Vice President of Newfangled.com, Writer for PRINT and F+W Media, blogger, infrequent designer, reader, science fiction enthusiast...
David Ulin

(Source: independent.co.uk)

Posted at 2:28pm and tagged with: digital-literacy, quote,.

Reading is an act of resistance in a landscape of distraction…. It requires us to pace ourselves. It returns us to a reckoning with time. In the midst of a book, we have no choice but to be patient, to take each thing in its moment, to let the narrative prevail. We regain the world by withdrawing from it just a little, by stepping back from the noise.

I just wrote up something about blogging that I don’t think gets talked about much: not just that it’s hard, or that it takes a lot of time, but that sometimes it feels terrible. I recently gathered our team together to discuss this and discovered the truth—that as much as blogging creates good, it also creates challenges that aren’t easily overcome. Here’s a clip:

…I imagine that if I am struggling with this, so are you. So let me confess a bit more. Tell me if this sounds right to you.

Creating content on the web and promoting engagement around it:

- enables me to share information I care about with other people
- inspires me to learn more
- causes me to engage with new and interesting people
- engages my vanity
- makes me feel competitive
- causes me to worry about being misunderstood
- creates frustration
- feels defeating

Some of these feelings I like, but most of them I don’t. I especially don’t like admitting them. I’d have a hard enough time being honest about them to a friend; writing them here feels like one of those dreams where you are somehow naked in public…

Read the whole piece here>

Posted at 11:19am and tagged with: blogging, content-strategy,.

The Two Things About Web Measurement

Last month, I keyboard-mashed a quick brain-dump of things I wish I could tell everyone about analytics, which was pretty much a reaction to a couple of troubling trends I’ve noticed within the realm of website measurement. First and foremost, troubling-trend #1 is the notion that data are meaningful in and of themselves. No. Wrong. I’ll get to that in a moment. Troubling-trend #2 is the generally quantitative focus that really should be qualitative. That’s why I wanted to start out with quoting Joshua Yaffa’s piece on Edward Tufte—his (and Tufte’s) indictment of us is, I believe, spot on. We are a hyperactively quantitative culture. This is not good!

So, in my introduction to the Two Things meme, I promised a forthcoming “two-things” post on measurement. Here it is. The two things about website measurement are:

  1. Proper measurement is slavery infinitely cyclical.
  2. There are no independently meaningful metrics.

Read the rest >

Posted at 7:44am and tagged with: measurement, web-development, the-two-things,.

The Two Things About Web Measurement
Last month, I keyboard-mashed a quick brain-dump of things I wish I could tell everyone about analytics, which was pretty much a reaction to a couple of troubling trends I’ve noticed within the realm of website measurement. First and foremost, troubling-trend #1 is the notion that data are meaningful in and of themselves. No. Wrong. I’ll get to that in a moment. Troubling-trend #2 is the generally quantitative focus that really should be qualitative. That’s why I wanted to start out with quoting Joshua Yaffa’s piece on Edward Tufte—his (and Tufte’s) indictment of us is, I believe, spot on. We are a hyperactively quantitative culture. This is not good!
So, in my introduction to the Two Things meme, I promised a forthcoming “two-things” post on measurement. Here it is. The two things about website measurement are:
Proper measurement is slavery infinitely cyclical.
There are no independently meaningful metrics.
Read the rest >

“The Two Things” and Content Strategy

There’s a “soft-meme” on the web called The Two Things. Have you heard of it? I call it a soft-meme because I don’t think many people have. The basic gist of it is that The Two Things are the two most important things you need to know about any subject. Check it out. There are two things for all kinds of subjects—from business to being a DJ.

Anyway, I bring this up because I think you can you should use The Two Things as a catalyst for content. For example: I gathered our client services team last Thursday for our regular team meeting and listed out the various disciplines involved in the web development process—the core stuff that we talk about with our clients every day—and asked everyone to think about and suggest The Two Things about each of them: Planning, Personas, Prototyping, SEO, Measurement, Content, Website Nurturing, Lead Generation, Scheduling, and Budgeting (there, of course, could be many more).

