Dear nettimers,

on this day of the Facebook Farewell Party, which will be held tonight in the 
National Theater in Amsterdam on Leidseplein our Institute of Network Cultures 
is very proud to present the release of:

In the Facebook Aquarium—The Resistable Rise of Anarcho-Capitalism by Ippolita

Read it online or download the publication here:

http://networkcultures.org/blog/publication/no-15-in-the-facebook-aquarium-the-resistible-rise-of-anarcho-capitalism-ippolita/

In their new work research collective Ippolita provides a critical 
investigation of the inner workings of Facebook as a model for all commercial 
social networks. Facebook is an extraordinary platform that can generate large 
profit from the daily activities of its users. Facebook may appear to be a form 
of free entertainment and self-promotion but in reality its users are working 
for the development of a new type of market where they trade relationships. As 
users of social media we have willingly submitted to a vast social, economic 
and cultural experiment.

By critically examining the theories of Californian right-libertarians, 
Ippolita show the thread con- necting Facebook to the European Pirate Parties, 
WikiLeaks and beyond. An important task today is to reverse the logic of 
radical transparency and apply it to the technologies we use on a daily basis. 
The algorithms used for online advertising by the new masters of the digital 
world – Facebook, Apple, Google and Amazon – are the same as those used by 
despotic governments for personalized repression. Ippolita argues we should not 
give in to the logic of conspiracy or paranoia instead we must seek to develop 
new ways of autonomous living in our networked society.

Ippolita are an interdisciplinary research group active since 2005. They 
conduct wide-ranging re- search on technology and its social effects. Their 
published works include Open non è Free (2005), The Dark Side of Google (2013) 
and La Rete è libera e democratica. FALSO! (2014). The collective also run 
workshops on digital self-defense for girls, children, academics, affinity 
groups, computer geeks and curious people. See: http://ippolita.net

First published in Italian, 2012.
English edition revised and updated, June 2015.

Author: Ippolita. Translator: Patrice Riemens and Cecile Landman. Copy-editing: 
Matt Beros. Editorial support: Miriam Rasch. Design: Katja van Stiphout. EPUB 
development: Gottfried Haider. Printer: ‘Print on Demand’. Publisher: Institute 
of Network Cultures, Amsterdam 2015. ISBN: 978-94-92302-00-7.

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