February, 2007

Kids aren't on the street

Thursday, February 15th, 2007

Here’s a fascinating article that in a sense reinforces things that you already knew, but hadn’t put into words. Or at least I instinctively knew but hadn’t articulated. It’s at NYmag.com, but I got it via Seb Chan’s Powerhouse Museum blog, Fresh + New.

People tackle risk in an emotional way that’s weighted towards immediate benefits over long term risks. It’s in people accepting the benefits of omega-3 oils in bread and milk even as they question the use of GM ingredients elsewhere, or driving home after a few drinks rather than wait for a cab or public transport. That’s the underlying concept here, I guess. Though we’re also talking a seismic shift in the way people interact online, a sudden shift forward in the internet’s evolution.

Web 2.0 – Flickr, Last.fm, myspace, del.icio.us – is an epic scale shakedown on privacy considerations. Even as campaigners take on government organisations, banks and big business to keep data collection to a minimum, the young public has taken to recording it all online, voluntarily.

In personal discussions with friends I’ve struggled to articulate just why it’s not an issue, or at least not an issue worth stopping me from doing things online. I guess it’s because although I’m not an under-25, as someone who’s had a vaguely public life through DJing, radio and writing, doing things online is pretty comfortable. I didn’t grow up with gaming – no online worlds like Second Life or WOW – but message boards and forums can be community every bit as real as anywhere else.

The New York mag article points out this is the first ‘real’ generation gap since the ’50s.

“Younger people, one could point out, are the only ones for whom it seems to have sunk in that the idea of a truly private life is already an illusion. Every street in New York has a surveillance camera. Each time you swipe your debit card at Duane Reade or use your MetroCard, that transaction is tracked. Your employer owns your e-mails. The NSA owns your phone calls. Your life is being lived in public whether you choose to acknowledge it or not.”

Like a great song, a great observation takes something so patently obvious that noone’s thought of observing it before, and uses it to enunciate a poignant reality.

“When I was in high school, you’d have to be a megalomaniac or the most popular kid around to think of yourself as having a fan base. But people 25 and under are just being realistic when they think of themselves that way, says media researcher Danah Boyd, who calls the phenomenon “invisible audiences.” Since their early adolescence, they’ve learned to modulate their voice to address a set of listeners that may shrink or expand at any time: talking to one friend via instant message (who could cut-and-paste the transcript), addressing an e-mail distribution list (archived and accessible years later), arguing with someone on a posting board (anonymous, semi-anonymous, then linked to by a snarky blog). It’s a form of communication that requires a person to be constantly aware that anything you say can and will be used against you, but somehow not to mind.”

It’s funny commenting on this here – should I cross-post to Last.fm and myspace?

I read on a friend’s myspace that he likes reading blogs by people he hates (!) and having posted at inthemix.com.au for ages, it’s second nature to remember that your throwaway remark, acerbically witty as it might be, the day after a second-rate club night, will probably be read (and remarked upon) by the promoter, the DJs, and a sub-set of people who were there.

That’s not to say it’s all good.

It’s important that people question what’s happening, and what’s going to happen with all this information. The people who control these sites, and thus the data, are huge multinationals as Jace/Rupture and Wayne comment here.

“I think im saying web2.0 culture is great, but the monetization/meta-data analysis of that culture could easily be applied to uses out of step with web2.0’s XML-y emphasis on collabo, trading, datamashup, sharing, etc.”

Wayne calls for “collabo-curatorial hacktivism…fostering DIY/p2p remix/mash culture thru the civilly disobedient sharing and tweaking and linking of things. &thus making eloquent arguments, in discourse and design, against the very status quo that the corporate mining of our metamaps would seem to support.”

If I like the sound of that, does it pin me to my generation?

Join the Dots (8/02/07)

Thursday, February 8th, 2007

Band game rules. Join the dots.

Hi God People – Thunder on the Way to Funan
Eric B & Rakim – The R
Milkrun – Your Sexxx
Night Radio – Black Clouds Appear
Oval – Delft
The Last Poets – White Man’s Got a God Complex
Seaworthy – Distant Hills Burn Bright (Part 5)
Yen – Meet-Paul
New Buffalo – Cheer Me Up Thank You
Olav Brekke Mathisen – Hasj Box
Ned Collette – A Plea For You Through Me
Espers – Dead Queen
Steven Heath – Oversight
Handsome Family – Your Great Journey
Yob – 2 B or Not
Benni Hemm Hemm – Egisa
Marsmobil – Mangia Amore
Let Zem – Let Hem
Matinee Orchestra – Run For Cover (It’s Going to Rain)
Aluf – Asif
400 Blows – Black and White Mix Up
Swayzak – Ease My Mind
Will Saul feat Ursula Rucker – Tic Toc (Swayzak remix)

TZU Summer Days deal blazed

Monday, February 5th, 2007

Melb hip hop crew TZU’s ‘Summer Days’ was a stone cold summer classic a few years ago when it dropped, accompanied by a lovely Mad Professor dub, but after Cricket Australia picked the song up for a one day ad campaign, it’s attracted some less welcome attention. At least for the cricket bureacrats involved.

Crikey writer Thomas Hunter picked up the song’s references to getting blazed, rolling up big jays, and sparking up in today’s episode of the enewsletter.

tzu.jpg

Trouble on the way for this licensing deal? Crikey’s trying to drum up the story in any case.

Join the Dots feat Alex Jarvis (01/02/07)

Friday, February 2nd, 2007

A delightfully shambolic show last night – comment if you agree/disagree – featuring Alex Jarvis chatting on his mobile from a bar on Lygon St, Melbourne. Alex’s record is a lo-fi drone and melody vehicle for his (personal) political lyrics. It was my birthday too.

A Tribe Called Quest – Can I Kick It? (Extended Boilerhouse Mix)
Lou Reed – Men of Good Fortune
The Velvet Underground – Beginning to See the Light
Kate Ceberano and Her Septet – I’m Beginning to See the Ligtht (live in Melbourne)
I’m Talking – Stay With Me
Essendon Airport – How Low Can You Go… (?)
Tsk Tsk Tsk – One Note Song
The Underground Lovers – Your Eyes
Black Cab – Underground Star
Registered Nurse – The Captain and His Glove
Alex Jarvis & Friends – Me and the Man
Alex Jarvis – Seconds
Gaslight Radio – Bitches of the Poor
Pulp – I’m a Man
Jarvis Cocker – I Will Kill Again
Bobby Bare – All the Good Times Are Past and Gone
Islands – Don’t Call Me Whitney, Bobby
The Unicorns – I Was Born (a Unicorn)

Most overrated band of last year

Thursday, February 1st, 2007

Arctic Monkeys were on everyone’s lips. For a moment, at least, they were the biggest thing since Oasis – themselves ‘the biggest thing since the Beatles, according to Mojo/Uncut critics desperate for another Beatles – they had the whole thing going on: hip enough to have an online hard yards bypass, too rock to bother making a website (apparently fans set up a myspace for them).

Just how much they bypassed that whole rigmarole is open to discussion, but perhaps a more pertinent line of discussion might be to ask who really cares considering the music is so boring?

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