Re: [PD] [PD-announce] Piksel video report: Sonification of IT censorship technologies

2010-12-27 Thread Mathieu Bouchard

On Wed, 22 Dec 2010, Marco Donnarumma wrote:

Matju, I see your point and I won't try to convince you that this work 
is something you don't believe it to be. However, I believe our 
disagreement born from a very different viewpoint on the nature of an 
artistic intervention. Your technical analysis is excellent, but 
it seems to me it goes over the real scope of the work.


Yes, we do have radically differing viewpoints. For example, I don't even 
think that the scope of the work ought to exclude what I talked about.


Technique is artistic.

I agree with you, it's hard to imagine not obvious ways for censorship 
to enter music, and that's one of the reasons why I'm happy 
experimenting with it. 


Yes. It's important to make experiments.

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Re: [PD] [PD-announce] Piksel video report: Sonification of IT censorship technologies

2010-12-26 Thread Mathieu Bouchard

On Sat, 25 Dec 2010, João Pais wrote:


I wanted to go one step ahead of possibly coming critique.


me too.

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Re: [PD] [PD-announce] Piksel video report: Sonification of IT censorship technologies

2010-12-25 Thread João Pais
Censorship itself is easy to justify, but what can be censored, and how  
we

decide what to censor, and what we reveal about the decision process, are
the big questions.


if you have a clear process/concept that gives it's identity to the
project, it's a bit of a pity that the final result looses power because
there isn't a strong enough "palpable" (whatever that is) connection.
Going too far with the "palpability" could result in a "technical
demonstration", but letting things too loose means that you're not
expressing anything at all,


Do you think that increasing palpability, by itself, causes something to
look like a technical demonstration ? And do you think that technical
demonstration, in itself, isn't able to be expressive ?


no. but someone said that, and I wanted to go one step ahead of possibly  
coming critique.


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Re: [PD] [PD-announce] Piksel video report: Sonification of IT censorship technologies

2010-12-24 Thread Mathieu Bouchard

On Wed, 22 Dec 2010, john saylor wrote:

if i understand you, one of your indirect points is that artists need to 
get more scientific. this seems correct to me [art has always been 
practiced by leading scientists, think of einstein and his violin]. and 
at the same time, this does not mean to ignore imagination- it means you 
must do everything.


Imagination is most meaningful when it is anchored in real life.

It's one think to imagine Einstein's space bending, and to imagine 
Minkowski's four-dimensional space-time, but it's another thing to know 
that a satellite's atomic clock has to be adjusted because it _drifts_, 
and that timeflow² + speedratio² = 1 isn't a formula that Einstein made up 
from nowhere.


In a very different domain, if I read a novel by Kafka, Camus, M-C Blais, 
Zola, C Gauvreau or whoever else, the content makes sense because it is 
anchored in real life. Even when impossible things or unlikely things 
happen in the novel, there's something in it that is relevant to real 
life.


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Re: [PD] [PD-announce] Piksel video report: Sonification of IT censorship technologies

2010-12-24 Thread Mathieu Bouchard

On Thu, 23 Dec 2010, João Pais wrote:

Predicting some critiques, someone can say "with the IPs I don't know 
what are the sites", but they don't really have to know. It should be 
enough to get an idea of the quantity of manipulated sites,


The number of blocked sites isn't meaningful : a one-page, one-topic site 
might count just as much as a million-page site that took a million more 
man-hours to write (think wikipedia). And then there is the relevance of 
those pages to each person.


There are many sites that we wouldn't mind getting blocked, and sometimes 
sites that we may believe ought to be blocked, but the problem is more 
about the criteria being used. If my government were to specifically only 
block IPs of the foreign sites that are used for the purpose of massive 
banking fraud in my country, I'd agree, and I'm sure that this would get 
massive support. OTOH, freedom of speech also gets massive support, but 
making a website faking a famous bank isn't considered Speech in that 
sense.


Censorship itself is easy to justify, but what can be censored, and how we 
decide what to censor, and what we reveal about the decision process, are 
the big questions.


if you have a clear process/concept that gives it's identity to the 
project, it's a bit of a pity that the final result looses power because 
there isn't a strong enough "palpable" (whatever that is) connection. 
Going too far with the "palpability" could result in a "technical 
demonstration", but letting things too loose means that you're not 
expressing anything at all,


Do you think that increasing palpability, by itself, causes something to 
look like a technical demonstration ? And do you think that technical 
demonstration, in itself, isn't able to be expressive ?


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Re: [PD] [PD-announce] Piksel video report: Sonification of IT censorship technologies

2010-12-24 Thread Mathieu Bouchard

On Thu, 23 Dec 2010, Marco Donnarumma wrote:

I reckon one learns it better in real life, not all schools are enough 
good to teach you that. :) 


Well, in the end, a student has to teach oneself, and is ultimately 
responsible for one's own learning ; though some are lucky to find people 
who make this easier. I didn't study in an artistic department, so those 
are all second-hand impressions (outsiders are very rarely present during 
crit sessions).


@ Derek: Agree with you, this is perhaps the focal point here. However, 
I would suggest to observe the same miscommunication not only from a 
pragmatical point of view (the artist might not know how to properly 
code something) but also from a conceptual perspective.


There are a few more layers between the coding and the artistic concepts : 
there are the math concepts layer, the programming concepts layer, etc. 
Those are all different levels at which something can « break » or be 
otherwise unsatisfying.


Maybe the artist does not always need to perfectly know how to code 
something,


What is that perfection that you refer to ? I have no idea.

And it's one thing to know how to « perfectly » code something,
but it's another, to know « perfectly » what you want to code.

If one sticks to the existing vocabulary of artist statements, there is 
quite a gap to bridge between the concept in art history's terminology 
(usually called just « the concept »), and the art object itself, because 
once one has stated what is usually called « the concept », the art object 
is hardly described at all, and almost everything is left to decide, and I 
mean almost everything that matters to the experience of the audience.


but the conceptual relevance of a work can be unveiled and successfully 
diffused even if somehow a work lacks of technical consistence,


That sounds like the artist statement is being successfully diffused, more 
than the work in itself. Or otherwise, it can sound like the artist 
statement and the work in itself lead two separate lives...



or does not fulfil requirements of a scientific paper.


(Do I have to restate what I said about scientific papers and art ? It's 
not like I expect art to fulfill those requirements, but that's the 
caricature that I read twice already this week.)



But this is probably OT already :P


pd-list would be quite dry without a healthy dose of OT.

(and the sexism thread of 2007 is not what I have in mind here.)