It wasn’t easy to do…

Read On >

Posted at 8:14am and tagged with: content-strategy, longreads,.

“The Two Things” and Content Strategy
There’s a “soft-meme” on the web called The Two Things. Have you heard of it? I call it a soft-meme because I don’t think many people have. The basic gist of it is that The Two Things are the two most important things you need to know about any subject. Check it out. There are two things for all kinds of subjects—from business to being a DJ.
Anyway, I bring this up because I think you can you should use The Two Things as a catalyst for content. For example: I gathered our client services team last Thursday for our regular team meeting and listed out the various disciplines involved in the web development process—the core stuff that we talk about with our clients every day—and asked everyone to think about and suggest The Two Things about each of them: Planning, Personas, Prototyping, SEO, Measurement, Content, Website Nurturing, Lead Generation, Scheduling, and Budgeting (there, of course, could be many more).
It wasn’t easy to do…
Read On >
Sven Birkerts

(Source: lareviewofbooks.org)

Posted at 7:30pm and tagged with: digital-literacy, longreads, Information-Overload,.

What distresses me about the transfer from thing to cloud — it was Karl Marx who lamented that “all that’s solid melts into air” — is not just the loss of the object, the fetish, the thing, but also the larger thematic implications. Of course we will never dispense with physicality altogether: even the characters in Forster’s extreme parable had bodies that lived in cell-like structures. But the primal materiality that governed the terms of existence is being by degrees, quick degrees, put at a distance. In his book The End of Nature, Bill McKibben argued with some persuasiveness that we have tamed nature and domesticated the idea of it. Nature is now for vacations or high-priced adventurings; or else it is, for the fortunate majority of us, a catastrophe spectacle, something else for the AOL home page slide show: tsunami, tornado, calving iceberg.

We might try on the big picture for a moment, imagining the terms of physical existence as they were a hundred years ago for the average person, and comparing these with the present. I won’t itemize, though I could. The short version is that the world, its elements, its nouns, has receded, as has its intractability, the defining obstacles of time and space. It’s almost as if world and screen were in inverse relation, the former fading as the latter keeps gaining in reach, in definition, in its power to compel our attention.

My latest article for Newfangled is out:

The Future of Mobile (is the Web)

I am amazed by how much strategic planning and selling of “insights” is being done these days around mobile technology. Do enough of us really consider mobile such a mystery to support a cottage industry of mobile consultants? It is certainly not true that all of that activity is wasteful, but it is also not justified that the explosion of mobile technology engender such a vast feeling of unpreparedness. The way I see it, if you own a mobile device and are comfortable using it, you possess far more expertise about the platform than you give yourself credit for. If you use them, then you know them.

Of course, just like any other technology or expertise area, there are those who have more time and resources to dig deeper on matters than others, so if we have questions about how to better prepare strategically for the future as it looks through the small screens in our pockets, others probably have the informed answers we need. That is just fine—if you have the resources to invest in employing a research analyst or consultant to guide you through the mobile “space,” more power to you. But if you do not have those resources, as I imagine is true of most reading this, then I want to encourage you to leverage what you already know. Take out your mobile device for a moment and ask yourself, what do you love about it? What works so well about it that it has become indispensable to you? What could be better about mobile experiences and how could you contribute to their improvement?

Mobile devices have proliferated to such an extent that with their virtually instant ubiquity has come the illusion of stability of the entire industry surrounding them. But it is better that we see the industry as a laboratory; its initial success and profitability, no matter how outstanding, is not yet reliable enough to establish a robust “theory” of mobile upon which our planning can rest assured. We are still figuring so many things out in such rapidly revolving cycles—how to make better devices, how to adapt content for them, repeat—that neither the device makers nor the content creators can afford to stop and take a breath. The situation is challenging, but not futile; I am certainly not going to advocate we all bury our heads in the sand and wait for stability. Being very much a believer in the immediately leverage-able, flexible power of the web, the point of view on mobile that I would like to share with you is unblushingly web and content focused. Hence the title; the mobile web is not a new thing, it is the same thing, just through a new screen.

