Franco Bifo Berardi reviews Geert Lovink’s ‘dark fiber’
For many years, Geert Lovink has carried out his
work as net-critic wandering across the territories where the net meets the
economy, politics, social action and art. Years of fast writing on mailing
lists, analysis, polemics, replies and reports have been collected and
elaborated in a way that maintains the rap-style of e-mail debates: short
sentences, ironic slogans, cuts and returns, allusions, citations...but what
emerges from this mosaic is a coherent overall view on the first decade of
digital society.
This book is the first complete investigation of
global netculture, an analysis of the evolution and involution of the web
during the first decade of its mass expansion.
But Lovink goes beyond a sociological, economic and anthropological survey.
Many of the essays in the book outline the
theoretical positions of various agents in the cyber-cultural scene: Wired's
libertarian ideology, its economistic and neoliberal involution, and the
radical pessimism of European philosophers. Outside of such confrontation,
Geert's position is that of a radical and pragmatic Northern-European
intellectual close to autonomist and cyberpunk movements, who has animated the
cybercultural scene for a decade with his polymorphous activity as writer and
moderator of connective environments such as nettime.org, and as organiser of
international meetings.
This book has been published almost simultaneously
in the United States and in Italy, it will soon come out in a Spanish and a
Japanese edition. Its publication is exceptionally timely, coinciding with an
unprecedented storm in the global economic system. In the middle of the storm,
in the eye of the cyclone sits the system of webs that multiplied the energies
of mass capitalism in the 90s, and that today finds itself on the threshold of
a radical redefinition of perspectives.
The economic crisis can only be fully explained in
relation to the ideological crisis of the new economy that supported the mass
capitalism of the 90s. Similar to Carlo Formenti's 'Mercanti del futuro',
Einaudi, this book helps us analyze the actual interlacement of web and
economy, and to get a glimpse of what is to come.
The 1987 Wall Street crash interrupted the booming
cycle that had characterized the first affirmation of Reagan's monetarist and
neoliberal policies. During the storm that upset the markets for several weeks,
(nothing in comparison to the one to come between 2000 and 2002), analysts
offered an interesting explanation: part of the international financial system
was being modernized and connected to the internet. Long before the internet
entered everyday life, some sectors of international finance had started to
make their information systems interdependent in real time.
However, since not all of the international
financial system was interconnected - so the experts claimed - the gaps and the
incompatibility of the systems of communication disturbed the fluidity of
exchanges and prevented a fast and coordinated intervention of American banks.
In order to avoid a reoccurrence of these delays in coordination, the
informatization of finance and the pervasiveness of systems of
telecommunication needed to be perfected. This is what happened in the
following years. In the 90's the circuit of information and financial exchanges
was so spread as to allow a capillary and mass participation to the flux of
financial investments.
The web became the principal support of mass
capitalism and sustained its long expansive phase in the last decade of the
century. Millions of Americans and Europeans started to invest their money,
buying and selling shares from their own homes. The whole financial system
became tightly interconnected. Today that long expansive phase has entered into
a crisis, and we see that, contrary to 1987, in fact the main danger for the
global system is the pervasive character of its connections. The Web, this
fantastic multiplier of popular participation to the market, risks becoming the
multiplier of its crisis, and the point of flight from the mediatic-financial
system of control.
But there is another side to the process. Due to
mass participation in the cycle of financial investment in the 90s, a vast
process of self-organization of cognitive producers got underway. Cognitive
workers invested their expertise, their knowledge and their creativity, and
found in the stock market the means to create enterprises. For several years,
the entrepreneurial form became the point where financial capital and highly
productive cognitive labour met.
The libertarian and liberal ideology that dominated
the (American) cyberculture of the 90s idealized the market by presenting it as
a pure, almost mathematical environment. In this environment, as natural as the
struggle for the survival of the fittest that makes evolution possible, labour
would find the necessary means to valorise itself and become enterprise. Once
left to its own dynamic, the reticular economic system was destined to optimise
economic gains for everyone, owners and workers, also because the distinction between
owners and workers would become increasingly imperceptible when one enters the
virtual productive circuit.
This model, theorised by authors such as Kevin Kelly and transformed by the
Wired magazine in a sort of digital-liberal, scornful and triumphalist
Weltanschauung, went bankrupt in the first couple of years of the new
millennium, together with the new economy and a large part of the army of
self-employed cognitive entrepreneurs who had inhabited the dotcom world.