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Re: [PD] [PD-announce] Piksel video report: Sonification of IT censorship technologies

2010-12-24 Thread Mathieu Bouchard

On Thu, 23 Dec 2010, Derek Holzer wrote:

here I would agree 100%, as it follows directly from what I wrote already. Ii 
think, rather than dealing with the fallout of the Romantic era as Mathieu 
suggested, we are dealing with the fallout of the 1980's--and its 
intesification of spectacle and commodity.


Why would it have to be one or the other, but not both ?

Lots of things are happening concurrently in the world, but it seems like 
arguments often avoid acknowledging that complexity. It's not you in 
particular.


Although driven by a different kind of economics--mainly grants and 
subsidies with academic, social and political concerns involved--art/sci 
work still strives for the spectacle in a similar way.


In the end, what ever artist ever wanted is to show off. After that, you 
can make a distinction between showing off the budget, vs showing off the 
skills (of techniques and imagination...), and whether one kind of showing 
off is hindering another kind of showing off.


For any art to be experimental, the possibility of failure must be 
present at all times.


For any art to be really experimental, failure has to be an undefined 
concept. But seriously : how do you evaluate whether something « has 
failed » in art ?



avant-garde concert pianists [...] idiosyncrasies [...] Canadian


Btw, have you come across l'Infonie yet ?

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Re: [PD] [PD-announce] Piksel video report: Sonification of IT censorship technologies

2010-12-23 Thread Jonathan Wilkes


--- On Thu, 12/23/10, Mathieu Bouchard  wrote:

> From: Mathieu Bouchard 
> Subject: Re: [PD] [PD-announce] Piksel video report: Sonification of IT 
> censorship technologies
> To: "Jonathan Wilkes" 
> Cc: "Derek Holzer" , pd-list@iem.at
> Date: Thursday, December 23, 2010, 6:59 PM
> On Thu, 23 Dec 2010, Jonathan Wilkes
> wrote:
> > --- On Thu, 12/23/10, Mathieu Bouchard 
> wrote:
> >> In Romantic times, an anti-scientific strand of
> artists took over, who were really obsessed by their
> emotions.
> > 
> > Which strand of composers are you talking about?
> 
> I'm not very much talking about composers. I have the
> impression that Romanticism tended to have a separate
> meaning when it was only about music. I was thinking mostly
> about literature.

Ok, so then which Romantic writers are you referring to who were 
writing anti-scientific stuff?

-Jonathan

> 
> I don't know what it meant in terms of how composers
> approached composition back then. If someone could tell me
> if there was any general change of techniques that is
> relevant to what I'm saying...
> 
> I didn't study art history, so, I don't have enough
> background to talk so much more about it.
> 
> 
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> 


  

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Re: [PD] [PD-announce] Piksel video report: Sonification of IT censorship technologies

2010-12-23 Thread Mathieu Bouchard

On Thu, 23 Dec 2010, Jonathan Wilkes wrote:

--- On Thu, 12/23/10, Mathieu Bouchard  wrote:
In Romantic times, an anti-scientific strand of artists took over, who 
were really obsessed by their emotions.


Which strand of composers are you talking about?


I'm not very much talking about composers. I have the impression that 
Romanticism tended to have a separate meaning when it was only about 
music. I was thinking mostly about literature.


I don't know what it meant in terms of how composers approached 
composition back then. If someone could tell me if there was any general 
change of techniques that is relevant to what I'm saying...


I didn't study art history, so, I don't have enough background to talk so 
much more about it.


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Re: [PD] [PD-announce] Piksel video report: Sonification of IT censorship technologies

2010-12-23 Thread Jonathan Wilkes


--- On Thu, 12/23/10, Mathieu Bouchard  wrote:

> From: Mathieu Bouchard 
> Subject: Re: [PD] [PD-announce] Piksel video report: Sonification of IT 
> censorship technologies
> To: "Derek Holzer" 
> Cc: pd-list@iem.at
> Date: Thursday, December 23, 2010, 2:51 AM
> On Thu, 23 Dec 2010, Derek Holzer
> wrote:
> 
> > This is a classic example of the ongoing
> (mis)communication(s) between artists and scientists. In
> this case, I think Mathieu is confusing the purpose of art
> with the purpose of a scientific paper.
> 
> That's right, the purpose of art is to have no purpose.
> Thus spake Captain Haddock, as he explained why he had
> bought a large plexiglas sculpture of the letter H, in
> Tintin's (unfinished) opus 24 : 
> http://www.decitre.fr/gi/16/9782203017016FS.gif
> 
> ;)
> 
> > One's aim is to establish and demonstrate facts, the
> other to explore possibilities and inspire imaginative (and
> often non-linear) connections.
> 
> That's a typical Romantic conception of it. Before that
> time, art and technique were largely interchangeable words
> (they still can be, depending on context), and a lot more
> people knew that the word «technique» comes from classical
> greek «τέχνη», which has several meanings including
> «art» and «craftsmanship». In Romantic times, an
> anti-scientific strand of artists took over, who were really
> obsessed by their emotions.

Which strand of composers are you talking about?

> We are still under that
> influence, but the reason we're having this discussion is in
> part because there is a partial reconvergence of art and
> science happening these years. Some may call it a
> confusion.
> 
> I think that it's pretty clear that to establish and
> demonstrate facts, one needs to explore possibilities and
> inspire imaginative (and often non-linear) connections. It's
> so intertwined, that it's necessary.
> 
> Nevertheless, in the scientific culture, much of the
> «artsy» part of the job has been swept under the carpet
> although the job's greatest successes depends on it. (I
> guess that this would be why Einstein appears in that book
> about creativity that was mentioned some days ago)
> 
> > For me, far too much of this art-science stuff errs on
> the side of technical demonstration.
> 
> If technical demonstration can be one of the many purposes
> of art, ... Gallery contents of the last century is one long
> argument that art can be anything at all and always escapes
> any definition.
> 
> I too think that art errs a lot : someone needs to pee in
> Duchamp's urinal, imho. We just don't quite agree on which
> art is erring.
> 
> Yet at once, I don't wish that Marco's work had been a
> technical demonstration ; it's not what I said. My wish is
> about valuing the possibility to sense the input through the
> output. That does happen to be a necessary feature of
> scientific visualisation and/or sonification, but it doesn't
> mean art can't have this feature.
> 
> > The flip side of that coin is that poetry is often
> unquantifiable ("program me something sad" says the media
> artist to their trusty technician) and causes segfaults in
> engineer-type brains ;-)
> 
> It's more like "program me something interesting" and then
> the engineer-type brain suspects he's being asked to be the
> artist, and that the nominal artist is in fact some kind of
> curator except he gets the credit for the whole thing.
> 
> But that's the worst case : usually it's a lot more
> pleasant than that, and the artists' requirements are
> usually very graspable.
> 
> 
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Re: [PD] [PD-announce] Piksel video report: Sonification of IT censorship technologies

2010-12-23 Thread Derek Holzer

Hi Marco,

On 12/23/10 10:26 AM, Marco Donnarumma wrote:

> Maybe the artist does not always need to perfectly know how to code
> something, but the conceptual relevance of a work can be unveiled and
> successfully diffused even if somehow a work lacks of technical
> consistence, or does not fulfil requirements of a scientific paper.

here I would agree 100%, as it follows directly from what I wrote 
already. Ii think, rather than dealing with the fallout of the Romantic 
era as Mathieu suggested, we are dealing with the fallout of the 
1980's--and its intesification of spectacle and commodity.