I am going to explore in a bit more detail how mobile devices work and the role they play in our culture before weighing the pros and cons of app and web-focused approaches to mobile strategy. But first, I am happy to offer my overall opinion as it stands today in short: Those employing a content-based digital marketing strategy should continue to focus on the web and adaptive design for mobile devices rather than dilute their focus by developing for the apps marketplaces. I will spend the rest of this article defending this statement…

Read the Whole Thing >

Posted at 7:52am and tagged with: longreads, mobile,.

My latest article for Newfangled is out:
The Future of Mobile (is the Web) I am amazed by how much strategic planning and selling of “insights” is being done these days around mobile technology. Do enough of us really consider mobile such a mystery to support a cottage industry of mobile consultants? It is certainly not true that all of that activity is wasteful, but it is also not justified that the explosion of mobile technology engender such a vast feeling of unpreparedness. The way I see it, if you own a mobile device and are comfortable using it, you possess far more expertise about the platform than you give yourself credit for. If you use them, then you know them. Of course, just like any other technology or expertise area, there are those who have more time and resources to dig deeper on matters than others, so if we have questions about how to better prepare strategically for the future as it looks through the small screens in our pockets, others probably have the informed answers we need. That is just fine—if you have the resources to invest in employing a research analyst or consultant to guide you through the mobile “space,” more power to you. But if you do not have those resources, as I imagine is true of most reading this, then I want to encourage you to leverage what you already know. Take out your mobile device for a moment and ask yourself, what do you love about it? What works so well about it that it has become indispensable to you? What could be better about mobile experiences and how could you contribute to their improvement? Mobile devices have proliferated to such an extent that with their virtually instant ubiquity has come the illusion of stability of the entire industry surrounding them. But it is better that we see the industry as a laboratory; its initial success and profitability, no matter how outstanding, is not yet reliable enough to establish a robust “theory” of mobile upon which our planning can rest assured. We are still figuring so many things out in such rapidly revolving cycles—how to make better devices, how to adapt content for them, repeat—that neither the device makers nor the content creators can afford to stop and take a breath. The situation is challenging, but not futile; I am certainly not going to advocate we all bury our heads in the sand and wait for stability. Being very much a believer in the immediately leverage-able, flexible power of the web, the point of view on mobile that I would like to share with you is unblushingly web and content focused. Hence the title; the mobile web is not a new thing, it is the same thing, just through a new screen. I am going to explore in a bit more detail how mobile devices work and the role they play in our culture before weighing the pros and cons of app and web-focused approaches to mobile strategy. But first, I am happy to offer my overall opinion as it stands today in short: Those employing a content-based digital marketing strategy should continue to focus on the web and adaptive design for mobile devices rather than dilute their focus by developing for the apps marketplaces. I will spend the rest of this article defending this statement…
Read the Whole Thing >

The Folly of the Flock

My first Interaction column for Print Magazine is now out in the June issue! (Hi, Mom!)

After a long search—it’s tough to find design magazines in my neck of the woods—I was able to pick up a copy and take a close look at it. I’m of course proud of the article, and very thankful for the opportunity to write for the same design magazine that inspired me so much as a student at RISD. I am also pretty excited about the illustration that Jennifer Daniel created to accompany the piece—it’s very cool!. I hope you’ll be able to see the printed version at some point. Anyway, the editors at Print have graciously ok’ed me republishing the text of the article here. Enjoy!

Read it here >

Posted at 8:14pm and tagged with: design, attention,.


The Folly of the Flock
My first Interaction column for Print Magazine is now out in the June issue! (Hi, Mom!)
After a long search—it’s tough to find design magazines in my neck of the woods—I was able to pick up a copy and take a close look at it. I’m of course proud of the article, and very thankful for the opportunity to write for the same design magazine that inspired me so much as a student at RISD. I am also pretty excited about the illustration that Jennifer Daniel created to accompany the piece—it’s very cool!. I hope you’ll be able to see the printed version at some point. Anyway, the editors at Print have graciously ok’ed me republishing the text of the article here. Enjoy!
Read it here >

…that’s how I’ve heard it said, anyway. But until this year, I’ve been thinking of that maxim incorrectly. I always assumed it meant that if you were, say, writing a book, the way to do thatwell is to work on writing it every day. Now that I am writing a book, I’ve come to a different interpretation.