It went bankrupt because the model of a perfectly
free market is a practical and theoretical lie. What neoliberalism supported in
the long run was not the free market, but monopoly. While the market was
idealised as a free space where knowledges, expertise and creativity meet,
reality showed that the big groups of command operate in a way that far from
being libertarian introduces technological automatisms, imposing itself with
the power of the media or money, and finally shamelessly robbing the mass of
share holders and cognitive labour.
The free market lie has been exposed by the Bush administration. Its policy is
one of explicit favouritism for monopolies (starting with the scandalous
absolution of Bill Gates' authority in exchange for a political alliance based
on large electoral donations). It is a protectionist policy that imposes the
opening of markets to weak states while allowing the United States to impose
40% import taxes on steel. With Bush's victory, the libertarian and liberal
ideology has been defeated and reduced to a hypocritical repetition of
banalities devoid of content. Geert Lovink does not dwell on American liberal
ideology, the defeated enemy. Instead, he invites us to understand what
happened at the level of production in the years of dotcom-mania.
We have no reason to cheer over the dotcom crash,
he says. The ideology that characterised dotcom mania was a fanatical
representation of obligatory optimism and economistic fideism. But the real
process that developed in these years contains elements of social as well as technological
innovation: elements that we should recuperate and re-actualise.
In the second half of the 90s a real class struggle
occurred within the productive circuit of high technologies. The becoming of
the web has been characterised by this struggle. The outcome of the struggle,
at present, is unclear. Surely the ideology of a free and natural market turned
out to be a blunder. The idea that the market functions as a pure environment
of equal confrontation for ideas, projects, the productive quality and the
utility of services has been wiped out by the sour truth of a war monopolies
have waged against the multitude of self-employed cognitive workers and against
the slightly pathetic mass of microtraders.
The struggle for survival was not won by the best
and most successful, but by the one who drew his gun out. The gun of violence,
robbery, systematic theft, of the violation of any legal and ethical norm. The
Bush-Gates alliance sanctioned the liquidation of the market, and at that point
the phase of the internal struggle of the virtual class ended. One part of the
virtual class entered the techno-military complex; another part (the large
majority) was expelled from the enterprise and pushed to the margins of
explicit proletarianization. On the cultural plane, the conditions for the
formation of a social consciousness of the cognitariat are emerging, and this
could be the most important phenomenon of the years to come, the only key to
offer solutions to the disaster.
Dotcoms were the training laboratory for a
productive model, and for a market. In the end the market was conquered and
suffocated by monopolies, and the army of self employed entrepreneurs and
venture microcapitalists was robbed and dissolved. Thus a new phase began: the
groups that became predominant in the cycle of the net-economy forge an
alliance with the dominant group of the old-economy (the Bush clan,
representative of the oil and military industry), and this phase signals a
blocking of the project of globalisation. Neoliberalism produced its own
negation, and those who were its most enthusiastic supporters become its
marginalized victims.
The main focus of this book is the Internet. What
has it been, what has it become and especially what will it be? A discussion,
starting in the mid-90's, opened gaps within cyberculture and divided the
theoretical and creative paths of its various agents. As soon as the internet
became more diffuse and revealed cultural, technical and common synergies, the
advertisers and traders arrived with their entourage of profit fanatics.
Naturally, they only had one question: can the
Internet become a moneymaking machine? The 'experts' (who then amounted to a
multicoloured bunch of artists, hackers and techno-social experimentators)
replied in Sibylline ways. The Californian digerati of Wired replied that the
Internet was destined to multiply the power of capitalism, to open vast
immaterial markets, and to upset the laws of the economy, which predict crisis
and delays and decreasing incomes and falls of profit. Nobody really refuted
these people. Net-artists and media activists had other things to do, and their
criticisms and reservations came across as the lament of the losers, who are
incapable of entering the big club.
Digerati, cyberpunk digital visionaries, and net
artists let the bubble grow. The money that entered into web circuits was
useful to develop any kind of technological, communicative and cultural
experimentation. Someone called it the funky business. Creative labour found a
way to scrounge money from a whole host of fat, obese and small capitalists.
The truth is that nobody (or very few) said that the Internet was not a
moneymaking machine. It has never been and it cannot be. Careful: this does not
mean that the web has nothing to do with the economy. On the contrary, it has
become an indispensable infrastructure for the production and the realization
of capital, but this does not mean that its specific culture can be reduced to
the economy. The Internet has opened a new chapter in the processes of production.
The dematerialization of the commodity, the principle of cooperation, and the
unbreakable continuity between production and consumption has made the
traditional criteria of definition of the value of commodities redundant.
