1 00:00:00,379 --> 00:00:06,880 [music] 2 00:00:06,880 --> 00:00:18,008 So yeah, being one of the first net culture or computers in society writers was strategically a poor move for me 3 00:00:19,758 --> 00:00:26,837 And I'm living proof, though, you can still survive it, if you can get through it somehow, by answering e-mail more slowly 4 00:00:27,395 --> 00:00:35,341 It's funny, I wrote some notes because I thought I should be responsible, because you guys are real computer studies 5 00:00:35,341 --> 00:00:45,856 computer science people, as opposed to just, you know, your average, digitally illiterate audience. 6 00:00:45,856 --> 00:00:54,480 So I don't really need to make the case - I probably don't - on why learning something about digital technology is a smart thing 7 00:00:54,480 --> 00:00:58,911 Because you guys have already made that choice. 8 00:00:58,911 --> 00:01:06,425 But something that occurred to me on the way here, actually, that you might not realize as young people 9 00:01:06,425 --> 00:01:10,804 if you don't mind being called that 10 00:01:10,804 --> 00:01:19,458 ...is that it's very hard to get a very accurate sense of the biases of the digital media environment... 11 00:01:19,458 --> 00:01:23,096 ...when you've been raised inside it. 12 00:01:23,096 --> 00:01:34,323 In other words, what I want to suggest to you is that those of us who are old enough to have experienced and consciously experienced 13 00:01:34,323 --> 00:01:45,063 the shift from a pre-digital media environment to a digital media environment actually understand something 14 00:01:45,063 --> 00:01:55,610 or sense something or experience something about the biases of digital technology that is relatively difficult for those of you who have been raised 15 00:01:55,610 --> 00:01:58,829 with digital technology to get. 16 00:01:58,829 --> 00:02:02,188 Right now this is the opposite argument I made through most of my career. 17 00:02:02,188 --> 00:02:06,443 In 1995, I wrote a book called, Playing the Future, where I argued that, 18 00:02:06,443 --> 00:02:10,707 "Don't worry, you grown ups, digital technology is coming and you feel overwhelmed. 19 00:02:10,707 --> 00:02:15,124 But you guys are digital immigrants whereas kids are digital natives. 20 00:02:15,124 --> 00:02:18,564 So you're going to speak the language like an immigrant, they're going to speak like a native. 21 00:02:18,564 --> 00:02:26,260 You're always going to feel slightly out of place and unsure, and everytime you have a hypertext link, you're gonna be a disoriented 22 00:02:26,260 --> 00:02:29,512 because we're not used to that, whereas kids are going to experience that very naturally. 23 00:02:29,512 --> 00:02:33,156 That what looks disjointed to us, will be a natural terrain for them. 24 00:02:33,156 --> 00:02:37,056 And they will have command, don't worry, the kids are alright." 25 00:02:37,056 --> 00:02:42,572 But as I've grown older, and as I've watched where cyberspace has gone, 26 00:02:42,572 --> 00:02:51,728 and where our culture has gone, or hasn't, I realize that some of my elders were actually more right about this than I was 27 00:02:51,728 --> 00:02:56,770 And in reading all the - finally catching up with who I was supposed to read, 28 00:02:56,770 --> 00:03:01,021 when I was younger, you know, McCluen and Ong, and all the great media theorists, you know, 29 00:03:01,021 --> 00:03:07,429 I would read about the digital environ- or the media environments, and this notion that McCluen had, 30 00:03:07,429 --> 00:03:12,646 that, you know, if you ask a fish about water he wouldn't be able to tell you what it is, right? 31 00:03:12,646 --> 00:03:17,977 Because the fish is swimming in the water. He's not aware of the water. 32 00:03:17,977 --> 00:03:22,659 You know, so if you ask someone who is raised in a television environment, "Oh, what about the impact television on you?" 33 00:03:22,659 --> 00:03:28,638 You can't say it because you're living in it. You're living in that media environment. 34 00:03:28,638 --> 00:03:35,556 Likewise, those of us living in a digital media environment, it's very difficult for us to parse it's effect 35 00:03:35,556 --> 00:03:38,675 For us to feel what it is 36 00:03:38,675 --> 00:03:45,276 For us to understand the difference between what it is to be a human being 37 00:03:45,276 --> 00:03:50,172 and what it is to be a digital being 38 00:03:50,172 --> 00:03:58,555 And, being able to parse it, though, being able to begin to look at that 39 00:03:58,555 --> 00:04:07,510 What Norbert Weinert used to call, "the human use of human beings." He was one of the first people to talk about cybernetics 40 00:04:07,510 --> 00:04:12,622 I think he invented the word, actually, back when, cybernetics. Even though it got stolen. 41 00:04:12,622 --> 99:59:59,999 He was really looking at as we develop a computer environment, how will we recognize what is the difference between humans and the machines that we're in? 42 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 How will we understand how to create a human, or a humanity-encouraging, digital media environment? 43 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 Now the reason why I think this is important is because most of my peers strongly disagree with this sentiment 44 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 Most of my peers, and call them the sort of, the Negroponte, Kevin Kelley, Wired Magazine, Chris Anderson, 45 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 all the way to Ray Kurzwhile on that spectrum, Clay Shirkey - there's this sense, this sort of letter ripped sense about technology 46 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 that's uncomfortably consonant with corporate capitalism, but that's another story 47 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 That human beings are merely one stage in information's inevitable evolution towards greater states of complexity, right? 48 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 And they tell this very compelling story about the beginning of time all the way through now. 49 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 That matter has been groping toward greater states of complexity, right? 50 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 That we had atoms became molecules, and molecules became, you know, sort of these weird pre-proto-life things which became cells 51 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 And now we have this whole life thing that happened 52 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 And life got very complex through evolution 53 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 And we had people 54 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 And people built machines, and machines are just sort of in that big, blue, overtake humanity moment, 55 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 and when they do, then machines, our computers, our networks will be the real host for the evolution of information 56 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 and we human beings can tend to those machines, or, at best, upload our consciousness 57 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 and then they will continue that journey for us 58 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 You know, and each one has a different metaphor for explaining it 59 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 You know, whether it's Kevin talking about what technology wants, right? What technology wants, like it really wants. 