Read on >

Posted at 11:20am and tagged with: writing,.

I’ve been following the ongoing conversation around the internet of things and the networked city and have enjoyed it very much.

(To follow along, check out—in no particular order—Really Interesting Group, mammoth, City of Sound, frog, The Infrastructurist, Berg, Dentsu, Stamen, and Quiet Babylon. Very light on Americans, by the way. Something to think and perhaps feel a bit of shame about.)

There’s a feeling of being right on the cusp of something—that, soon, many things will be profoundly different for us not just in the world of screens that we’ve already been immersed in, but also in the physical world in which we exist (or, for lack of a less cynical way of saying it, the world in between screens). The only problem is that this future world—the networked city we’re imagining now—just isn’t that appealing to me. The idea of being followed around by the ghost in the machine, being addressed by name on public transportation (because of technology, not because I know the bus driver), being sold things in the park by disembodied voices, etc., is dystopic to me. All we’re doing is imagining a future in which the virtual world we already know so well, characterized primarily by commerce, is manifest as an invisible layer over the organic, physical one. How interesting, really, is that?

What we really need to do is apply the technology in ways that will network the city to make our day to day experience less virtual. Invisibility is actually pretty key to that. So is a focus on us, but not from the perspective of finding more ways to reach us with advertising (no matter how soft or “social” it may seem), but from the perspective of making the work we do more productive, more efficient, safer, more enjoyable, etc.

This occurred to me dramatically when I read an article recently bemoaning the fact that the United States physical infrastructure has declined to such a great extent as to rank us shockingly low in global terms. Yes, us. It’s sad that we walk around crumbling cities with shiny new gadgets in our hands. Our infrastructure is hurting. It really shows where our focus is—I could string together quite a nice metaphor about these screens being the reflecting pool to our Narcissus, but that’s been done. But what’s even more troubling to me is how quickly our narcissistic trance could be broken and transformed to anger and entitlement by a dumb and harmful accident due to lack of upkeep on a bridge or road or something similar. I can imagine the response, the outraged questioning: “Why wasn’t this prevented? How could we let this happen in America?” I know I risk oversimplifying things by imagining that the answer lies in our unproductive online distraction. But hey, I’m going to say so anyway. Maybe we’d get more done, and have a more reliable physical experience if we weren’t so obsessed by our virtual one.

So how would this tweak to the motivation actually change what a networked city could be? One example came to mind right away, and could be the confluence of several technological trends of interest right now. Imagine if every municipal trashcan had a sensor in it that could detect when it had reached capacity. That sensor could report back to a main database. That simple full/not full report could be measured over time, and once the data set represented a large enough span of time, we could begin to do analysis on it to predict in advance when the trashcans would be full. Couple that will an algorithm that would apply the full/not full statistical analysis to the pickup crews and their routes, and we could create a system that plans and assigns routes based upon realtime data. I believe that would be a truly smart system that would create all kinds of efficiencies: better route planning would, of course, save time and fuel by reducing the waste of hitting cans and streets that don’t need attention, but also reduce monotony for the workers, which I’m willing to bet would increase their happiness and reduce turnover.

My firm (we do web technology and digital marketing) began working with a client several years ago that created software to coordinate municipal road projects, in particular between systems that don’t ordinarily know what the other is doing. Their tool would allow workers to know when a street is being or has already been dug up, whether to fix an electricity problem, communications issue, or a sewer, water, or gas main. They created it because many cities and towns impose moratoriums on digging in order to reduce traffic problems, so that if a street is dug up it can’t be dug up again for a period of years after. You can imagine, then, why coordination is so important. If a street is cut in order to do maintenance on an electrical line, then resealed before the sewer team can do the work they may need to do, the sewer work is delayed significantly. I didn’t realize it at the time, but their tool was anticipating where this networked city concept could go. The only limitation is that their tool (as far as I know right now) has to be adopted on the municipal level and is not being run in the cloud. To distribute it widely enough to make it really effective, it would have to be adopted and installed on enough machines and mobile devices to fill it with enough data to make it worthwhile. It’s just kind of clunky right now. But if each of the municipal systems were networked, the same kind of analysis system I described for the trashcans could be created to detect and anticipate problems and then plan maintenance routines that are efficiently coordinated across systems.