Whoever enters the web does not see him- or herself as a client, but as a
collaborator, hence, he/she does not want to pay. AOL, Microsoft and all the
other sharks can do what they like, but they won't be able to change this fact
that is not just a rather anarchoid cultural trait, but the core of the digital
labour relation.
We should not think that the Internet is an
extravagant island where the principle of valorisation that dominates the rest
of human relations enters a crisis. On the contrary, the web has created a
conceptual opening that is destined to grow larger. The principle of freedom is
not a marginal exception, it can become the universal principle of access to
material and immaterial goods.
With the dotcom crash, cognitive labour has
separated itself from capital.
Digital artisans, who during the 90s felt like
entrepreneurs of their own labour, will slowly realize that they have been
deceived, expropriated, and this will create the conditions for a new
consciousness of cognitive workers. The latter will realise that despite having
all the productive power, they have been expropriated of its fruits by a
minority of ignorant speculators who are only good at handling the legal and
financial aspects of the productive process. The unproductive section of the
virtual class, the lawyers and the accountants, appropriate the cognitive
surplus value of physicists and engineers, of chemists, writers and media
operators. But they can detach themselves from the juridical and financial
castle of semiocapitalism, and build a direct relation with society, with the
users: then maybe the process of autonomous self-organisation of cognitive
labour will begin. This process is already underway, as the experiences of
media activism and the creation of networks of solidarity from migrant labour
show.
Starting from these experiences, we need to rethink the 19c question of the
intellectual. In Geert Lovink's book the question re-emerges. His portrait of
the virtual intellectual, in the first section of the book, is both a synthetic
autobiography and a description of the different intellectual attitudes that
characterized the formation of the connective sphere. Between the 'organic'
intellectual of corporations, and the radical and nostalgically humanistic
pessimist (the dominant intellectual figures of the 90s), Lovink proposes the
figure of the net-critic, undogmatic and curious about what happens while
resistant to any form of ideological and especially economic hegemony. But more
is at stake than a cultural fashion that is counterpoised to another. At stake
is the defection from the political scene that characterised the XXth century,
and the creation of a totally different scenario.
The XXth century was dominated by the figure of the
'superstructural' intellectual, to use an Engels, Leninist and Gramscian
formulation. For the revolutionary communist movement, the intellectual was the
pre-industrial figure, whose function was determined on the basis of a choice
of organic affiliation with a social class. The Leninist party is the
professional formation of intellectuals who chose to serve the proletarian
cause. Antonio Gramsci introduced decisive elements of innovation to the
Leninist conception, because he introduced the theme of cultural hegemony, of
the specificity of a work of ideology to develop in the process of seizing
political power. But Gramsci remained fundamentally attached to an idea of the
intellectual as an unproductive figure, to an idea of culture as pure consensus
with ideological values. The industrialisation of culture that developed during
the 1900s modified these figures, and critical thought realised this when it
migrated from Frankfurt to Hollywood.
Benjamin and Marcuse, Adorno and Horkheimer, Brecht
and Krakauer registered this passage. But it is not until the digital web redefined
the whole process of production that intellectual labour assumed the
configuration that Marx had, in the Grundrisse, defined with the expression of
‘General Intellect’.
Pierre Levy calls it collective intelligence, Derrick De Kerkhove points out that
it actually is a connective intelligence. The infinitely fragmented mosaic of
cognitive labour becomes a fluid process within a universal telematic network,
and thus the shape of labour and capital are redefined. Capital becomes the
generalized semiotic flux that runs through the veins of the global economy,
while labour becomes the constant activation of the intelligence of countless
semiotic agents linked to one another. Retrieving the concept of 'general
intellect' in the 90s, Italian compositionist thought (Paolo Virno, Christian
Marazzi, Carlo Formenti) has introduced the concept of mass intellectuality,
and emphasized the interaction between labour and language.
We needed to go through
the dotcom purgatory, through the illusion of a fusion between labour and
capitalist enterprise, and then through the hell of recession and endless war,
in order to see the problem emerge in clear terms. On the one hand, the useless
and obsessive system of financial accumulation and a privatisation of public
knowledge, the heritage of the old industrial economy. On the other hand,
productive labour increasingly inscribed in the cognitive functions of society:
cognitive labour that starts to see itself as a cognitariat, building
autonomous institutions of knowledge, of creation, of care, of invention and of
education that are autonomous from capital.
Franco Berardi Bifo
Agosto 2002
Bologna
Translated by Arianna Bove from