Law in the Internet Society

View   r3  >  r2  ...
CasidheMcCloneSecondEssay 3 - 20 Feb 2017 - Main.CasidheMcClone
Line: 1 to 1
 
META TOPICPARENT name="SecondEssay"
Line: 22 to 22
 Maybe you’re hesitant. Maybe you feel like you get some utility from the website. That’s fair… but you should take a long hard look at that utility before you decide you need it. What benefits do you get? Do you just like to know what your friends are up to?
Changed:
<
<
Maybe you “don’t really use it that much.” Perfect, then you don’t really need it. If you don’t really use it, then just take the last step and stop using it altogether. It will be easy! You won’t even realize its gone.

Ahhh, do you use it more than you thought?

I’ll ask a different question. How much time do you spend looking at your friends’ profiles compared to your own? Sure, Facebook lets users connect to each other… but what you really want to do is connect to yourself. You worry about what your profile says about you, and what others are going to read into. The irony is that they don’t really care, and they don’t really scrutinize your profile. They are far too busy worrying about their own. But regardless, you spend hours refining your Facebook self. You pick photos that make him look more muscular, or more outdoorsy. You follow authors or musicians that make her seem trendy and intelligent. Maybe you actually are those things. Maybe you did enjoy Interstellar, and you are interested in following the Nolan brothers’ page. But it doesn’t matter how closely your Facebook self mirrors your own preferences- that person is still not you. You are dynamic, and she is static. You can enter an empty room, sit down, and exist. He is nothing without someone to look at him.

>
>
How much time do you spend looking at your friends’ profiles compared to your own? Sure, Facebook lets users connect to each other… but what you really want to do is connect to yourself. You worry about what your profile says about you, and what others are going to read into. They don’t really scrutinize your profile. They are far too busy worrying about their own. But regardless, you spend hours refining your Facebook self. You pick photos that make him look more muscular, or more outdoorsy. You follow authors or musicians that make her seem trendy and intelligent. Maybe you actually are those things. Maybe you did enjoy Interstellar, and you are interested in following the Nolan brothers’ page. But it doesn’t matter how closely your Facebook self mirrors your own preferences- that person is still not you. You are dynamic, and she is static. You can enter an empty room, sit down, and exist. He is nothing without someone to look at him.
 Maybe you can’t part with an online persona you view as successful. The multi-person chats you contribute to, the secret clubs you’re a member of, and the inside jokes that can make every member laugh. Surely those are valuable. Think of all the clever things you’ve said there! You’ve commanded the chat room, even if only for a brief moment. People liked what you had to say. You can’t let those social victories disappear… You felt so smart. You are smart. But any wisdom you’ve imparted through Facebook didn’t come from the interface. Anything clever you’ve said online can be said offline. The character you’ve created isn’t required.
Line: 31 to 26
 Maybe you can’t part with an online persona you view as successful. The multi-person chats you contribute to, the secret clubs you’re a member of, and the inside jokes that can make every member laugh. Surely those are valuable. Think of all the clever things you’ve said there! You’ve commanded the chat room, even if only for a brief moment. People liked what you had to say. You can’t let those social victories disappear… You felt so smart. You are smart. But any wisdom you’ve imparted through Facebook didn’t come from the interface. Anything clever you’ve said online can be said offline. The character you’ve created isn’t required.
Deleted:
<
<
 You will be giving something up. We are law students, after all. We want to be lawyers- we want to deal with things made out of people. The job is inherently social, which means we need to be networkers. You want to build connections, and you want to know who to tap at any given time. How could you possibly underestimate the value of a network that keeps track of them for you? It tells you what each of your friends are up to, tells you who they know, and gives you an easy means of getting in touch with them.
Added:
>
>
But there may be something to be said for the effort “old school” communication requires. If you know that someone had to track down your number or your email address in order to contact you, would you be more likely to take their requests seriously? Or conversely, is it possible that your own communications will be taken more seriously if the people you contact can’t see your message coming just be being aware of your life? The concept is economic: the less available information about you becomes, the more likely people are to pay attention to the information they do receive.
 Try and remember the last time you took a picture, admired it, and didn’t consider posting it. The last time you took a picture just so you could capture a moment. So that a piece of time you will never get back could belong to you forever. You could revisit it whenever you wanted. It was yours. Maybe you shared it with people who you thought would be interested by it; maybe you didn’t. You didn’t have to. If someone wanted to see it, they asked you. You decided if you wanted to let them into your memory.

Try and remember the last time you did something big without updating your status. The last time you finished finals season without advertising it. The last time you went out of town for the weekend without all of your friends knowing where, and what time you were getting back. The last time somebody asked you “What have you been up to?” without already knowing the answer.

Changed:
<
<
Try and remember what it was like to be a monkey that didn’t perform for other monkeys. Well, we can’t stop being primates. But we can stop performing.
>
>
To be clear, I’m not arguing for isolation. The view from Walden Pond may be beautiful, but the local economy is kinder to philosophers than it is to lawyers. I’m just saying we should try to exercise a little more control over how visible we are. We’re all monkeys performing for other monkeys. We can’t stop being primates, and we can’t stop performing. But we can try a little harder to pick our own audience. .
 

Casidhe's page

Deleted:
<
<

Well, we can't stop doing that either: we are social animals and we have to perform our identities in order to have them. But the essence of your argument is that we don't have to perform them inside a system which commoditizes us and tries to consume our time in identity crises, like a teenager staring for hours into the mirror wondering if the nose is too long or the ears stick out too much. But the pleasure that people get from this performance of identity can't simply be denied, not effectively, anyway. The point has to be to explain to people how they can arrange to have the pleasures that they want to have, in modified but not deteriorated form, without adding the injury of surveillance to the insult of commodification.

 
You are entitled to restrict access to your paper if you want to. But we all derive immense benefit from reading one another's work, and I hope you won't feel the need unless the subject matter is personal and its disclosure would be harmful or undesirable. To restrict access to your paper simply delete the "#" character on the next two lines:

Revision 3r3 - 20 Feb 2017 - 03:04:27 - CasidheMcClone
Revision 2r2 - 12 Feb 2017 - 20:58:44 - EbenMoglen
This site is powered by the TWiki collaboration platform.
All material on this collaboration platform is the property of the contributing authors.
All material marked as authored by Eben Moglen is available under the license terms CC-BY-SA version 4.
Syndicate this site RSSATOM