Rethinking AI through the politics of 1968.

By Dan Mcquillan

This talk was given at the conference 'Rethinking the legacy of 1968: Left 
fields and the quest for common ground' held at The Centre for Cultural Studies 
Research, University of East London on September 22nd 2018

There's a definite resonance between the agitprop of '68 and social media. 
Participants in the UCU strike earlier this year, for example, experienced 
Twitter as a platform for both affective solidarity and practical 
self-organisation1. However, there is a different geneaology that speaks 
directly to our current condition; that of systems theory and cybernetics. What 
happens when the struggle in the streets takes place in the smart city of 
sensors and data? Perhaps the revolution will not be televised, but it will 
certainly be subject to algorithmic analysis. Let's not forget that 1968 also 
saw the release of '2001: A Space Odyssey' featuring the AI supercomputer HAL.

While opposition to the Vietnam war was a rallying point for the movements of 
'68, the war itself was also notable for the application of systems analysis by 
US Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara, who attempted to make it, in modern 
parlance, a data-driven war. During the Vietnam war the hamlet pacification 
programme alone produced 90,000 pages of data and reports a month2, and the 
body count metric was published in the daily newspapers. The milieu that helped 
breed our current algorithmic dilemmas was the contemporaneous swirl of systems 
theory and cybernetics, ideas about emergent behaviour and experiments with 
computational reasoning, and the intermingling of military funding with the 
hippy visions of the Whole Earth Catalogue.

The double helix of DARPA and Silican Valley can be traced through the 
evolution of the web to the present day, where AI and machine learning are 
making inroads everywhere carrying their own narratives of revolutionary 
disruption; a Ho Chi Minh trail of predictive analytics. They are playing Go 
better than grand masters and preparing to drive everyone's car, while the 
media panics about AI taking our jobs. But this AI is nothing like HAL, it's a 
form of pattern finding based on mathematical minimisation; like a complex 
version of fitting a straight line to a set of points. These algorithms find 
the optimal solution when the input data is both plentiful and messy. 
Algorithms like backpropagation3 can find patterns in data that were 
intractable to analytical description, such as recognising human faces seen at 
different angles, in shadows and with occlusions. The algorithms of Ai crunch 
the correlations and the results often work uncannily well.

The rest of text here...
http://rethinking1968.today/

Marc Garrett

Co-Founder, Co-Director and main editor of Furtherfield.
Art, technology and social change, since 1996
http://www.furtherfield.org

Furtherfield Gallery & Commons in the park
Finsbury Park, London N4 2NQhttp://www.furtherfield.org/gallery
Currently writing a PhD at Birkbeck University, London
https://birkbeck.academia.edu/MarcGarrett
Just published: Artists Re:thinking the Blockchain
Eds, Ruth Catlow, Marc Garrett, Nathan Jones, & Sam Skinner
Liverpool Press - http://bit.ly/2x8XlMK

Marc Garrett – Unlocking Proprietorial Systems for Artistic Practice.
Posted in Journal Issues, Research Values. VOLUME 7, ISSUE 1, 2018
http://www.aprja.net/unlocking-proprietorial-systems-for-artistic-practice/

Furtherfield Editorial – Border Disruptions: Playbour & Transnationalisms.
https://www.furtherfield.org/editorial-border-disruptions-playbour-transnationalisms/

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