Damien Hirst, Jeff Koons and etc taught us that art must be BIG and to 
go beyond the scale of what artists can make by themselves in the studio 
by hiring craftspeople and technicians to realize massive, expensive 
works as the desirable aim of this art market economy. Although driven 
by a different kind of economics--mainly grants and subsidies with 
academic, social and political concerns involved--art/sci work still 
strives for the spectacle in a similar way.


I am personally not interested in what kind of work someone fund-raise 
and be a middle-manager to create. I want to see what someone is capable 
of doing with their own two hands, as flawed as that may be. For any art 
to be experimental, the possibility of failure must be present at all times.


At the other extreme of the spectrum, and closer to my own heart, are 
artists like David Tudor. After becoming the premier avant-garde concert 
pianists, he locked himself in the studio for two years and taught 
himself analog electronics. His electronic creations represented his own 
personal musical vision--with all the idiosyncrasies included--and have 
always been a huge inspiration. And I would happily categorize your work 
more along these lines as well.


In case this sounds like part of a paper--it is. I will be curating an 
edition of the Canadian online journal Vague Terrain in March 2011 under 
the theme "Schematic as Score" and I intend to address a lot of this 
material there.


Happily veering OT,
Derek


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---Oblique Strategy # 134:
"Remove a restriction"

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Re: [PD] [PD-announce] Piksel video report: Sonification of IT censorship technologies

2010-12-23 Thread Marco Donnarumma
>
> I would say that in this particular case (golden shield music), the
> problem is the "abstractization" of the material. as Marco himself
> admitted, due to the synthesis model he used, any numbers would have
> triggered a not very different result, and the music alone (I don't know
> the rest of the installation) doesn't let the intended meaning go through.
>
>

a small, but important correction just for the sake of information.

I didn't said the music won't change much, that's what Matju argued.
I only said the rhythmic structure would be the same, but notes would
change.

As described on the project webpage, each one of the four fragment of the IP
constitutes a single voice of the synth.
So notes do definitely change in a recognizable way even with similar IPs.

Besides, "resulting notes are ordered by the amount of pages the Golden
Shield obscured for each IP address: the website’s IP obtaining the highest
page result on Google.com becomes the first note of the score and the others
follow in decreasing order."

Which makes the composition fairly unique and related to the subject of the
investigation.

I keep on believing to have reached the needed technical degree for such
kind of work. Its importance to me is given by the _concept_ of (poorly
said) giving a voice to banned websites through music or sound, raising
awareness about the existence of this kind of censorship.

I'm still very happy to have stimulated such interesting conversation.
Thanks everybody for throwing yourself in...

M










> since someone asked how to make censorship clear, I would propose (in the
> same way to make something else clear) for example to change the sound
> content, so that we can get a more clear objectification of what's being
> dealt with. just of the top of the head I can give a concrete realisation
> (which will have a different result): instead of "abstract" tones, use
> voice samples speaking out the IPs / or flustering, as being menaced / or
> computer "reading" / or voice samples but with some variable distortion
> (that can be controlled by the country from where the site comes, ...)
> This would be a proposal so that the result is more connected with the
> concept and process of the installation. Predicting some critiques,
> someone can say "with the IPs I don't know what are the sites", but they
> don't really have to know. It should be enough to get an idea of the
> quantity of manipulated sites, I guess that was the intention of the
> installation. Or then, another level could use the whois data to sonify as
> well... of course the possibilities are endless.
>
>  From my side, I just resume: if you have a clear process/concept that
> gives it's identity to the project, it's a bit of a pity that the final
> result looses power because there isn't a strong enough "palpable"
> (whatever that is) connection. Going too far with the "palpability" could
> result in a "technical demonstration", but letting things too loose means
> that you're not expressing anything at all, you're just making "nice
> music" (which is what you said yourself you didn't want to do). The
> question is finding the balance.
>
> And of course, you can always write an article.
>
> Jo?o
>
>
> > This is a classic example of the ongoing (mis)communication(s) between
> > artists and scientists. In this case, I think Mathieu is confusing the
> > purpose of art with the purpose of a scientific paper. One's aim is to
> > establish and demonstrate facts, the other to explore possibilities and
> > inspire imaginative (and often non-linear) connections.
> >
> > For me, far too much of this art-science stuff errs on the side of
> > technical demonstration. And far too many artists lack the training to
> > engage with the real media of their work and instead hire technicians to
> > realize it for them. The flip side of that coin is that poetry is often
> > unquantifiable ("program me something sad" says the media artist to
> > their trusty technician) and causes segfaults in engineer-type brains ;-)
> >
> > D.
> >
> > On 12/22/10 9:18 PM, Marco Donnarumma wrote:
> >> Matju, I see your point and I won't try to convince you that this work
> >> is something you don't believe it to be.
> >>
> >> However, I believe our disagreement born from a very different viewpoint
> >> on the nature of an artistic intervention.
> >> Your technical analysis is excellent, but it seems to me it goes over
> >> the real scope of the work.
> >
>
>
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Re: [PD] [PD-announce] Piksel video report: Sonification of IT censorship technologies

2010-12-23 Thread João Pais
I would say that in this particular case (golden shield music), the  
problem is the "abstractization" of the material. as Marco himself  
admitted, due to the synthesis model he used, any numbers would have  
triggered a not very different result, and the music alone (I don't know  
the rest of the installation) doesn't let the intended meaning go through.


since someone asked how to make censorship clear, I would propose (in the  
same way to make something else clear) for example to change the sound  
content, so that we can get a more clear objectification of what's being  
dealt with. just of the top of the head I can give a concrete realisation  
(which will have a different result): instead of "abstract" tones, use  
voice samples speaking out the IPs / or flustering, as being menaced / or  
computer "reading" / or voice samples but with some variable distortion  
(that can be controlled by the country from where the site comes, ...)
This would be a proposal so that the result is more connected with the  
concept and process of the installation. Predicting some critiques,  
someone can say "with the IPs I don't know what are the sites", but they  
don't really have to know. It should be enough to get an idea of the  
quantity of manipulated sites, I guess that was the intention of the  
installation. Or then, another level could use the whois data to sonify as  
well... of course the possibilities are endless.


