What Turned Jaron Lanier Against the Web?
The digital pioneer and visionary behind virtual reality has turned against the very culture he helped create
- By Ron Rosenbaum
- Smithsonian magazine, January 2013, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 4)
The connection Lanier makes between techno-utopianism, the rise of the machines and the Great Recession is an audacious one. Lanier is suggesting we are outsourcing ourselves into insignificant advertising-fodder. Nanobytes of Big Data that diminish our personhood, our dignity. He may be the first Silicon populist.
“To my mind an overleveraged unsecured mortgage is exactly the same thing as a pirated music file. It’s somebody’s value that’s been copied many times to give benefit to some distant party. In the case of the music files, it’s to the benefit of an advertising spy like Google [which monetizes your search history], and in the case of the mortgage, it’s to the benefit of a fund manager somewhere. But in both cases all the risk and the cost is radiated out toward ordinary people and the middle classes—and even worse, the overall economy has shrunk in order to make a few people more.”
Lanier has another problem with the techno-utopians, though. It’s not just that they’ve crashed the economy, but that they’ve made a joke out of spirituality by creating, and worshiping, “the Singularity”—the “Nerd Rapture,” as it’s been called. The belief that increasing computer speed and processing power will shortly result in machines acquiring “artificial intelligence,” consciousness, and that we will be able to upload digital versions of ourselves into the machines and achieve immortality. Some say as early as 2020, others as late as 2045. One of its chief proponents, Ray Kurzweil, was on NPR recently talking about his plans to begin resurrecting his now dead father digitally.
Some of Lanier’s former Web 2.0 colleagues—for whom he expresses affection, not without a bit of pity—take this prediction seriously. “The first people to really articulate it did so right about the late ’70s, early ’80s and I was very much in that conversation. I think it’s a way of interpreting technology in which people forgo taking responsibility,” he says. “‘Oh, it’s the computer did it not me.’ ‘There’s no more middle class? Oh, it’s not me. The computer did it.’
“I was talking last year to Vernor Vinge, who coined the term ‘singularity,’” Lanier recalls, “and he was saying, ‘There are people around who believe it’s already happened.’ And he goes, ‘Thank God, I’m not one of those people.’”
In other words, even to one of its creators, it’s still just a thought experiment—not a reality or even a virtual-reality hot ticket to immortality. It’s a surreality.
Lanier says he’ll regard it as faith-based, “Unless of course, everybody’s suddenly killed by machines run amok.”
“Skynet!” I exclaim, referring to the evil machines in the Terminator films.
At last we come to politics, where I believe Lanier has been most farsighted—and which may be the deep source of his turning into a digital Le Carré figure. As far back as the turn of the century, he singled out one standout aspect of the new web culture—the acceptance, the welcoming of anonymous commenters on websites—as a danger to political discourse and the polity itself. At the time, this objection seemed a bit extreme. But he saw anonymity as a poison seed. The way it didn’t hide, but, in fact, brandished the ugliness of human nature beneath the anonymous screen-name masks. An enabling and foreshadowing of mob rule, not a growth of democracy, but an accretion of tribalism.
It’s taken a while for this prophecy to come true, a while for this mode of communication to replace and degrade political conversation, to drive out any ambiguity. Or departure from the binary. But it slowly is turning us into a nation of hate-filled trolls.
Surprisingly, Lanier tells me it first came to him when he recognized his own inner troll—for instance, when he’d find himself shamefully taking pleasure when someone he knew got attacked online. “I definitely noticed it happening to me,” he recalled. “We’re not as different from one another as we’d like to imagine. So when we look at this pathetic guy in Texas who was just outed as ‘Violentacrez’...I don’t know if you followed it?”
“I did.” “Violentacrez” was the screen name of a notorious troll on the popular site Reddit. He was known for posting “images of scantily clad underage girls...[and] an unending fountain of racism, porn, gore” and more, according to the Gawker.com reporter who exposed his real name, shaming him and evoking consternation among some Reddit users who felt that this use of anonymity was inseparable from freedom of speech somehow.
“So it turns out Violentacrez is this guy with a disabled wife who’s middle-aged and he’s kind of a Walter Mitty—someone who wants to be significant, wants some bit of Nietzschean spark to his life.”
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Comments (79)
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The article is historically compelling. And gives rise to a rather provocative analogy of the psychology of human nature and its use of knowledge for the purpose of empowerment. Many great civilizations have risen and fallen based on their faculty to think, reason, acquire and apply such knowledge. For a creator to place a "warning label" on his creation should give those reading this article pause for thought. Artificial intelligence is a powerful and magnificent tool; but in all its glory it is tainted by a downside, that can only be tempered by the use of the very human element of empathic reasoning.