We don’t need more advertising systems, but we do need smarter infrastructure. We certainly have the technology to do this—we’ve spent at least the last decade amassing huge amounts of data from consumer technology use and continue to gather it at unprecedented levels; surely we have something better to do with this computing power than find new ways to do advertising (see here and here and here for an indictment of how we’re using our tech and time, and here and here for an indication of what’s technically possible).

What other ways could we network the city to make it a truly better place to live and work?

Posted at 9:37am and tagged with: networked city, one column,.

My latest article for Newfangled is up. Here’s a clip…

The Website, the Webcam, and the Test Plan: Simple and Exciting Website Usability Testing

Allow me to set the scene: I’m standing behind the first of several testing volunteers we’ve arranged to come and spend a few minutes using our website. He’s sitting at my computer studying our homepage, which we’ve asked him to do for a minute or so without clicking any links. Lauren, one of our project managers who is guiding this round of testing, asks him to narrate his observations.

“Clearly Newfangled are web developers. That’s easy enough…You guys have a lot of different clients.”

So far so good, I’m thinking. We’re so awesome. And our website is so rad.

“..If I was just coming to this site the first thing I would wonder is…well, every thing seems pretty specific, like, lots of little articles…”

True, true, we work hard. Thanks for noticing.

“…but if none of these interest me, I don’t know exactly where I would click to just see a basic, um, “what we do”—even like a two line…”

Wait, what? Really? My sense that this would be a fun, expertise-confirming experience just evaporated. No, not evaporated—that sounds too pleasant. More like melted down, like the way that one bad guy’s face does after he’s covered in toxic waste at the end of Robocop.

Doesn’t he see the positioning statement (two lines, by the way) right there in front of his face? Is he blind???

I guess that’s what the earliest stage of failure feels like—when you haven’t even realized you’ve failed. For a brief moment, you’re the victim of a cruel injustice until you realize that, no, he’s right. Our positioning statement is barely there. The most important statement our homepage could make, quietly tucked beneath the much louder and less critical slideshow—which, as it turns out, moves so fast that most of our volunteers couldn’t process the messaging it contains. We were only a minute and twenty-five seconds in to our tests, and yet we had weeks of work before us.

I’m too close to my own website to judge it, and so are you.

All melodrama aside, website usability tests are not the kind of experiences everyone walks away from feeling like a winner, which is exactly why you should do them. They don’t just expose the flaws and weaknesses of a website’s design or construction; more importantly, they reveal the inability of anyone close to the website to accurately judge it’s effectiveness. Though we had, of course, expected actionable feedback from the test subjects, that expectation didn’t preclude a bit of a sting in actually receiving it. But these tests present a positive opportunity to learn what you are not able to see for yourself. If you can take that point of view, usability testing should produce excitement, not resignation.

This month I’d like to share with you the simple video-enhanced usability testing procedure we used on our own website, what we found, and what we’re going to do next…

Read the rest here >

Posted at 1:00pm and tagged with: usability, web-design, web-development,.

