~terry
Mon, Nov 24, 1997 (00:11)
seed
Esther Dyson, a modern day technoprohetess? Or bloated windbag?
Read the following review and discuss among yourselves.
~terry
Mon, Nov 24, 1997 (00:12)
#1
A review in the current issue of the New York Observer
>From a New Media Prophetess, A Staid Old Media Product
by Laura Miller
Release 2.0: A Design for Living in the Digital Age, by Esther Dyson.
Broadway Books, 307 pages, $25.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
If living in the digital future is anything like reading Esther Dyson's
book about it, I don't think I'll be able to stay awake for the
experience. Ms. Dyson owns a company, Edventure Holdings Inc., that
publishes a newsletter (Release 1.0) about technology trends and puts on
conferences for high-tech movers and shakers, including the exclusive PC
Forum. She's part of a relatively new breed of pundit promising to give
nervous businessmen a handle on the unpredictable, swiftly evolving,
mandarin world of high technology. The less people understand about a
powerful force, the more likely they are to manufacture cults of
personality around those who seem to have an inside line, which is how
Nicholas Negroponte managed to sell so many copies of his pompous and
silly book, Being Digital, and why Ms. Dyson got an advance of more than
a million dollars for this soporific Design for Living in the Digital
Age.
In her introduction to Release 2.0, Ms. Dyson writes that the intent of
her book is "to help us think about the Internet and our roles as
citizens, rule-makers and community members." The Net, she explains, "is
a potential home for all of us ... a place where people meet, talk, do
business, find out things, form committees, and pass on rumors." For the
rest of the book's 307 pages, Ms. Dyson continues, in this bland and
measured tone, to weigh in on various Internet quandaries--pornography,
spam (junk e-mail), intellectual property rights and, especially,
electronic commerce. She's a moderate libertarian who believes that
"markets will do a lot of the design if we let them, but we need a
foundation of both traditional, or terrestrial, and Net-based rules to
make the markets work properly." Few of her positions seem likely to
provoke the kind of flaming debate for which the Net is notorious, and
when she does prescribe something drastic--like the death of
copyright--she does it in the mild, reasonable voice of technocrat
managers everywhere.
In a way, Ms. Dyson is an example of the curse inherent in getting what
you wished for. The first prophets of the digital future were early
adapters, mostly former hippies, and were prone to the grandiosity and
"revolutionary" junk rhetoric of the 60's counterculture. They talked a
lot of nonsense about the death of literature, the hive-mind and
screenagers, got brain-trust jobs at Wired magazine and discovered that
the more outlandish their predictions and pontifications, the more
easily they could scare corporate managers into paying them hefty
consulting fees for their goofy pronouncements. To be fair, they did
foster one industry--a minor boom of inner-Luddite authors who wrote
long, earnest, hand-wringing treatises on how the Internet spells the
end of civilization as we know it. Another former hippie, Kirkpatrick
Sale, even took his Cassandra act on the road, smashing computers with a
baseball bat during public appearances and reaffirming that his is the
Generation That Knows No Shame when it comes to the pursuit of media
attention. Meanwhile, the press went wild with horror stories about the
child molesters, hackers, sexual harassers and other sociopaths
supposedly lurking in every dark recess of the Net.
In short, it's been a three-ring circus, and I remember how most of the
people who early on had found the Net interesting, fun and useful would
yearn for a less inflammatory public discussion of its potential. Now
comes Esther Dyson to make us rue the day we did. The bonanza mentality
that once prevailed in the corporate world's attitude toward the Net has
been tempered with skepticism, and their tolerance for wild-eyed
visionaries has been exhausted. They prefer now to hear about the future
from one of their own (Ms. Dyson was once a securities analyst and used
to work at Forbes), in the language and terms that make them
comfortable, a soothing vocabulary--composed of words like "innovation,"
"productivity" and "outsourcing"--that can cloak the most ruthless
strategies and appalling events in a mantle of placid euphemism.
Compared to the Net's early champions and critics, Ms. Dyson sounds like
the voice of reason, but she's also depressingly lacking in passion.
