Anonymous and the Inevitable Fall of the Nation-State
A number of people have been linking to the following essay over the past couple of days, which provides additional information on Anonymous as well as an examination of what the organization represents if we take the long view. It was originally written in the context of this year’s relatively modest campaign against the Australian government, which had already become notorious among Western states for the extent to which it had chosen to interfere in information flow via the internet; a proposed law that ostensibly sought to regulate pornography was viewed, rightfully, as providing precedent for potential future censorship, with Minister Conroy’s plan to keep the websites that would be filtered secret from the public causing particular concern among free speech organizations. The level of DDOS utilized against various Australian government websites was minimal, but those attacks were accompanied by various other methods including black faxes, information campaigns, and in-person protests. Despite the relatively small number of participants, Operation Titstorm was notable for being the first campaign of its sort against a major government.
Meanwhile, despite the efforts of those brave pundits who have taken Anonymous to task for their unprecedented use of force against civilian websites, the organization continues to step-up its assault against Western civilization by announcing that members will be working to draw attention to overlooked stories by making YouTube videos with such keywords as “Justin Beiber” in which they actually read aloud certain important cables from the latest Wikileaks release. Afterwards, members will hold a private party at which we will have sex with small boys, unless I’m thinking of DynCorp. Sometimes I get the two confused.
De facto Operation Linkspin HQ may be found here. Thanks, Conde Nast!
There is always a point at which the terrorist ceases to manipulate the media gestalt. A point at which the violence may well escalate, but beyond which the terrorist has become symptomatic of the media gestalt itself. Terrorism as we ordinarily understand it is inately media-related. The Panther Moderns differ from other terrorists precisely in their degree of self-consciousness, in their awareness of the extent to which media divorce the act of terrorism from the original sociopolitical intent…
– William Gibson, Neuromancer
A phenomenon of great importance will not necessarily receive the attention it merits, and thus we may conclude that there is perhaps something going on this very instant to which we ought to be paying attention if we care to know what the future holds for us, in which case we should take a moment to examine what is novel today for signs that it may prove common tomorrow.
Ten years ago it would have been infeasible for tens of thousands of individuals with no physical connection or central leadership to conceive, announce, and implement a massive act of civil disobedience against a significant Western power, crippling a portion of its online infrastructure in the process – and to do all of this in a matter of days, and without anyone involved having to contend with the tear-gas-and-horseback response with which states have traditionally been in the habit of contending with mass action. But such a thing as this is happening today, and having been done once will almost certainly be done again – repeatedly, increasingly, and with potentially significant consequences for the nation-state and implications regarding that which will perhaps someday come to replace it.
In 1984, William Gibson introduced a great deal of what would become the iconography of the internet by way of the future world depicted in his novel Neuromancer. He also described a group of nihilistic young terrorists whose acts were often surrealist in nature and whose specialized common language and behavior had evolved quickly, one of many dramatic youth trends that were forever popping up and disappearing with an unprecedented rapidity facilitated by “cyberspace,” a term Gibson invented. A decade later the author described an organization called the Republic of Desire, itself made up largely of proficient internet users in the habit of conducting destructive pranks both for amusement and reasons more practical, and occasionally even ideological.
That some great array of individuals would come to unite via the advent of the internet and thus work in concert against a shared antagonist – perhaps a hated social convention or aesthetic sensibility – was not only predictable, but predicted. And now it is happening, most noticeably in the form of the ongoing denial of service (DDOS) attacks and other actions being taken against websites of the Australian government by the semi-absurdist semi-organization known as Anonymous, itself an outgrowth of the popular image board 4chan along with an interlocking directorate of associated internet entities.
The attacks in question, in which thousands of computer users work in concert to overload a given website with requests for information and thereby shut it down for the duration, are prompted by a recent spate of moves on the part of the Australian government to censor and otherwise regulate content available to its citizens via the internet, an effort in which the Aussie state has been unusually enthusiastic relative to most of its Western counterparts. Anonymous’ current campaign is the second of its kind; the first, in 2008, targeted the Church of Scientology with DDOS attacks, a series of in-the-flesh protests outside Scientology centers worldwide, the theft and dissemination of sensitive documents, and a variety of other steps – all coordinated, or not, in a decentralized fashion that provides for no names, ranks, or central direction.
The specifics of this particular case have already been described with varying levels of accuracy by some of the more astute media outlets ranging from Wired to the BBC. Some of the details expressed regarding Anonymous will be wrong, as usual, but the details matter little as nothing is likely to come of this incident, whereas the implications for the future defy overstatement. Having taken a long interest in the subculture from which Anonymous is derived and the new communicative structures that make it possible, I am now certain that this phenomenon is among the most important and under-reported social developments to have occurred in decades, and that the development in question promises to threaten the institution of the nation-state and perhaps even someday replace it as the world’s most fundamental and relevant method of human organization.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free_surface_effectReport
I’m afraid you’ll have to elaborate, as this could have several meanings in the context.Report
A pet theory (so much as a 5 graph arm-chair sociologist blog post can be call a “theory”) that I haven’t quite got worked into shaped. Perhaps the brain-trust here can help!
Let’s start with “flow of information” and “rush to judgement”.Report
I’m pretty sure we can turn you in about ten minutes if you come talk to us in our IRC channel at some point and see for yourself what’s really going on and who’s involved. I mean that as a compliment. In the meantime, can you elaborate further?Report
I don’t need to be turned so much as cheered up. (As my wife put it in the shower earlier this morning, “You’re singing a very different tune than you were 10 years ago.”)
I didn’t know people still did IRC (I courted my wife on ntalk). Recommend a good Mac client, and tell me where to be and when to be there.
/me nods his head and winks knowingly.Report
Send me an e-mail and I’ll provide info on how to log onto our SUPER SEKRIT INTERNET KIDZ CLUB.Report
This is some sort of test, right? If I can’t find/figure out your e-mail then I don’t get to be in the club?
Speaking of Conde Nast, we sent some artwork over to Myself last month and are supposed to be getting a mention in an upcoming issue. Jawohl!Report