My latest article for Newfangled is up. Here’s a clip…
The Website, the Webcam, and the Test Plan: Simple and Exciting Website Usability Testing
Allow me to set the scene: I’m standing behind the first of several testing volunteers we’ve arranged to come and spend a few minutes using our website. He’s sitting at my computer studying our homepage, which we’ve asked him to do for a minute or so without clicking any links. Lauren, one of our project managers who is guiding this round of testing, asks him to narrate his observations. “Clearly Newfangled are web developers. That’s easy enough…You guys have a lot of different clients.”So far so good, I’m thinking. We’re so awesome. And our website is so rad. “..If I was just coming to this site the first thing I would wonder is…well, every thing seems pretty specific, like, lots of little articles…”True, true, we work hard. Thanks for noticing. “…but if none of these interest me, I don’t know exactly where I would click to just see a basic, um, “what we do”—even like a two line…”Wait, what? Really? My sense that this would be a fun, expertise-confirming experience just evaporated. No, not evaporated—that sounds too pleasant. More like melted down, like the way that one bad guy’s face does after he’s covered in toxic waste at the end of Robocop.Doesn’t he see the positioning statement (two lines, by the way) right there in front of his face? Is he blind??? I guess that’s what the earliest stage of failure feels like—when you haven’t even realized you’ve failed. For a brief moment, you’re the victim of a cruel injustice until you realize that, no, he’s right. Our positioning statement is barely there. The most important statement our homepage could make, quietly tucked beneath the much louder and less critical slideshow—which, as it turns out, moves so fast that most of our volunteers couldn’t process the messaging it contains. We were only a minute and twenty-five seconds in to our tests, and yet we had weeks of work before us.I’m too close to my own website to judge it, and so are you. All melodrama aside, website usability tests are not the kind of experiences everyone walks away from feeling like a winner, which is exactly why you should do them. They don’t just expose the flaws and weaknesses of a website’s design or construction; more importantly, they reveal the inability of anyone close to the website to accurately judge it’s effectiveness. Though we had, of course, expected actionable feedback from the test subjects, that expectation didn’t preclude a bit of a sting in actually receiving it. But these tests present a positive opportunity to learn what you are not able to see for yourself. If you can take that point of view, usability testing should produce excitement, not resignation. This month I’d like to share with you the simple video-enhanced usability testing procedure we used on our own website, what we found, and what we’re going to do next…
Read the rest here >

Here’s some of the good stuff I encountered over the past week…

The Sad, Beautiful Fact that We’re All Going to Miss Almost Everything spoke to me. I should make a point to read this post regularly, as I am routinely struggling with how to manage the sense of urgency the web’s demand—aided and abetted, of course, by my curiosity—creates in me. Perhaps there is such a thing as infogluttony…?

Caveman: An Interview with Michel Siffre is a wonderful counterpoint to that feeling I just described. Siffre has “retreated” to long periods of extreme seclusion in order to study how isolation affects our sense of time. In a world where you can leave your desk for five minutes and return to find 50 new emails waiting for you, the thought of six months of seclusion is something beyond radical.

I Escaped from Auschwitz is the story of Kazimeirz Piechowski, a 91-year-old survivor and escapee of Auschwitz. His is a harrowing story, to be sure. But what shocked me most was something mentioned as almost an afterthought toward the end of the article: After having made his way back to his native Poland and immediately enlisting in the Polish army to fight the Nazis, he was imprisoned for almost a decade just a few short years later when Poland turned to communism. The fact that he is not bitter is remarkable.

Mid-Century Modern Music is a one-hour WNYC radio broadcast from their show, Spinning on Air, collecting what the host considers to be music that best “describes” the aesthetic of mid-century modern design. Lots of nice sounds in the mix. Especially if you can wait until toward the end, when an old sound/film piece by Jim Henson, called Limbo is played—it’s a sonic/visual tour of his brain.

Growing Up and I’m Fine is one of the many things I’ve bookmarked simply because I like the aesthetic fusion of human biology and “diagrammata.”

What Books Will Become is a longish post from Kevin Kelly (who has been quite prolific lately despite having recently released a rather thick book) imagining the future of the book—less object, more fluidity, as well as more networked. There’s certainly some familiar territory here for those keeping up with the future-of-the-book meme online, but he hits on some specifics that I haven’t heard before without much of the hand-waving-speak (if there is such a thing) that I have.

Oh, and at some point last week, my friend Jason and I discussed the concept of the Rat King, appropriately, over lunch.

What did I miss?

Posted at 9:47pm and tagged with: links, two column,.

Emil Cioran

(Source: chronicle.com)

Posted at 8:33am and tagged with: quote,.