From my side, I just resume: if you have a clear process/concept that  
gives it's identity to the project, it's a bit of a pity that the final  
result looses power because there isn't a strong enough "palpable"  
(whatever that is) connection. Going too far with the "palpability" could  
result in a "technical demonstration", but letting things too loose means  
that you're not expressing anything at all, you're just making "nice  
music" (which is what you said yourself you didn't want to do). The  
question is finding the balance.


And of course, you can always write an article.

João


This is a classic example of the ongoing (mis)communication(s) between  
artists and scientists. In this case, I think Mathieu is confusing the  
purpose of art with the purpose of a scientific paper. One's aim is to  
establish and demonstrate facts, the other to explore possibilities and  
inspire imaginative (and often non-linear) connections.


For me, far too much of this art-science stuff errs on the side of  
technical demonstration. And far too many artists lack the training to  
engage with the real media of their work and instead hire technicians to  
realize it for them. The flip side of that coin is that poetry is often  
unquantifiable ("program me something sad" says the media artist to  
their trusty technician) and causes segfaults in engineer-type brains ;-)


D.

On 12/22/10 9:18 PM, Marco Donnarumma wrote:

Matju, I see your point and I won't try to convince you that this work
is something you don't believe it to be.

However, I believe our disagreement born from a very different viewpoint
on the nature of an artistic intervention.
Your technical analysis is excellent, but it seems to me it goes over
the real scope of the work.





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Re: [PD] [PD-announce] Piksel video report: Sonification of IT censorship technologies

2010-12-23 Thread Marco Donnarumma
> That's something that they're supposed to have learned early in their BFA
> and/or MFA degrees, if they went that route. Otherwise, they have to learn
> it anyway.
>


I reckon one learns it better in real life, not all schools are enough good
to teach you that. :)


> This is a classic example of the ongoing (mis)communication(s) between
> artists and scientists.
> And far too many artists lack the training to engage with the
> real media of their work and instead hire technicians to realize it for
> them.

@ Derek: Agree with you, this is perhaps the focal point here. However, I
would suggest to observe the same miscommunication not only from a
pragmatical point of view (the artist might not know how to properly code
something) but also from a conceptual perspective.

Maybe the artist does not always need to perfectly know how to code
something, but the conceptual relevance of a work can be unveiled and
successfully diffused even if somehow a work lacks of technical consistence,
or does not fulfil requirements of a scientific paper.

Fortunately today's strands of "art" are manifold. Programmers are artists,
artists are programmers, cinema directors become artists, sound artists
become programmers, and so on...
Art itself is mutating, increasingly faster since the New Media global wave.
But this is probably OT already :P


-- 
Marco Donnarumma aka TheSAD
Independent New Media Arts Professional, Performer, Teacher
Ongoing MSc by Research, University of Edinburgh, UK


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Re: [PD] [PD-announce] Piksel video report: Sonification of IT censorship technologies

2010-12-22 Thread Jonathan Wilkes


--- On Wed, 12/22/10, Mathieu Bouchard  wrote:

> From: Mathieu Bouchard 
> Subject: Re: [PD] [PD-announce] Piksel video report: Sonification of IT 
> censorship technologies
> To: "Marco Donnarumma" 
> Cc: pd-list@iem.at
> Date: Wednesday, December 22, 2010, 8:02 PM
> On Mon, 20 Dec 2010, Marco Donnarumma
> wrote:
> 
> >> If one can't reasonably hear the censorship in it,
> is it appropriate to
> >> advertise the work using such a title ?
> > How would you define a 'reasonable listening of
> censorship'?
> 
> Well, perhaps there isn't one that can be done with IP
> addresses. IP addresses don't mean much to people, even less
> than phone numbers do, because the DNS and WHOIS systems do
> their best to hide those numbers away from people. There are
> hardly any well-known IP addresses apart from 127.0.0.1 and
> 192.168.0.1, which are reserved for things outside of the
> internet anyway.
> 
> Then there is the problem of putting numbers in any way
> that the numbers could be recovered (or recovered enough)
> from the data. In the case of IP addresses, anything one bit
> away is a totally distinct address, so, if such distinctions
> are hard to hear, you aren't really playing the IP address,
> but rather, a fragment of it. The way you play it, even if
> someone could make sense of MIDI notes as high as 255 (when
> even just 140 is above Nyquist...), there are 24
> combinations that would sound the same (for most IP
> addresses), because in an IP address, the order of the bytes
> is important, which is not rendered as such (you'd be either
> preserving the order or doing anything else that amounts to
> doing the same). Thus there are many combinations of
> non-banned addresses that sound exactly the same as the
> banned ones.
> 
> Both things led me to think that in this work, the IP
> addresses are secondary, the fact that they are banned
> addresses is secondary, and the concept of censorship is
> secondary.
> 
> That said, I don't know how censorship could enter a music
> piece as music.

Throw Beethoven's Eroica into a DAW and replace all the sforzandi 
with a 1000hZ sine tone.

-Jonathan

> 
> However, there are obvious ways to make it enter as lyrics
> : you write a song against censorship, and then it will get
> censored in China, and now it's doubly relevant to the topic
> of censorship.
> 
> > Sure, but in this case soundfile is only for online
> documentation, the work is exhibited as multichannel audio
> installation, the audience can interact with the software
> and read relevant information about the how/what/why.
> 
> Ah, that's very nice. Will you put some of it online one
> day ?
> 
> 
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> | Mathieu Bouchard  tél: +1.514.383.3801 
> Villeray, Montréal, QC
> -Inline Attachment Follows-
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Re: [PD] [PD-announce] Piksel video report: Sonification of IT censorship technologies

2010-12-22 Thread Mathieu Bouchard

On Thu, 23 Dec 2010, Derek Holzer wrote:

This is a classic example of the ongoing (mis)communication(s) between 
artists and scientists. In this case, I think Mathieu is confusing the 
purpose of art with the purpose of a scientific paper.


That's right, the purpose of art is to have no purpose. Thus spake Captain 
Haddock, as he explained why he had bought a large plexiglas sculpture of 
the letter H, in Tintin's (unfinished) opus 24 : 
http://www.decitre.fr/gi/16/9782203017016FS.gif


;)

One's aim is to establish and demonstrate facts, the other to explore 
possibilities and inspire imaginative (and often non-linear) 
connections.


