MachineMachine /stream - search for therourke https://machinemachine.net/stream/feed en-us http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/tech/rss LifePress therourke@gmail.com <![CDATA[I take responsibility stating that therourke I have turned the horror/dystopian now and future into a meaningful platform for acting]]> https://twitter.com/morehshin/statuses/805837955390652416 ]]> Mon, 05 Dec 2016 10:15:14 -0800 https://twitter.com/morehshin/statuses/805837955390652416 <![CDATA[WHAT IS #ADDITIVISM? Critical Perspectives on 3D Printing]]> https://vimeo.com/142438943

studioforcreativeinquiry.org/events/lecture-workshop-what-is-additivism-critical-perspectives-on-3d-printing-with-morehshin-allahyari-daniel-rourke twitter.com/morehshin twitter.com/therourke via-2015.com/ The 3D Additivist Manifesto calls creators and thinkers to action around a technology filled with hope and promise: the 3D printer. By considering this technology as a potential force for good, bad, and otherwise, visiting artists Morehshin Allahyari and Daniel Rourke aim to disrupt binary thinking entirely, drawing together makers and thinkers invested in the idea of real, radical, change. In March 2015 Allahyari and Rourke invited submissions to an open-source ‘Cookbook’ of radical ideas that cut across the arts, engineering, and sciences. Inspired, in part, by William Powell’s The Anarchist Cookbook (1969), The 3D Additivist Cookbook will contain speculative texts, templates, recipes and (im)practical designs for living in this most contradictory of times. A talk and Q&A session by Morehshin Allahyari and Daniel Rourke about The 3D Additivist Manifesto + The 3D Additivist Cookbook in addition to the screening of The 3D Additivist Manifesto video. Artists will talk about their own research and practice in relationship to Additivism and 3D printing.Cast: STUDIO for Creative InquiryTags:

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Tue, 10 Nov 2015 07:20:54 -0800 https://vimeo.com/142438943
<![CDATA[The fantastic open essay edited live by @therourke at @fig2london is now archived here: t.co/h5n6DVEnK6 t.co/chP5Tz8Jc2]]> https://twitter.com/therourke/statuses/624263811097341952 ]]> Thu, 23 Jul 2015 10:04:25 -0700 https://twitter.com/therourke/statuses/624263811097341952 <![CDATA[Algorithmic Narratives and Synthetic Subjects (paper)]]> http://machinemachine.net/portfolio/paper-at-theorizing-the-web-synthetic-subjects/

This was the paper I delivered at The Theorizing the Web Conference, New York, 18th April 2015. This video of the paper begins part way in, and misses out some important stuff. I urge you to watch the other, superb, papers on my panel by Natalie Kane, Solon Barocas, and Nick Seaver. A better video is forthcoming. I posted this up partly in response to this post at Wired about the UK election, Facebook’s echo-chamber effect, and other implications well worth reading into.

Data churning algorithms are integral to our social and economic networks. Rather than replace humans these programs are built to work with us, allowing the distinct strengths of human and computational intelligences to coalesce. As we are submerged into the era of ‘big data’, these systems have become more and more common, concentrating every terrabyte of raw data into meaningful arrangements more easily digestible by high-level human reasoning. A company calling themselves ‘Narrative Science’, based in Chicago, have established a profitable business model based on this relationship. Their slogan, ‘Tell the Stories Hidden in Your Data’, [1] is aimed at companies drowning in spreadsheets of cold information: a promise that Narrative Science can ‘humanise’ their databases with very little human input. Kristian Hammond, Chief Technology Officer of the company, claims that within 15 years over 90% of all news stories will also be written by algorithms. [2] But rather than replacing the jobs that human journalists now undertake, Hammond claims the vast majority of their ‘robonews’ output will report on data currently not covered by traditional news outlets. One family-friendly example of this is the coverage of little-league baseball games. Very few news organisations have the resources, or desire, to hire a swathe of human journalists to write-up every little-league game. Instead, Narrative Science offer leagues, parents and their children a miniature summary of each game gleaned from match statistics uploaded by diligent little league attendees, and then written up by Narrative Science in a variety of journalistic styles. In their book ‘Big Data’ from 2013, Oxford University Professor of internet governance Viktor Mayer-Schönberger, and  ‘data editor’ of The Economist, Kenneth Cukier, tell us excitedly about another data aggregation company, Prismatic, who: …rank content from the web on the basis of text analysis, user preferences, social network-popularity, and big-data analysis. [3] According to Mayer- Schönberger and Cukier this makes Prismatic able ‘to tell the world what it ought to pay attention to better than the editors of the New York Times’. [4] A situation, Steven Poole reminds us, we can little argue with so long as we agree that popularity underlies everything that is culturally valuable. Data is now the lifeblood of technocapitalism. A vast endless influx of information flowing in from the growing universe of networked and internet connected devices. As many of the papers at Theorizing the Web attest, our environment is more and more founded by systems whose job it is to mediate our relationship with this data. Technocapitalism still appears to respond to Jean Francois Lyotard’s formulation of Postmodernity: that whether something is true has less relevance, than whether it is useful. In 1973 Jean Francois Lyotard described the Postmodern Condition as a change in “the status of knowledge” brought about by new forms of techno-scienctific and techno-economic organisation. If a student could be taught effectively by a machine, rather than by another human, then the most important thing we could give the next generation was what he called, “elementary training in informatics and telematics.” In other words, as long as our students are computer literate “pedagogy would not necessarily suffer”. [5] The next passage – where Lyotard marks the Postmodern turn from the true to the useful – became one of the book’s most widely quoted, and it is worth repeating here at some length:

