I too Doc think JFK pushing the personal data initiatives through politics, driving policy isn’t a bad thing.
On Feb 21, 2018, at 5:41 PM, Doc Searls <
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Let me be clear that I’ve been an advocate of personal agency for the duration. My involvement with Linux, free software, open source, Cluetrain, The Intention Economy, ProjectVRM… all of them, have been about getting tools into the hands of individuals, enlarging personal agency, and solving problems from the individual’s side—while 99.xx% of all other solutions remain top-down and centralized, expanding the reach of business, government and other institutions. I don’t believe any of those approaches are bad, just that they are too easily defaulted by available money, incumbency, and models that have been wearing ruts in roads for hundreds of years—and because approximately nothing is happening on the individual’s side, enormous leverage is to be had there, and we have a network underneath it all that enables personal agency like never before in the history of our species.
Yet I also believe we have to respect the role that policy can play. Thanks to the GDPR and ePrivacy, we have opportunities right now we haven’t ever had before. The whole business world is shaken up. This is good.
But I do like that James is running for office and wanting to address privacy and related issues with policy that our community, even with its divided opinions, can influence.
Doc On Feb 21, 2018, at 4:54 PM, Adrian Gropper <
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Agency may be the only thing.
( I was censored by the DC Metro )
Adrian On Wed, Feb 21, 2018 at 4:51 PM Adrian Gropper <
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> wrote: +1 Philip - Agency may be I salute James' robust response and motivations, but never the method. Culturally, it might suit the US until it doesn't.
I subscribe 100% to the heuristic of enhancing human agency ... it's the focus of my research. And I celebrate difference re. "differentiable beings". Lennard Davis (2002) offers up a favorite quote of mine: "form follows dysfunction". And Doc (2015): "We’re all human. We’re also all now on one worldwide network, and we need to keep that human too. Nothing is more human than our differences — not only from each other, but from our former selves, even from moment to moment and context to context. Likewise, nothing is more human than our ability to relate to one another in countless ways, all the time, even as we all grow and change. Our new networked world needs to respect that." Any reading of Jaron Lanier responds appropriately (and conclusively?) to any proposal seeking to justify our human existence through its systematic quantification, so I won't attempt to regurgitate that here. Do we really want to reduce this fantastical digital facility to a question of data ownership and market participation? Seriously, is that the best we can aspire to? Just as the rest of the world is catching up with this community, are we really happy to slide back to some dated 1980s paradigm just to see some 'progress' locked in? Or should we assert that the human is now as informational and interfacial as she is biological and psychological? A question of identity and dignity and participation not market worth. Shouldn't we raise questions of identity and collectivities and ethics rather than securitization and free (flawed) markets? Should we not strive to offer and derive unquantifiable value in all agencement of wonderful variety and purpose rather than construct a simplistic mechanic by which some one might package up the personal data equivalent of a collateralized debt obligation?
Best, Philip.
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Adrian Gropper MD
PROTECT YOUR FUTURE - RESTORE Health Privacy! HELP us fight for the right to control personal health data.
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