That's a typical Romantic conception of it. Before that time, art and 
technique were largely interchangeable words (they still can be, depending 
on context), and a lot more people knew that the word «technique» comes 
from classical greek «τέχνη», which has several meanings including «art» 
and «craftsmanship». In Romantic times, an anti-scientific strand of 
artists took over, who were really obsessed by their emotions. We are 
still under that influence, but the reason we're having this discussion is 
in part because there is a partial reconvergence of art and science 
happening these years. Some may call it a confusion.


I think that it's pretty clear that to establish and demonstrate facts, 
one needs to explore possibilities and inspire imaginative (and often 
non-linear) connections. It's so intertwined, that it's necessary.


Nevertheless, in the scientific culture, much of the «artsy» part of the 
job has been swept under the carpet although the job's greatest successes 
depends on it. (I guess that this would be why Einstein appears in that 
book about creativity that was mentioned some days ago)


For me, far too much of this art-science stuff errs on the side of 
technical demonstration.


If technical demonstration can be one of the many purposes of art, ... 
Gallery contents of the last century is one long argument that art can be 
anything at all and always escapes any definition.


I too think that art errs a lot : someone needs to pee in Duchamp's 
urinal, imho. We just don't quite agree on which art is erring.


Yet at once, I don't wish that Marco's work had been a technical 
demonstration ; it's not what I said. My wish is about valuing the 
possibility to sense the input through the output. That does happen to be 
a necessary feature of scientific visualisation and/or sonification, but 
it doesn't mean art can't have this feature.


The flip side of that coin is that poetry is often unquantifiable 
("program me something sad" says the media artist to their trusty 
technician) and causes segfaults in engineer-type brains ;-)


It's more like "program me something interesting" and then the 
engineer-type brain suspects he's being asked to be the artist, and that 
the nominal artist is in fact some kind of curator except he gets the 
credit for the whole thing.


But that's the worst case : usually it's a lot more pleasant than that, 
and the artists' requirements are usually very graspable.


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Re: [PD] [PD-announce] Piksel video report: Sonification of IT censorship technologies

2010-12-22 Thread john saylor
greetings

if i understand you, one of your indirect points is that artists need
to get more scientific. this seems correct to me [art has always been
practiced by leading scientists, think of einstein and his violin].
and at the same time, this does not mean to ignore imagination- it
means you must do everything.

On Wed, Dec 22, 2010 at 7:02 PM, Derek Holzer  wrote:
> This is a classic example of the ongoing (mis)communication(s) between
> artists and scientists.
> And far too many artists lack the training to engage with the
> real media of their work and instead hire technicians to realize it for
> them.

as most of us know, traditional artistic training does not cover what
tech savvy artists need to know:
 - how to program [something]
 - how is information stored and retrieved using [relational] data bases
 - what is the network like both as artistic medium [there is some
activity here] and for propaganda purposes

and for all artists:
 - what is the role of money in art culture [a subsidiary to: what is
the role of money in my life] ?

but learning how to do art is hard enough. and understanding
technology from a tools perspective is hard enough. so why is it that
any artist will take this upon themselves?

because it's necessary to their art works. [that's enough]

-- 
\js : "verbing weirds language." -calvin  [http://or8.net/~johns/]

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Re: [PD] [PD-announce] Piksel video report: Sonification of IT censorship technologies

2010-12-22 Thread Derek Holzer
This is a classic example of the ongoing (mis)communication(s) between 
artists and scientists. In this case, I think Mathieu is confusing the 
purpose of art with the purpose of a scientific paper. One's aim is to 
establish and demonstrate facts, the other to explore possibilities and 
inspire imaginative (and often non-linear) connections.


For me, far too much of this art-science stuff errs on the side of 
technical demonstration. And far too many artists lack the training to 
engage with the real media of their work and instead hire technicians to 
realize it for them. The flip side of that coin is that poetry is often 
unquantifiable ("program me something sad" says the media artist to 
their trusty technician) and causes segfaults in engineer-type brains ;-)


D.

On 12/22/10 9:18 PM, Marco Donnarumma wrote:

Matju, I see your point and I won't try to convince you that this work
is something you don't believe it to be.

However, I believe our disagreement born from a very different viewpoint
on the nature of an artistic intervention.
Your technical analysis is excellent, but it seems to me it goes over
the real scope of the work.


--
::: derek holzer ::: http://macumbista.net :::
---Oblique Strategy # 64:
"Don't stress one thing more than another"

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Re: [PD] [PD-announce] Piksel video report: Sonification of IT censorship technologies

2010-12-22 Thread Marco Donnarumma
>
> Ah, that's very nice. Will you put some of it online one day ?


Technical information are on-line, I can provide a more detailed description
if you really need it :)

Regarding the software, yes, as I mentioned in a previous email, I need a
moment to fix few things and publish it.

 M

On Wed, Dec 22, 2010 at 9:18 PM, Marco Donnarumma wrote:

> Matju, I see your point and I won't try to convince you that this work is
> something you don't believe it to be.
>
> However, I believe our disagreement born from a very different viewpoint on
> the nature of an artistic intervention.
> Your technical analysis is excellent, but it seems to me it goes over the
> real scope of the work.
>
> A reliable, efficient, accurate and consistent sonification system for IP
> addresses was not what I aimed for.
> The project is a simple critical observation.
> That's my personal view of it and that's what I aimed for in first
> instance.
>
> I agree with you, it's hard to imagine not obvious ways for censorship to
> enter music, and that's one of the reasons why I'm happy experimenting with
> it.
>
> M
>
>
>
>
> On Wed, Dec 22, 2010 at 8:02 PM, Mathieu Bouchard wrote:
>
>> On Mon, 20 Dec 2010, Marco Donnarumma wrote:
>>
>>  If one can't reasonably hear the censorship in it, is it appropriate to
 advertise the work using such a title ?