We begin to live authentically only where philosophy ends, at its wreck, when we have understood its terrible nullity, when we have understood that it was futile to resort to it, that it is no help.

Last week, I listened to an OnPoint Radio program on the current state of online privacy and found myself pretty discouraged. While the guests were sophisticated in their dissection of the issue, I was surprised that despite the if-you-have-nothing-to-hide-then-it-shouldn’t-bother-you straw man argument being raised again and again, no one countered it with what I feel is a very obvious distinction. That is, that privacy is not a place where one does bad things unseen. Privacy is a right due humans regardless of the content of their actions (though I admit there are good arguments to be made for incarcerated prisoners losing their privacy, I’m talking more about everyday life).

Imagine a world without sin—or for lack of a less loaded term, “bad” actions or intent. Would privacy still exist as a concept? According to former Google CEO Eric Schmidt, it would not. But his ideas on privacy are simply frightening and smack of the kind of proto-fascism we should be doing everything in our power right now to diffuse. It is not up to a corporation to decide what facts about anyone should be made publicly available. Regardless of whether those facts are indicative of morally “good” or even normative behavior, they are not public property. That’s the substance of privacy—that one be granted the autonomy to speak for one’s self (thereby being the best source for one’s identity baring any established disability to do so) and protect what might be considered “interior” knowledge. In other words, if I want my income, medical history, dietary habits, or even something as inconsequential as my favorite color, to be known only to me and those to whom I personally disclose that information, that should be my right. To me, my right to arbitrate on the accessibility of facts about me is the essence of privacy. It is not, as certain fascist CEO’s turned cabinet-wannabes would like to portray it, my ability to hide illegal acts.

Of course, no one seems to be talking about what privacy actually means. There’s certainly no shortage of current opinions on “privacy” in general available on the web; let me share a few I’ve read in the last several days, starting with the lamest and making my way to the more thoughtful.

First, Michael Arrington makes the “whatever” case:

If you do stuff online, people are tracking it and putting it into a database and trying to sell you stuff based on that. There’s not much you can do about it except not be online. And it’s not all that bad, really, to get ads for diapers when you’re having a baby, or ads for cars when you are looking to buy a car. Life will go on.

While we’re in the world of I-barely-thought-about-this-before-my-ego-made-me-post-it…here’s Vivek Wadhwa, also writing for TechCrunch about what he calls the new information age (why everyone has to brand their great-big-new-but-actually-not-so-insightful-idea is beyond me…sorry, but TC is the most annoying cluster of quasi-tech-journalism possible), is more optimistic. He writes:

“Now imagine the possibilities that could derive from access to an integration of these data collections: being able to match your DNA to another’s and to learn what diseases the other person has had and how effective different medications were in curing them; learning the other person’s abilities, allergies, likes, and dislikes; who knows, maybe being able to find a DNA soul mate. We are entering an era of crowd-sourced, data-driven, participatory, genomic-based medicine.”

But what about what the future hidden costs of todays tracking culture could be? On that note, Ben McAllister of Frog Design digs a bit deeper, writing:

“We have an instinctive aversion to debt and a suspicion of free lunch, made worse by recent experience. And while our “Internet debt,” like the interest charges described by Franzen above, may be more figurative than financial, we can’t be blamed for feeling a little uneasy about the future. Perhaps we’d all feel a little less queasy if providers offered us a little more choice and control over how we settle up?”

But my favorite voice on the matter is WIRED UK columnist Russell Davies. In his usual it’s-going-to-be-much-more-mundane-than-that brand of forecasting, he warned of a less dangerous but more humanity-revealing future in his April columnn:

“All of which leads us rather sharpish to a situation where our working assumption has to be that everything you write on the internet will be read by the people you’re writing about.”