60 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 Not, it's not bias towards something, but it wants something, we've made this thing. 61 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 Just as God made people, people made technology, and this child will go on wanting something. 62 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 Or Ray Kurzwhile who will talk about the singularity, which I'm sure you've all read or heard about, even on, you know, 63 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 you can find out about it in Vice Magazine or anything, at this point 64 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 You know, the idea that technology reaches this point of, not self-consciousness or self-awareness necessarily, but it just surpasses us 65 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 It becomes this thing and can keep going. 66 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 It's a... I don't know... for me it's a discomforting view of humanity 67 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 but it's also, I would argue, an incorrect one, you know? 68 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 It's one that is - it's one that is a result of living unconsciously in a digital media environment 69 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 It's one where you let the digital media environment dictate what you are and how you think about the world 70 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 rather than maintaining some sense of humanity in that. 71 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 Alright? So, what's interesting to me as I look at the history of computing, which now we have 72 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 and as we look at computers in society, which is a real thing. 73 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 I mean, 20 years ago, 10 years ago, when we taught courses like this, it was futurism. 74 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 Computers in Society was a course was a course in, "What's it gonna be like someday when people have e-mail?" 75 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 I mean, there were times, and I'm sure you were in those conversations 76 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 when people like me used to go to a cocktail party or go to a publisher, or explain to a magazine editor. 77 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 Someday people are going to have their own computers 78 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 They are gonna send messages to eachother using little text editors 79 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 using, you know, word processors, 80 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 and they would literally laugh us out of the room. 81 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 They did not - they - it seemed so outrageous, that - Or they'd walk around 82 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 No, you're not gonna have to implant chips in people, they're gonna walk around with phones that are gonna track them everywhere they go 83 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 and they're gonna do this voluntarily 84 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 They're gonna give all their information - it's all just - and no one believed us. But, of course that happened. 85 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 But, the thing that's interesting to me about computer history, if we're gonna follow it from the history of humanity 86 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 rather than the history of technology, right? Let's not worry about paper tape to punch cards to tape to discs to hard drives to RAM. 87 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 Let's not worry about machine evolution. But you look at the difference in people, right? 88 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 If we look at history as the human story rather than the story of stuff 89 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 then the interesting thing becomes - the big switch, I think, is the shift from a pre-literate to a literate society, right? 90 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 When we look at the impact of the printing press. 91 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 Do we talk about it in terms of, "Oh, look! These rooms filled up with books!" 92 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 No, that's not the part that's interesting. 93 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 The part that is interesting is people learned to read 94 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 and then when they learned to read, they had personal interpretations of the Bible, right? 95 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 So we had a Protestant Reformation, with people rebelling against the Church, 96 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 So we had the idea of "one man, one vote," because everyone has their own perspective. 97 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 It coincided with prospective painting. 98 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 It coincided with central banking. 99 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 And all of these other, very, analagous human inventions that were all about people having individual perspectives, 100 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 "One man, one vote," it led to the Enlightenment, and all this other stuff. 101 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 Consumerism, Industrial Era and everything else. 102 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 When we look at digital technology I think we have to look at it that way. 103 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 In other words, what is the difference between a pre-literate digital society and a post-literate digital society? 104 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 You know, I'm over arguing for digital literacy. I think digital literacy is inevitable, you know? 105 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 I feel like I'm making that - when I, and I, it's my main talk that I do. 106 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 It's like, you know, "Programmer be programmed!" And I wrote this book, Programmer Be Programmed. 107 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 We have to learn to program. If you don't learn how to program, you're just swimming blindly in a sea of information. 108 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 Kids don't understand the biases of the technologies they use. 109 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 You know, if you ask a kid what Facebook is for, he'll say Facebook is here to help him make friends. 110 99:59:59,999 --> 99:59:59,999 But we all know Facebook is really not here - it's really here to monetize the social graft and all that.