>>> How would you define a 'reasonable listening of censorship'?
>>>
>>
>> Well, perhaps there isn't one that can be done with IP addresses. IP
>> addresses don't mean much to people, even less than phone numbers do,
>> because the DNS and WHOIS systems do their best to hide those numbers away
>> from people. There are hardly any well-known IP addresses apart from
>> 127.0.0.1 and 192.168.0.1, which are reserved for things outside of the
>> internet anyway.
>>
>> Then there is the problem of putting numbers in any way that the numbers
>> could be recovered (or recovered enough) from the data. In the case of IP
>> addresses, anything one bit away is a totally distinct address, so, if such
>> distinctions are hard to hear, you aren't really playing the IP address, but
>> rather, a fragment of it. The way you play it, even if someone could make
>> sense of MIDI notes as high as 255 (when even just 140 is above Nyquist...),
>> there are 24 combinations that would sound the same (for most IP addresses),
>> because in an IP address, the order of the bytes is important, which is not
>> rendered as such (you'd be either preserving the order or doing anything
>> else that amounts to doing the same). Thus there are many combinations of
>> non-banned addresses that sound exactly the same as the banned ones.
>>
>> Both things led me to think that in this work, the IP addresses are
>> secondary, the fact that they are banned addresses is secondary, and the
>> concept of censorship is secondary.
>>
>> That said, I don't know how censorship could enter a music piece as music.
>>
>> However, there are obvious ways to make it enter as lyrics : you write a
>> song against censorship, and then it will get censored in China, and now
>> it's doubly relevant to the topic of censorship.
>>
>>
>>  Sure, but in this case soundfile is only for online documentation, the
>>> work is exhibited as multichannel audio installation, the audience can
>>> interact with the software and read relevant information about the
>>> how/what/why.
>>>
>>
>> Ah, that's very nice. Will you put some of it online one day ?
>>
>>
>>  ___
>> | Mathieu Bouchard  tél: +1.514.383.3801  Villeray, Montréal, QC
>>
>
>
>
> --
> Marco Donnarumma aka TheSAD
> Independent New Media Arts Professional, Performer, Teacher
> Ongoing MSc by Research, University of Edinburgh, UK
>
>
> PORTFOLIO: http://marcodonnarumma.com
> LAB: http://www.thesaddj.com | http://cntrl.sourceforge.net |
> http://www.flxer.net
> EVENT: http://www.liveperformersmeeting.net
>



-- 
Marco Donnarumma aka TheSAD
Independent New Media Arts Professional, Performer, Teacher
Ongoing MSc by Research, University of Edinburgh, UK


PORTFOLIO: http://marcodonnarumma.com
LAB: http://www.thesaddj.com | http://cntrl.sourceforge.net |
http://www.flxer.net
EVENT: http://www.liveperformersmeeting.net
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Re: [PD] [PD-announce] Piksel video report: Sonification of IT censorship technologies

2010-12-22 Thread Marco Donnarumma
Matju, I see your point and I won't try to convince you that this work is
something you don't believe it to be.

However, I believe our disagreement born from a very different viewpoint on
the nature of an artistic intervention.
Your technical analysis is excellent, but it seems to me it goes over the
real scope of the work.

A reliable, efficient, accurate and consistent sonification system for IP
addresses was not what I aimed for.
The project is a simple critical observation.
That's my personal view of it and that's what I aimed for in first instance.

I agree with you, it's hard to imagine not obvious ways for censorship to
enter music, and that's one of the reasons why I'm happy experimenting with
it.

M




On Wed, Dec 22, 2010 at 8:02 PM, Mathieu Bouchard wrote:

> On Mon, 20 Dec 2010, Marco Donnarumma wrote:
>
>  If one can't reasonably hear the censorship in it, is it appropriate to
>>> advertise the work using such a title ?
>>>
>> How would you define a 'reasonable listening of censorship'?
>>
>
> Well, perhaps there isn't one that can be done with IP addresses. IP
> addresses don't mean much to people, even less than phone numbers do,
> because the DNS and WHOIS systems do their best to hide those numbers away
> from people. There are hardly any well-known IP addresses apart from
> 127.0.0.1 and 192.168.0.1, which are reserved for things outside of the
> internet anyway.
>
> Then there is the problem of putting numbers in any way that the numbers
> could be recovered (or recovered enough) from the data. In the case of IP
> addresses, anything one bit away is a totally distinct address, so, if such
> distinctions are hard to hear, you aren't really playing the IP address, but
> rather, a fragment of it. The way you play it, even if someone could make
> sense of MIDI notes as high as 255 (when even just 140 is above Nyquist...),
> there are 24 combinations that would sound the same (for most IP addresses),
> because in an IP address, the order of the bytes is important, which is not
> rendered as such (you'd be either preserving the order or doing anything
> else that amounts to doing the same). Thus there are many combinations of
> non-banned addresses that sound exactly the same as the banned ones.
>
> Both things led me to think that in this work, the IP addresses are
> secondary, the fact that they are banned addresses is secondary, and the
> concept of censorship is secondary.
>
> That said, I don't know how censorship could enter a music piece as music.
>
> However, there are obvious ways to make it enter as lyrics : you write a
> song against censorship, and then it will get censored in China, and now
> it's doubly relevant to the topic of censorship.
>
>
>  Sure, but in this case soundfile is only for online documentation, the
>> work is exhibited as multichannel audio installation, the audience can
>> interact with the software and read relevant information about the
>> how/what/why.
>>
>
> Ah, that's very nice. Will you put some of it online one day ?
>
>
>  ___
> | Mathieu Bouchard  tél: +1.514.383.3801  Villeray, Montréal, QC
>



-- 
Marco Donnarumma aka TheSAD
Independent New Media Arts Professional, Performer, Teacher
Ongoing MSc by Research, University of Edinburgh, UK


PORTFOLIO: http://marcodonnarumma.com
LAB: http://www.thesaddj.com | http://cntrl.sourceforge.net |
http://www.flxer.net
EVENT: http://www.liveperformersmeeting.net
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Re: [PD] [PD-announce] Piksel video report: Sonification of IT censorship technologies

2010-12-22 Thread Mathieu Bouchard

On Mon, 20 Dec 2010, András Murányi wrote:

Maybe the wisdom is exactly that, that a censored world will sound just 
like a non-censored world,


Well, in a censored world, when I lookup Paul Desmarais' links with 
Nicolas Sarkozy on CyberPresse, I can read it aloud like this : «404». 
This certainly sounds quite different from the article I originally read, 
which had ended up on the website by mistake. This «mistake» gave me a 
glimpse of what a noncensored world could be.


(OTOH, the way the local newspapers are gradually turning into blogs with 
near-realtime comments, it's getting harder for newspaper owners to oppose 
the flow of information, but that still depends on their customers' 
vigilance)



and one will not be able to percept that "something is missing",


There are usually omissions that are made in most any censorship job, 
especially because it's getting harder to control information, even though 
the tools that help finding what to censor are improving too. But it's 
true that given a nearly endless supply of « i'm just doing my job » 
pawns, a country can get pretty close.


Imagine you go home one day and some important things of yours have been 
stolen but you go on without noticing their absence, even with the time 
passing. Scary!


Now, will this cross the mind of any visitor of the exhibition ?

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Re: [PD] [PD-announce] Piksel video report: Sonification of IT censorship technologies

2010-12-22 Thread Mathieu Bouchard

On Mon, 20 Dec 2010, Marco Donnarumma wrote:


If one can't reasonably hear the censorship in it, is it appropriate to
advertise the work using such a title ?

How would you define a 'reasonable listening of censorship'?