It is only in the context of the grand narratives of legitimation – the life of the spirit and/or the emancipation of humanity – that the partial replacement of teachers by machines may seem inadequate or even intolerable. But it is probable that these narratives are already no longer the principal driving force behind interest in acquiring knowledge. [6] Here, I want to pause to set in play at least three elements from Lyotard’s text that colour this paper. Firstly, the historical confluence between technocapitalism and the era now considered ‘postmodern’. Secondly, the association of ‘the grand-narrative’ with modern, and pre-modern conditions of knowledge. And thirdly, the idea that the relationship between the human and the machine – or computer, or software – is generally one-sided: i.e. we may shy away from the idea of leaving the responsibility of our children’s education to a machine, but Lyotard’s position presumes that since the machine was created and programmed by humans, it will therefore necessarily be understandable and thus controllable, by humans. Today, Lyotard’s vision of an informatically literate populous has more or less come true. Of course we do not completely understand the intimate workings of all our devices or the software that runs them, but the majority of the world population has some form of regular relationship with systems simulated on silicon. And as Lyotard himself made clear, the uptake of technocapitalism, and therefore the devices and systems it propagates, is piece-meal and difficult to predict or trace. At the same time Google’s fleet of self-driving motor vehicles are let-loose on Californian state highways, in parts of sub-Saharan Africa models of mobile-phones designed 10 or more years ago are allowing farming communities to aggregate their produce into quantities with greater potential to make profit on a world market. As Brian Massumi remarks, network technology allows us the possibility of “bringing to full expression a prehistory of the human”, a “worlding of the human” that marks the “becoming-planetary” of the body itself. [7] This “worlding of the human” represents what Edmund Berger argues is the death of the Postmodern condition itself: [T]he largest bankruptcy of Postmodernism is that the grand narrative of human mastery over the cosmos was never unmoored and knocked from its pulpit. Instead of making the locus of this mastery large aggregates of individuals and institutions – class formations, the state, religion, etc. – it simply has shifted the discourse towards the individual his or herself, promising them a modular dreamworld for their participation… [8] Algorithmic narratives appear to continue this trend. They are piece-meal, tending to feedback user’s dreams, wants and desires, through carefully aggregated, designed, packaged Narratives for individual ‘use’. A world not of increasing connectivity and understanding between entities, but a network worlded to each individual’s data-shadow. This situation is reminiscent of the problem pointed out by Eli Pariser of the ‘filter bubble’, or the ‘you loop’, a prevalent outcome of social media platforms tweaked and personalised by algorithms to echo at the user exactly the kind of thing they want to hear. As algorithms develop in complexity the stories they tell us about the vast sea of data will tend to become more and more enamoring, more and more palatable. Like some vast synthetic evolutionary experiment, those algorithms that devise narratives users dislike, will tend to be killed off in the feedback loop, in favour of other algorithms whose turn of phrase, or ability to stoke our egos, is more pronounced. For instance, Narrative Science’s early algorithms for creating little league narratives tended to focus on the victors of each game. What Narrative Science found is that parents were more interested in hearing about their own children, the tiny ups and downs that made the game significant to them. So the algorithms were tweaked in response. Again, to quote chief scientist Kris Hammond from Narrative Science: These are narratives generated by systems that understand data, that give us information to support the decisions we need to make about tomorrow. [9] Whilst we can program software to translate the informational nuances of a baseball game, or internet social trends, into human palatable narratives, larger social, economic and environmental events also tend to get pushed through an algorithmic meatgrinder to make them more palatable. The ‘tomorrow’ that Hammond claims his company can help us prepare for is one that, presumably, companies like Narrative Science and Prismatic will play an ever larger part in realising. In her recently published essay on Crisis and the Temporality of Networks, Wendy Chun reminds us of the difference between the user and the agent in the machinic assemblage: Celebrations of an all powerful user/agent – ‘you’ as the network, ‘you’ as the producer- counteract concerns over code as law as police by positing ‘you’ as the sovereign subject, ‘you’ as the decider. An agent however, is one who does the  actual labor, hence agent is one who acts on behalf of another. On networks, the agent would seem to be technology, rather than the users or programmers who authorize actions through their commands and clicks. [10] In order to unpack Wendy Chun’s proposition here we need only look at two of the most powerful, and impactful algorithms from the last ten years of the web. Firstly, Amazon’s recommendation system, which I assume you have all interacted with at some point. And secondly, Facebook’s news feed algorithm, that ranks and sorts posts on your personalised stream. Both these algorithms rely on a community of user interactions to establish a hierarchy of products, or posts, based on popularity. Both these algorithms also function in response to user’s past activity, and both, of course, have been tweaked and altered over time by the design and programming teams of the respective companies. As we are all no doubt aware, one of the most significant driving principles behind these extraordinarily successful pieces of code is capitalism itself. The drive for profit, and the relationship that has on distinguishing between a successful or failing company, service or product. Wendy Chun’s reminder that those that carry out an action, that program and click, are not the agents here should give use solace. We are positioned as sovereign subjects over our data, because that idea is beneficial to the propagation of the ‘product’. Whether we are told how well our child has done at baseball, or what particular kinds of news stories we might like, personally, to read right now, it is to the benefit of technocapitalism that those narratives are positive, palatable and uncompromising. However the aggregation and dissemination of big data effects our lives over the coming years, the likelihood is that at the surface – on our screens, and ubiquitous handheld devices – everything will seem rosey, comfortable, and suited to the ‘needs’ and ‘use’ of each sovereign subject.

