Sociality, a new project by Paolo Cirio.

PRESS RELEASE, October 12th 2018, NYC.

Human sociality is being engineered and patented.
https://SOCIALITY.today

The artist Paolo Cirio investigated public repositories of patents to reveal 
thousands of technologies that conceal the social control, manipulation, and 
surveillance at play on the Internet.

Sociality aims to exploit intellectual property laws for monitoring and 
regulating information technology. As an artistic provocation, it proposes the 
oversight, flagging, and banning of socially harmful inventions that employ 
devious psychological and profiling tactics through artificial intelligence, 
algorithms, data mining, social media, user interfaces, and tracking, in favor 
of a more ethical use of technology.

Today, human sociality and psychology are affected by devices subtly designed 
to program social behaviors. Sociality seeks to inspire regulations, 
accountability, and public awareness regarding these apparatuses. Beyond 
addressing the technology itself, the artwork looks at intellectual property as 
a political and economic field that has become applied to the sociality of 
humans. Our sociality is now being owned and traded by private companies 
without public scrutiny. This artwork documents the history of the unscrupulous 
business of engineering human sociality with the introduction of technology for 
social networks, Internet advertising, and even mind-reading.

On Sociality’s website everyone is able to browse, search, submit, and rate 
patents by their titles, images of flowcharts, and the companies that created 
them. Both the artist and the online participants perform oversight of invasive 
inventions designed to target demographics, push content, coerce interactions, 
and monitor citizens. In the exhibition, the public confronts large-scale 
compositions with images of flowcharts that abstractly invoke the complexity 
and magnitude of uncanny plans to program people. Images of flowcharts of 
patents are composed with short descriptions and patent numbers to be shared 
online or through printouts distributed at art shows and in the public space.

The documentary form of this artwork aims to shed light on contemporary 
mechanisms of social control by showing evidence of complex technological 
systems and their roles in enabling addiction, opinion formation, deceptions, 
discrimination, and profiling. Sociality examines the concepts of social 
bubbles, algorithmic bias, amplification of misinformation, behavior 
modification, tech addiction, and corporate surveillance. Expanding from 
privacy and bias, this project focuses on technology for the manipulation of 
human behaviors and psyche. Attention economy, steered social validation, and 
habit forming products can be psychologically damaging and impact social 
relationships to the point of harming the fabric of society and endangering 
democracy.

We regulate the financial sector, we have check and balance in the government, 
we ban the sale of guns, and toxic chemicals. As information technology impacts 
society perilously, we must also regulate both centralized and decentralized 
platforms, infrastructures, and interfaces with inventive, restrictive, and 
reflexive policies.

The first presentations and interventions with Sociality will be on October 
13th at MIT - Massachusetts Institute of Technology and at the Berkman Klein 
Center for Internet & Society, Harvard University on October 12th.

Read more about the Sociality project here:
https://SOCIALITY.today/about/

Regulatory Art
The cultural celebration of technology concerns the ethics of representation. 
Critical art should account for the intentional and unintentional social 
consequences caused by technolibertarianism. In a time when institutions 
struggle to regulate technology, artists can creatively engage with regulations 
and governance as a form of Regulatory Art. Technology is now a cultural field 
in which belief systems, politics, and ethics are central in determining the 
acceptance of any technological system. Data, code, crypto, and platforms are 
not the law, nor above it, and they should never be. Technology has become a 
political agent and its governance needs creative, critical, and dynamic 
propositions from artists. Regulatory Art is the practice of addressing, 
engaging, and inquiring about regulations in the technocratic society we live 
in.

Paolo Cirio also addresses the politics of Internet regulations in his ongoing 
projects https://Obscurity.online and https://Right2Remove.us

The project Obscurity connected individuals affected by the mugshot publishing 
industry and provided a point of departure for the project Right2Remove to 
regulate the exposure of stigmatizing and abusive content on Internet search 
engines.

After two years of activism and organizing, Right2Remove grew into a community 
of activists, lawyers, and journalists spread across the United States and 
internationally. Right2Remove is now forming as an organization and partnering 
with the Association for Accountability and Internet Democracy. In order to 
create Internet regulations Paolo Cirio’s campaign is successfully shifting the 
cultural understanding and knowledge about the Right to Be Forgotten and 
privacy inequality in United States.

The data collected for the Obscurity project, over 10 millions images of 
mugshots and 15 millions criminal records, has all been deleted without 
archived copies as a final part of the Internet art performance. In addition, 
the obfuscated websites will be delisted since they served their function and 
mugshot websites have been changing and multiplying.

Paolo Cirio discussed the mugshot websites and the Right2Remove in this article 
on The Guardian US in June:
https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2018/jun/12/mugshot-exploitation-websites-arrests-shame

The artwork Obscurity is currently in display as an art installation at the 
12th Gwangju Biennale in South Korea:
https://paolocirio.net/work/obscurity/inst-gwangju.php

Moreover, the Right to Remove and content moderation on Internet platforms will 
be discussed with experts in a panel organized by Paolo Cirio and the Center 
for Technology, Society & Policy at The School of Information, University of 
California Berkeley on November 15:
https://ctsp.berkeley.edu

Finally to conclude the projects, Paolo Cirio addresses abuses and freedom of 
speech on the Internet with the theoretical text “Perceptions on Systems of 
Justice over the Internet”:
https://paolocirio.net/press/texts/text_obscurity-right2remove.php

Thank you for your support.

Paolo Cirio Press.
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