Well, perhaps there isn't one that can be done with IP addresses. IP 
addresses don't mean much to people, even less than phone numbers do, 
because the DNS and WHOIS systems do their best to hide those numbers away 
from people. There are hardly any well-known IP addresses apart from 
127.0.0.1 and 192.168.0.1, which are reserved for things outside of the 
internet anyway.


Then there is the problem of putting numbers in any way that the numbers 
could be recovered (or recovered enough) from the data. In the case of IP 
addresses, anything one bit away is a totally distinct address, so, if 
such distinctions are hard to hear, you aren't really playing the IP 
address, but rather, a fragment of it. The way you play it, even if 
someone could make sense of MIDI notes as high as 255 (when even just 140 
is above Nyquist...), there are 24 combinations that would sound the same 
(for most IP addresses), because in an IP address, the order of the bytes 
is important, which is not rendered as such (you'd be either preserving 
the order or doing anything else that amounts to doing the same). Thus 
there are many combinations of non-banned addresses that sound exactly the 
same as the banned ones.


Both things led me to think that in this work, the IP addresses are 
secondary, the fact that they are banned addresses is secondary, and the 
concept of censorship is secondary.


That said, I don't know how censorship could enter a music piece as music.

However, there are obvious ways to make it enter as lyrics : you write a 
song against censorship, and then it will get censored in China, and now 
it's doubly relevant to the topic of censorship.


Sure, but in this case soundfile is only for online documentation, the 
work is exhibited as multichannel audio installation, the audience can 
interact with the software and read relevant information about the 
how/what/why.


Ah, that's very nice. Will you put some of it online one day ?

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Re: [PD] [PD-announce] Piksel video report: Sonification of IT censorship technologies

2010-12-20 Thread András Murányi
On Mon, Dec 20, 2010 at 8:05 PM, Mathieu Bouchard wrote:

> On Mon, 20 Dec 2010, Marco Donnarumma wrote:
>
>  I could also ask why does the fact that the resulting music itself
>> doesn't have much to do with censorship matter?
>>
>
> Because the title of the work is « Sonification of IT censorship
> technologies » and this title is the public's first contact with the work.
>
> If one can't reasonably hear the censorship in it, is it appropriate to
> advertise the work using such a title ?
>
> Also, if the media you give for documenting the work is a soundfile, and
> not a way to witness the process, how can the audience relate to your
> process instead of just to your soundfile ?
>

Maybe the wisdom is exactly that, that a censored world will sound just like
a non-censored world, and one will not be able to percept that "something is
missing", which is dangerous if you think about it. Imagine you go home one
day and some important things of yours have been stolen but you go on
without noticing their absence, even with the time passing. Scary!

Andras
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Re: [PD] [PD-announce] Piksel video report: Sonification of IT censorship technologies

2010-12-20 Thread Marco Donnarumma
> Because the title of the work is « Sonification of IT censorship
> technologies » and this title is the public's first contact with the work.

Sonification is the exactly the process I was talking about.


> If one can't reasonably hear the censorship in it, is it appropriate to
> advertise the work using such a title ?

How would you define a 'reasonable listening of censorship'?

> Also, if the media you give for documenting the work is a soundfile, and not
> a way to witness the process, how can the audience relate to your process
> instead of just to your soundfile ?

Sure, but in this case soundfile is only for online documentation, the
work is exhibited as multichannel audio installation, the audience can
interact with the software and read relevant information about the
how/what/why.


>
>  ___
> | Mathieu Bouchard  tél: +1.514.383.3801  Villeray, Montréal, QC



-- 
Marco Donnarumma aka TheSAD
Independent New Media Arts Professional, Performer, Teacher
Ongoing MSc by Research, University of Edinburgh, UK


PORTFOLIO: http://marcodonnarumma.com
LAB: http://www.thesaddj.com | http://cntrl.sourceforge.net |
http://www.flxer.net
EVENT: http://www.liveperformersmeeting.net

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Re: [PD] [PD-announce] Piksel video report: Sonification of IT censorship technologies

2010-12-20 Thread Mathieu Bouchard

On Mon, 20 Dec 2010, Marco Donnarumma wrote:


I could also ask why does the fact that the resulting music itself
doesn't have much to do with censorship matter?


Because the title of the work is « Sonification of IT censorship 
technologies » and this title is the public's first contact with the work.


If one can't reasonably hear the censorship in it, is it appropriate to 
advertise the work using such a title ?


Also, if the media you give for documenting the work is a soundfile, and 
not a way to witness the process, how can the audience relate to your 
process instead of just to your soundfile ?


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Re: [PD] [PD-announce] Piksel video report: Sonification of IT censorship technologies

2010-12-20 Thread Marco Donnarumma
I could also ask why does the fact that the resulting music itself
doesn't have much to do with censorship matter?
(even though I think it's a little overstated, as the music is a
direct translation of those data)

I reckon the modalities by which a process happens do matter in my
personal methodology.
However the response of a viewer to such process can be diverse from
one individual to another.


M


2010/12/20 Mathieu Bouchard :
> On Mon, 20 Dec 2010, Marco Donnarumma wrote:
>>
>> 2010/12/20 Mathieu Bouchard :
>>>
>>> Ok. Thus your music doesn't really have anything to do with censorship.
>>
>> Not directly. The involved process does.
>
> Why does it matter, that the involved process does ?
>
>  ___
> | Mathieu Bouchard  tél: +1.514.383.3801  Villeray, Montréal, QC
>



-- 
Marco Donnarumma aka TheSAD
Independent New Media Arts Professional, Performer, Teacher
Ongoing MSc by Research, University of Edinburgh, UK


PORTFOLIO: http://marcodonnarumma.com
LAB: http://www.thesaddj.com | http://cntrl.sourceforge.net |
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Re: [PD] [PD-announce] Piksel video report: Sonification of IT censorship technologies

2010-12-20 Thread Mathieu Bouchard

On Mon, 20 Dec 2010, Marco Donnarumma wrote:

2010/12/20 Mathieu Bouchard :

Ok. Thus your music doesn't really have anything to do with censorship.

Not directly. The involved process does.


Why does it matter, that the involved process does ?

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Re: [PD] [PD-announce] Piksel video report: Sonification of IT censorship technologies

2010-12-20 Thread Marco Donnarumma
Not directly. The involved process does.