Release 2.0 has all the pizzazz and sense of adventure of an in-flight
magazine.
The book offers a series of scenarios--entitled "Communities," "Work,"
"Education," "Governance" and so on--illustrating how Ms. Dyson expects
the Net will reshape various areas of our lives. It's a vision of the
world common in libertarians, in which all students are industrious, all
employers judicious, all consumers well informed and every citizen
exercises his or her freedom of choice and speech with the rationality
of a Vulcan--as long as the noxious forces of centralized government and
excessive regulation are kept at bay.
Well, actually, there may still be a few hate groups and con men and
slanderers and unsocialized wackos out there, but a complex, grass-roots
system of social and commercial shunning will, Ms. Dyson assures us,
keep them from running amok. Individuals and companies will thrive or
fail on the basis of reputation. "Better communications, Net versions of
best-10 lists, consumer ratings and overall visibility will cause
investors, managers, employees, and customers to gravitate to good
companies; they will flee from bad or ineffective ones." How
simple--unless you're one of the unfortunate pioneers who discovers
first-hand that an unregulated meatpacking plant or automobile
manufacturer has been cutting corners, in which case I suppose you could
take comfort in knowing that your personal loss will eventually become
the free market's gain.
Release 2.0 suffers from such idiocies because Ms. Dyson, like many of
the so-called "digerati," is too deeply embedded in the high-tech
sub-economy to understand that much of the rest of the world doesn't
work that way and never will. "Just as the pace at which you live your
individual work life will speed up," she chirps blithely, "so will the
pace at which companies are created, grow, and disappear The good news
is that this 'Darwinism' applies more to companies than to people. Bad
companies die or get absorbed, but with luck their employees learn
something and move on to better companies." So far, that's been true in
Silicon Valley, where the workers in question are highly skilled, well
paid and still fairly young. It's an acceptable way for the software
industry to run, but try translating Ms. Dyson's model to agriculture,
or mining, or the manufacturing of durable goods. It just doesn't
compute.
Her editors (no doubt thinking of the kind of sales needed to recoup
that advance) probably urged her to make Release 2.0 accessible. As a
result, people in the technology industry will find the book too
elementary to be of any real use, while the unwired will wind up
bewildered by it. But, while Broadway Books may wind up stung in this
deal, Ms. Dyson probably won't. A recent Vanity Fair profile of her
quotes her father, the physicist Freeman Dyson, dismissing her monthly
newsletter thus: "I'm always surprised that people pay so much for so
little." Beyond displaying the kind of parenting that helped make his
daughter the automatonlike workaholic depicted in the profile, Mr. Dyson
misses the point. A $695-per-year subscription to Release 1.0 provides
access to PC Forum, an event where talent connects with money and vice
versa. Ms. Dyson's real skill lies in hooking people up, not in her
ideas, so don't expect anyone in the industry to publicly confess to the
widespread opinion that Release 2.0 is stale and vague. Chances are
they're indebted to Ms. Dyson for a past introduction, or hoping for an
advantageous one in the future.
back to top
This column ran on page 35 in the 11/24/97 edition of The New York
Observer.
~mikeg
Mon, Nov 24, 1997 (07:03)
#2
I read an article by Dyson in a UK newspaper (The Independent, I think), where she rubbished the idea of community being initiated on the net - she seems to think that the internet-community is only useful when applied to existing,
real-life communities. I e-mailed her pointing out this was perhaps not the case. Dyson does not answer her e-mail.
~terry
Mon, Nov 24, 1997 (09:51)
#3
Perhaps in would gain some relevance if tied to a r/l community.
The Spring is pursuing building some real flesh based communties and
hot wiring each home with high speed need access and "surround video".
Perhaps these folks will join our virtual community, maybe not, I find
the folks here interesting and stimulating and many of these interactions
may lead to actual physical meetings or "netmeetings" of some sort.
~terry
Mon, Nov 24, 1997 (13:21)
#4
Here's one for the "give me a break" department.
