conclusion that opposing to the free circulation of information can be destructive for the good of the society and stop this creation of public virtue, or, written in another way, public security. This ultimately brings us to the commodification of everything, even private and social aspects of our lives.\\
|
|
|
This last point of view seems to be based on a too huge leap. Personally, looking at our society I don't think that these conclusions are so unreasonable, but for sure they need another type of discussion, and they also touch other big and debated ethical issues, that can't be discussed here. As said before these last conclusions are not essentials to the following of the discussion, probably even \textit{Biondi} knows that these conclusions are too stretched, but she tried to sketch some possible discussion points for further analysis and discussions.\\
|
|
|
-What I think is important to keep from this section is the comparison between two at first sight completely different scenarios, and the problem that in this kind of surveillance culture we are giving up some rights over our privacy like that could affect our relationships as highlighted by \textit{Rachels} \cite{privacyimportant}, and in the next section I'll try to go further and try to sketch some other implications and issues.
|
|
|
+What I think is important to keep from this section is the comparison between two at first sight completely different scenarios, and the problem that in this kind of surveillance culture we are giving up some rights over our privacy like that could affect our relationships as highlighted by \textit{Rachels} \cite{privacyimportant}, in a system that made us accept that everything, even our rights become a good that we can trade in order to gain some superior objective, and that we need to enact surveillance with each other for our own good. In the next section I'll try to go further and try to sketch some other implications and issues of this type of surveillance culture.
|