M

2010/12/20 Mathieu Bouchard :
> On Mon, 20 Dec 2010, Marco Donnarumma wrote:
>
>> @Matju: I guess you can't. If the system would be based on a real time
>> flows of IP censored and non-ones, I think it would make more sense to code
>> something which could emphasize the difference. Perhaps this way it would be
>> a different work.
>
> Ok. Thus your music doesn't really have anything to do with censorship.
>
>  ___
> | Mathieu Bouchard  tél: +1.514.383.3801  Villeray, Montréal, QC



-- 
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Ongoing MSc by Research, University of Edinburgh, UK


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Re: [PD] [PD-announce] Piksel video report: Sonification of IT censorship technologies

2010-12-20 Thread Mathieu Bouchard

On Mon, 20 Dec 2010, Marco Donnarumma wrote:

@Matju: I guess you can't. If the system would be based on a real time 
flows of IP censored and non-ones, I think it would make more sense to 
code something which could emphasize the difference. Perhaps this way it 
would be a different work.


Ok. Thus your music doesn't really have anything to do with censorship.

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Re: [PD] [PD-announce] Piksel video report: Sonification of IT censorship technologies

2010-12-20 Thread Andy Farnell


Duh!? The censored ones will have the notes replaced
with rests.

On Mon, 20 Dec 2010 09:35:17 -0500 (EST)
Mathieu Bouchard  wrote:

> On Mon, 20 Dec 2010, Marco Donnarumma wrote:
> 
> > Yes, although atm the score would keep the same time structure, notes
> > would be and sound different.
> 
> But I mean, how can one distinguish between sets of censorship IP 
> addresses and non-censorship IP addresses, by ear ?
> 
>   ___
> | Mathieu Bouchard  tél: +1.514.383.3801  Villeray, Montréal, QC


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Re: [PD] [PD-announce] Piksel video report: Sonification of IT censorship technologies

2010-12-20 Thread Marco Donnarumma
@Matju: I guess you can't.
If the system would be based on a real time flows of IP censored and
non-ones, I think it would make more sense to code something which
could emphasize the difference. Perhaps this way it would be a
different work.

@Joao: Yes, indeed.
I tried to create a simple straight-forward conversion of data into
sound, without working at all on harmony, scales, etc. Also the design
of the synths is nothing too complex on purpose. I wanted the work to
focus mostly on the intervention itself and not on its outcome.
Although I myself don't think that's a "nice piece of music", I didn't
expect that degree of musicality.


M



On Mon, Dec 20, 2010 at 3:36 PM, João Pais  wrote:
> funny, you said "I don't want to make a nice music", but when I listened to
> the recording, I could only hear the nice music, and no IPs or chinese
> tentacles.
>
>> On Fri, 17 Dec 2010, Marco Donnarumma wrote:
>>
>>> Piksel team just released a full video of my recent presentation in
>>> Norway for Piksel 2010. The talk focused on the current state of IT
>>> censorship technologies and a related sonification work titled Golden
>>> Shield Music (http://marcodonnarumma.com/works/golden-shield-music/).
>>
>> Would a random selection of non-censorship IP addresses make the same
>> patch sound recognisably different ?
>>
>>  ___
>> | Mathieu Bouchard  tél: +1.514.383.3801  Villeray, Montréal, QC
>
>
> --
> Friedenstr. 58
> 10249 Berlin (Deutschland)
> Tel +49 30 42020091 | Mob +49 162 6843570
> Studio +49 30 69509190
> jmmmp...@googlemail.com | skype: jmmmpjmmmp
>
>



-- 
Marco Donnarumma aka TheSAD
Independent New Media Arts Professional, Performer, Teacher
Ongoing MSc by Research, University of Edinburgh, UK


PORTFOLIO: http://marcodonnarumma.com
LAB: http://www.thesaddj.com | http://cntrl.sourceforge.net |
http://www.flxer.net
EVENT: http://www.liveperformersmeeting.net

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Re: [PD] [PD-announce] Piksel video report: Sonification of IT censorship technologies

2010-12-20 Thread João Pais
funny, you said "I don't want to make a nice music", but when I listened  
to the recording, I could only hear the nice music, and no IPs or chinese  
tentacles.



On Fri, 17 Dec 2010, Marco Donnarumma wrote:


Piksel team just released a full video of my recent presentation in
Norway for Piksel 2010. The talk focused on the current state of IT
censorship technologies and a related sonification work titled Golden
Shield Music (http://marcodonnarumma.com/works/golden-shield-music/).


Would a random selection of non-censorship IP addresses make the same
patch sound recognisably different ?

  ___
| Mathieu Bouchard  tél: +1.514.383.3801  Villeray, Montréal, QC



--
Friedenstr. 58
10249 Berlin (Deutschland)
Tel +49 30 42020091 | Mob +49 162 6843570
Studio +49 30 69509190
jmmmp...@googlemail.com | skype: jmmmpjmmmp

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Re: [PD] [PD-announce] Piksel video report: Sonification of IT censorship technologies

2010-12-20 Thread Mathieu Bouchard

On Mon, 20 Dec 2010, Marco Donnarumma wrote:


Yes, although atm the score would keep the same time structure, notes
would be and sound different.


But I mean, how can one distinguish between sets of censorship IP 
addresses and non-censorship IP addresses, by ear ?


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Re: [PD] [PD-announce] Piksel video report: Sonification of IT censorship technologies

2010-12-20 Thread Marco Donnarumma
Yes, although atm the score would keep the same time structure, notes
would be and sound different.

Should publish the patch when I'll have some time to fix few things.


M


On Mon, Dec 20, 2010 at 2:53 PM, Mathieu Bouchard  wrote:
> On Fri, 17 Dec 2010, Marco Donnarumma wrote:
>
>> Piksel team just released a full video of my recent presentation in Norway
>> for Piksel 2010. The talk focused on the current state of IT censorship
>> technologies and a related sonification work titled Golden Shield Music
>> (http://marcodonnarumma.com/works/golden-shield-music/).
>
> Would a random selection of non-censorship IP addresses make the same patch
> sound recognisably different ?
>
>  ___
> | Mathieu Bouchard  tél: +1.514.383.3801  Villeray, Montréal, QC



-- 
Marco Donnarumma aka TheSAD
Independent New Media Arts Professional, Performer, Teacher
Ongoing MSc by Research, University of Edinburgh, UK


PORTFOLIO: http://marcodonnarumma.com
LAB: http://www.thesaddj.com | http://cntrl.sourceforge.net |
http://www.flxer.net
EVENT: http://www.liveperformersmeeting.net

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Re: [PD] [PD-announce] Piksel video report: Sonification of IT censorship technologies

2010-12-20 Thread Mathieu Bouchard

On Fri, 17 Dec 2010, Marco Donnarumma wrote:

Piksel team just released a full video of my recent presentation in 
Norway for Piksel 2010. The talk focused on the current state of IT 
censorship technologies and a related sonification work titled Golden 
Shield Music (http://marcodonnarumma.com/works/golden-shield-music/).


Would a random selection of non-censorship IP addresses make the same 
patch sound recognisably different ?


 ___
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