The Slantsman's Jeffrey Kallenberg writes:
"...the best job I've seen in breaking down the Internet,
the cybercommunity, and the high tech world into well-thought
tidy bites. A definite buy . . ."
By the way, that should be bytes, Jeff. And what were you
on when you wrote this?
~terry
Mon, Nov 24, 1997 (13:46)
#5
Re: the article above.
Nail. Head. Bang. Right on.
~mikeg
Tue, Nov 25, 1997 (08:03)
#6
Hmm...seems I must now eat my words. Dyson replied to my e-mail after my last posting, and said that she basically agreed with what I had said. Which begs the question why she seemed to put another viewpoint across in her newspaper article. Fickle fickle fickle.
~terry
Tue, Nov 25, 1997 (09:39)
#7
Can you quote some of the things she said in her reply
and elaborate on this a bit?
~mikeg
Thu, Nov 27, 1997 (06:23)
#8
She only said one thing in her reply, which was:
"I basically agree with what you said" :)
Below which was quoted my entire e-mail, and then a huge signature advertising
her latest book (Release 2.0) - Dyson has much to learn about e-mail
etiquette, methinks...
However, I shall post my original message to her in a moment.
~mikeg
Thu, Nov 27, 1997 (06:27)
#9
Hi Esther,
I have just read with interest you article in the Guardian newspaper (06
November 97). I feel that you have - or appear to have - limited your
investigation of online community to so-called "chat rooms", which you
mention; you have neglected to mention the vast numbers of other online
communities - both real-time and asynchronous - which exist around the net.
I would challenge the idea that you put forward the net is a *community
support*, not actually a community itself. You mention that the community
tends to be built offline, and then transferred online in some manner - that
online communities tend to have real-life meets etc. This is both true and
false, and I have examples for both. Firstly, there is the (now infamous)
WELL, about which I'm sure you know. Howard Rheingold wrote about it in his
book "The Virtual Community", a seminal tome about which, again, I'm sure you
know.
As a former UK-based WELLite, I can definitely say that the sense of community
on the WELL was lower for me than it appeared to be for most San Francisco
members. That was a principal reason for me deciding to cancel my account.
However, in the same "conferencing" vein as the WELL, there is Cafe Utne
(http://www.utne.com/) which functions as an international net-based
community, but which has (to my knowledge) only a minimal amount of
face-to-face meeting, yet still seems to create the kind of "community
feeling" found in the WELL.
Also prevalent in this country, are a version of the Multi-User Dungeon (MUD),
which we know as "talkers". These are real-time, telnet-based communications
which are like MUDs,but with the hack-and-slash removed - people are simply
there to chat to each other. They differ from IRC in the fact that everyone
has a fixed id or nickname - there's no nickname stealing and
identity-ambiguity as is found in IRC. These communities, for they definitely
are, do not rely on face-to-face meets to establish community - the vast
majority of the users are simply university undergraduates. We do have meets,
but these are infrequent enough to encourage the community online.
I hope I haven't bored you too much, and I look forward to any comments you
have to make on the above, or indeed on any aspect of online communities.
Yours,
~Mike
~mikeg
Thu, Nov 27, 1997 (06:28)
#10
To which Esther replied:
Thanks for writing. What you said is fine and I basically agree with it.
Esther Dyson
[..snipped .sig...]
~terry
Thu, Nov 27, 1997 (07:56)
#11
So, Mike, is this dialogue of yours with Esther going
to continue? I got an email from Gregory Kallenberg
saying that his little piece was definitely altered
beyond recognition (the one he wrote about Esther's
book in the Statesman).
~mikeg
Fri, Nov 28, 1997 (12:41)
#12
I don't know - I invited her to reply (as you can read) on vcs in general, but she didn't. I guess she's too busy plugging her new book to worry about a little undergrad like me.
~americ
Fri, Nov 28, 1997 (15:44)
#13
She is traveling all over the place.
She did do a quick reply to my e-mail
where I invited her to a conference with my students.
said would perhaps take a question or two via e-mail.
~terry
Fri, Nov 28, 1997 (17:22)
#14
Wow, I should pop her an email and see what happens.