Posted by Priscilla Miller on May 11,2013 | 11:38 AM
dammit... and I thought it would take the rest of the world at least a month or two to catch up. Having given up on technology a few weeks ago, it's nice to see others close behind. The Androids of today do a fine job as typewriters and mailboxes, addressbooks and that's where I draw the line. Facepoop is a dated messaging system, and musicians gotz to pop their tunes on usb chips. Cheers !
Posted by dudermn on May 7,2013 | 05:46 PM
Well, this Jaron Lanier sounds like an interesting thinker. I do not feel, however, that the author made even the most remote attempt to understand the ideas presented. Technical error first: MIDI is a control protocol for "telling synthesizers what notes to play and the rhythms, as well as recording and playing back control information of various kinds" 2nd of all, why do we see all of these smart comparisons to known historical figures (like Chambers- oh no, there is no innuendo with THAT comparison, sir.) while our dear author seems incapable of comprehending or relaying the concept of mob rule and groupthink etc. Surely this concept is not a new concept, nor particularly difficult to comprehend. Why make Jaron look like an obscure figure, when his message is plain and simple? Thank You
Posted by aaron peacock on May 1,2013 | 11:05 AM
This guy is the tech version of Michael Moore and is laughing all the way to the bank...
Posted by Stone on April 8,2013 | 01:35 PM
Lanier's modus operandus is to go on on and about what he "advocated" and "promoted", leading lazy gullible easily confused minds to think that he actually had anything to do with creating or developing these things.
Posted by on March 18,2013 | 10:45 PM
"I have spoken with Jaron a number of times and it is clear that he is one of the most brilliant minds of our era. I'm a technology professional (telephone switching systems engineer) and share most of his critiques of the current status quo." He's brilliant because ... he agrees with you! Ever hear anyone say that someone is brilliant but they're wrong about everything?
Posted by Snort on March 18,2013 | 10:35 PM
"what is now known as Web 2.0—“information wants to be free,” “the wisdom of the crowd” and the like." The things you mention have nothing to do Web 2.0. Lanier has nothing to do with Web 2.0. All Lanier does is talk.
Posted by Snort on March 18,2013 | 10:22 PM
"Jaron Lanier was one of the creators of our current digital reality" No, really, he wasn't. The Web and VR have nothing to do with each other. Lanier's primary skill is as a self-promoter.
Posted by Snort on March 18,2013 | 10:18 PM
Author Ron Rosenbaum states that Jason Lanier's father "brought up his son in the New Mexico desert, far from civilization..." Please! In the 70's Mr. Lanier and teen-aged Jason used to come by our Dairy Goat farm a couple of miles from their place located in the lush and fertile Mesilla Valley on the outskirts of Las Cruces, New Mexico's 2nd largest city and home of New Mexico State University. Hardly "in the desert" or "far from civilization." Did Jason Lanier himself describe the area in those terms or did Rosenbaum just assume that we New Mexicans (all two million + of us) live under a cactus 15 miles from our neighbors? Poor old New Mexico has enough trouble convincing the "other 49" that we are part of the US. At least give us credit for being civilized. After all, some of us even subscribe to Smithsonian. Sincerely, Willa Hancock, Deming NM
Posted by Willa Hancock on March 3,2013 | 09:32 PM
Mr. Lanier came across as a gentle giant and I share his concerns about digital barbarism. Mr. Lanier is correct that Google translator and pirated music extract valuable societal assets. However, as a digital pioneer he could be prejudiced to ignoring the increase in value likely to attach to all non-digital (i.e. non-virtual) commodities (e.g. physical books, live music, the paper on which I am writing my letter). As the digital world deprives our senses of their genetically programmed wants, we humans will necessarily pay a higher price for products that have sensually restorative properties, such as the touch and feel of paper.
Posted by David Frank on February 27,2013 | 06:55 PM
This is basically a continuation of the discussion that nobody seem to want to have: what to do about all the services and jobs that will no longer be needed ? We have really only seen to the start of the internet age, there will probably be no need for translators or many many other service occupations that can easily be automated using big data and more processing power. Big data, AI and further innovations in automation will end up making most jobs more or less obsolete in the not so far future and we have only see the start of this yet. The question here is why the people in power doesn't have any real answers or solutions to this problematic future.
Posted by PL on February 6,2013 | 11:25 AM
This article mirrors my own concern regarding to techno-utopianism, I do see how anonymity gave a lot of people a license to become hate-filled trolls of the blogging-sphere.
Posted by Janet on January 29,2013 | 02:42 PM
The trouble with speaking out against the digital barbarism is that you have to somehow offer a path towards wherever it is that you want the digital world to go. Just say a few words about how you want things to be better.
Posted by Tom on January 27,2013 | 02:41 AM
So why did this guy defect again? I agree with several other readers... WHAT IS UP with this writer?
Posted by Gal on January 27,2013 | 01:56 AM
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