http://www.manilatimes.net/national/2006/dec/02/yehey/opinion/20061202opi6.html

Saturday, December 02, 2006


PROJECT SYNDICATE
By H.T. Goranson

Spying on Eros


A SYDNEY-BASED Muslim cleric, Sheik Hilaly, recently made headlines in 
Australia when he publicly reflected that immodest women invite rape 
because they are like "uncovered meat." More unfortunate still was his 
implication that this was the cause of a series of gang rapes in Sydney 
in 2000, in which the attackers' legal defense was that they thought the 
women were sexually available because they wore Western clothes.

Although local Muslim leaders have since criticized Hilaly's attitude, 
the incident again raises the question of attitudes regarding sex in 
"orthodox" communities, and how they can be reconciled with prevailing 
norms in the West.

Meanwhile, in the United States, the controversy over government spying 
on its citizens seems to have died down, mostly because people are now 
convinced that their government will only look at the really bad guys.

What do these two issues have in common?

Gathering sophisticated intelligence is largely a matter of 
understanding trends. It is less important, for instance, to steal a 
copy of North Korea's bomb designs than to know the morale and 
capability of its scientists. It is important to know how much 
deprivation in a country would swing public opinion. Like most social 
science, measurement of these dynamics is conducted indirectly.

Intelligence analysts operate like scientists, in the sense that they 
develop theories, then measure and test them. Like scientists, they 
prefer to work with huge amounts of data, which is why the US government 
wants a record of every call and financial transaction made by every 
inhabitant of the country. Tracking the movement of individuals by the 
locator in their cell phones is possible, and it is surely under 
consideration.

That is because intelligence agents look for indicators, correlations 
and causes. Causes are the hardest to understand. For example, the civil 
services in Iraq have recently crossed a threshold beyond which they are 
now probably impossible to administer. A significant reason is believed 
to be the steady flight of intellectuals from Iraq, which seems obvious, 
but is difficult to measure.

Indicators and correlations are easier to demonstrate. If a lot of 
people are leaving their seats during a sporting event, you might 
consider it an indication that the event is not exciting.

During the Cold War, Western intelligence agencies developed an immense 
catalogue of indicators and correlations. If train traffic on certain 
routes increased, it suggested that army food supplies were being 
delivered, thus hinting at impending military action. Also, shipments of 
toilet paper are amazingly accurate indicators of military activity. 
Once the Soviets realized this, they began to send bogus shipments 
around the country on random schedules, creating shortages for the 
baffled civilian population.

As it turns out, another extremely useful view into a society is the 
type of pornography it consumes, together with how that pornography is 
manufactured and delivered. Yes, it is true. Spies are interested in 
prurient behavior everywhere.

One reason is that pornography in orthodox societies is illicit, so the 
distribution channels opened by sexual materials are usually used for 
other goods as well. In the Muslim world, there is a significant, 
important flow of pornography. According to one story, possibly 
apocryphal, in the 1970's, the Islamic insurgency in Iran was initially 
planned using material delivered through porn-related channels because 
the mosques were so tightly controlled.

But there are other trends indicated by pornographic content that are 
useful to spies. Movies produced for the sexual gratification of 
consumers reveal cultural norms of restriction, transgression and 
otherĀ­ness. In fact, porn is so specifically tuned to the tastes of 
consumers that shifts can indicate changes in a society almost immediately.

Interestingly, many purveyors of pornography initially thought that 
better quality video would make their product more desirable. However, 
it seems that high production values were actually less popular. So a 
"casual" production style was adopted, similar to the design of worn and 
ripped jeans. Part of the raw appeal of pornography, it seems, is that 
the product itself be raw, and conspicuously illicit.

But local tastes nonetheless vary widely. Japanese porn features 
schoolgirls, often bound. Egyptian porn before Nasser featured local 
beauties and voyeurism, but now focuses on fair-haired and pale-skinned 
women, sometimes with forced sex as a theme. Egyptian-born Sheik Hilaly, 
in Sydney, may have been verbalizing a latent sense of otherness and 
mistaking it for insight.

This means that tinkering with the content of porn could be in the 
national interest, under certain circumstances. Anyone privy to details 
of such activities cannot comment on them, but one story circulating in 
the research community involved attempts to introduce condoms into 
African porn as part of an anti-AIDS effort.

Then, of course, there is the biggest market of all: the US, where it is 
estimated that annual revenue for pornography in 2004 exceeded the 
combined revenue of the ABC, CBS and NBC television networks by many 
billions of dollars. We should not be surprised if someone eventually 
tries to tweak the content of pornography to exploit Americans' cultural 
proclivities on behalf of other products, causes, or even political 
candidates.

H. T. Goranson is the lead scientist of Sirius-Beta Corp and was a 
senior scientist with the US Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency.

+++


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