[lbo-talk] Fwd: <nettime> The Googlization of Everything ... by Siva Vidyanathan

Doug Henwood dhenwood at panix.com
Fri Mar 21 04:58:33 PDT 2008


[from nettime]

From: "Frederick Noronha [फ़रेदरिक नोरोनया]" <fred at bytesforall.org> Date: March 17, 2008 2:07:05 PM EDT Resent-To: Nettime <nettime-l at kein.org> To: nettime-l at kein.org Subject: <nettime> The Googlization of Everything ... by Siva Vidyanathan

How one company is disrupting culture, commerce and commerce ... and

why we should worry!

This blog, the result of a collaboration between myself and the

Institute for the Future of the Book, is dedicated to exploring the

process of writing a critical interpretation of the actions and

intentions behind the cultural behemoth that is Google, Inc. The book

will answer three key questions: What does the world look like through

the lens of Google?; How is Google's ubiquity affecting the production

and dissemination of knowledge?; and how has the corporation altered

the rules and practices that govern other companies, institutions, and

states? [more]

* * *

Hi. Welcome to my book.

Hi. Welcome to my new book. Well, it's not a book yet. In fact, it

will not be a real book for a long time.

As you can tell from the title of this blog, the book will be about

Google and all they ways that Google is shaking up the world. Google

is a transformative and revolutionary company. I hesitate to use terms

like that. We live in an era of hyperbole. So I try my best to

discount claims of historical transformation or communicative

revolutions.

But in the case of Google, I am confident it is both.

Now, I am approaching this book as both a fan and a critic. I am in

awe of all that Google has done and all it hopes to do. I am also wary

of its ambition and power.

As I use this site to compose the manuscript (an archaic word that I

love too much to discard) for the book The Googlization of Everything,

I hope to do so with your help.

This is the latest in a series of "open book" experiments hosted and

guided by The Institute for the Future of the Book. The Institute has

been supportive of my work for years -- long before I became

affiliated with it as a fellow and certainly long before we thought up

this project together. As with the other projects by Ken Wark and

Mitch Stephens, this one will depend on reader criticism and feedback

to work right. So this is an appeal for help. If you know something

about Google, hip me to it. If you have an observation about how it

works or how it affects our lives, write to me about it.

On occasion, I will post an open question on this blog. Please help me

answer it.

I have never tried to write a book this way. Few have. Writing has

been a lonely, selfish pursuit for me so far. I tend to wall myself

off from the world (and my loved ones) for days at a time in fits and

spurts when I get into a writing groove. I don't shave. I order pizza.

I grumble. I ignore emails from my mother.

I tend to comb through and revise every sentence five or six times

(although I am not sure that actually shows up in the quality of my

prose). Only when I am sure that I have not embarrassed myself (or

when the editor calls to threaten me with a canceled contract ???

whichever comes first) do I show anyone what I have written. Now, this

is not an uncommon process. Closed composition is the default among

writers. We go to great lengths to develop trusted networks of readers

and other writers with whom we can workshop ??? or as I prefer to call

it because it's what the jazz musicians do, woodshed our work.

Well, I am going to do my best to woodshed in public. As I compose

bits and pieces of work, I will post them here. They might be very

brief bits. They might never make it into the manuscript. But they

will be up here for you to rip up or smooth over.

That's the thing. For a number of years now I have made my bones in

the intellectual world trumpeting the virtues of openness and the

values of connectivity. I was an early proponent of applying "open

source" models to scholarship, journalism, and lots of other things.

And, more to the point: One of my key concerns with Google is that it

is a black box. Something that means so much to us reveals so little

of itself.

So I would be a hypocrite if I wrote this book any other way. This

book will not be a black box.

Of course, it could get ugly in here. I could make tremendous

mistakes. I could shoot something out there that shuts all doors at

Google. I could undermine my ultimate market (but I seriously doubt

that I could). I could just write myself into a corner.

In my next post I will share a rough chapter outline. And I will give

some sense of the basic questions and major issues that I hope to

tackle in this work.

Ok. As Sgt. Phil used to say, "Let's roll. And let's be careful out there."

Send me links, questions and ideas:

siva [at] googlizationofeverything [dot] com

http://www.googlizationofeverything.com/2007/09/ hi_welcome_to_my_book.php

* * *

Like the Mind of God (6 posts)

All the World's Information (5 posts)

What If Big Ads Don't Work (4 posts)

Don't Be Evil (3 posts)

Is Google a Library? (15 posts)

Challenging Big Media (11 posts)

The Dossier (3 posts)

Global Google (1 post)

Google Earth (no posts)

A Public Utility? (7 posts)

About this Book (7 post

Siva Vaidhyanathan

(how do you pronounce that?)

Siva Vaidhyanathan I am a cultural historian and media scholar at the

University of Virginia. I have written two previous books: Copyrights

and Copywrongs: The Rise of Intellectual Property and How it Threatens

Creativity (New York University Press, 2001) and The Anarchist in the

Library: How the Clash between Freedom and Control is Hacking the Real

World and Crashing the System (Basic Books, 2004). Most recently I

edited (with Carolyn de la Pena) the collection, Rewiring the Nation:

The Place of Technology in American Studies (Johns Hopkins University

Press, 2007).

I've written for many periodicals, including American Scholar, The

Chronicle of Higher Education, The New York Times Magazine, MSNBC.COM,

Salon.com, openDemocracy.net, Columbia Journalism Review, and The

Nation. I also blog at SIVACRACY.NET.

After five years as a professional journalist, I earned a Ph.D. in

American Studies from the University of Texas at Austin. I've taught

at Wesleyan University, the University of Wisconsin at Madison,

Columbia University, New York University, and is this fall began as an

associate professor of Media Studies and Law at the University of

Virginia. I'm also a fellow at the New York Institute for the

Humanities and the Institute for the Future of the Book.

--

----------------------------------------------------------

Frederick 'FN' Noronha | Ym/Gmailtalk: fredericknoronha

http://fn.goa-india.org | fred at bytesforall.org

Independent Journalist | +91(832)2409490 Cell 9970157402

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