Davies lands where I think is most realistic: Despite our capacity for moral and ethical thought, we default to pragmatism once our inaction (or lack of proactivity) has presented us with a less-than-ideal situation. In other words, we say, “it’s not good, but what can you do?” This is the big problem—our unwillingness to grapple with the problem before we’re buried in so much corporate and political bureaucracy that no one has the fortitude to dig out. I explored this a bunch back in 2009 on my Newfangled blog—in particular, in a post from April 2009 on Cloud Computing and Privacy. In it, I quoted Brad Templeton, the chairman of EFF, who said in a presentation around that time:

“One of the things that I am concerned about is erasing the Fourth Amendment. For those who do not know, the Fourth Amendment is the line in the Bill of Rights that mostly relates to privacy. It says that you have the right be secure in your person, papers and effects, and people need a warrant to search your house or search your papers. Unfortunately, the Supreme Court and other courts of the United States have ruled that this wonderful Fourth Amendment does not apply when data is in the hands of third parties.

When you have something on the computer in your house, it is protected by the Fourth Amendment. If you put something on a computer owned by Facebook, it is not protected by the Fourth Amendment. It is only protected in some cases—email has a law that protects email and medical data has a law that protects medical data, and there are laws governing banking records. Specific laws protect certain types of data, but by changing the way we do computing so that all of our data is stored in the cloud we are effectively moving all of our personal data out of our houses and into big data warehouses, and we are erasing a line from the Bill of Rights.We may decide that we want to do that, but I want to make sure that we do not do it casually.”

I think that is a very compelling point. Like Brad, I don’t think that the choice is an inherently evil one. As he says, we may end up making that choice. However, if we do, it needs to be something that everyone is aware of. We chose to start sharing our data by using email services, but it wasn’t until advertisements started showing up on the right of our Gmail page that were related to the content of our emails that it really became plain that our messages were being read. Even if it’s just a robot reading them, they are being read—the robot is just a proxy for some person. Imagine if you came home one day and found a robot reading a letter that had been delivered to your home. First of all, you’d be freaked out—partly because of the robot intruder—but also because it would stand to reason that the robot was reading your letter on behalf of someone else.

What’s truly ironic is while we’re willing to default to the Arrington-lite-thinking—the “whatever” mode—we generally have unrealistic expectations of privacy within the online networks to which we belong today. It’s hard to explain the dissonance there…

I’d love to get a discussion going on this. What are your thoughts on privacy?

Posted at 8:46pm and tagged with: privacy, one column,.

Here are four articles and one video series I watched/read this week that I’m passing on to you…

What Do People Do All Day? If you only read one long blog post this week, make it this one. Bat, Bean, Beam is a once-a-week, long-form blog that covers all kinds of topics in a rich and thoughtful way. This post uses the Richard Scarry book as a launching point for discussing how our working society has changed in the last few decades.

The World’s Tallest Tree Is Hiding Somewhere In California is a post from NPR’s Robert Krulwich that tells the story (in words, pictures, and video) of the world’s tallest tree—the 379 foot, 4 inch “Hyperion.” The video documents one person’s trip climbing up the tree!

Ruins of Imagination is the first in a series of posts from Quiet Babylon that asks why we make the assumptions we do about the past.

Inside David Foster Wallace’s Private Self-Help Library is a long piece from The Awl about one journalist’s experience sifting through David Foster Wallace’s books and papers donated to the UT Austin’s Ransom Center, and the insights she gained about his mental/emotional history provided by the rich marginalia he left behind.

Ways of Seeing is a four-part BBC television series produced in 1972 and hosted by author John Berger questioning the traditional Western cultural perspective on art and aesthetics. I’m linking to Part 1 of the first episode, but the entire series is available on YouTube.

Posted at 3:20pm and tagged with: links,.

Paul Baran

(Source: The New York Times)

Posted at 10:50am and tagged with: quote,.

The process of technological developments is like building a cathedral. Over the course of several hundred years, new people come along and each lays down a block on top of the old foundations, each saying, ‘I built a cathedral.’ Next month another block is placed atop the previous one. Then comes along an historian who asks, ‘Well, who built the cathedral?’ Peter added some stones here, and Paul added a few more. If you are not careful you can con yourself into believing that you did the most important part. But the reality is that each contribution has to follow onto previous work. Everything is tied to everything else.