TtW15 #A7 @npseaver @nd_kane @s010n @smwat pic.twitter.com/BjJndzaLz1

— Daniel Rourke (@therourke) April 17, 2015

So to finish I just want to gesture towards a much much bigger debate that I think we need to have about big data, technocapitalism and its algorithmic agents. To do this I just want to read a short paragraph which, as far as I know, was not written by an algorithm: Surface temperature is projected to rise over the 21st century under all assessed emission scenarios. It is very likely that heat waves will occur more often and last longer, and that extreme precipitation events will become more intense and frequent in many regions. The ocean will continue to warm and acidify, and global mean sea level to rise. [11] This is from a document entitled ‘Synthesis Report for Policy Makers’ drafted by The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change – another organisation who rely on a transnational network of computers, sensors, and programs capable of modeling atmospheric, chemical and wider environmental processes to collate data on human environmental impact. Ironically then, perhaps the most significant tool we have to understand the world, at present, is big data. Never before has humankind had so much information to help us make decisions, and help us enact changes on our world, our society, and our selves. But the problem is that some of the stories big data has to tell us are too big to be narrated, they are just too big to be palatable. To quote Edmund Berger again: For these reasons we can say that the proper end of postmodernism comes in the gradual realization of the Anthropocene: it promises the death of the narrative of human mastery, while erecting an even grander narrative. If modernism was about victory of human history, and postmodernism was the end of history, the Anthropocene means that we are no longer in a “historical age but also a geological one. Or better: we are no longer to think history as exclusively human…” [12] I would argue that the ‘grand narratives of legitimation’ Lyotard claimed we left behind in the move to Postmodernity will need to return in some way if we are to manage big data in a meaningful way. Crises such as catastrophic climate change will never be made palatable in the feedback between users, programmers and  technocapitalism. Instead, we need to revisit Lyotard’s distinction between the true and the useful. Rather than ask how we can make big data useful for us, we need to ask what grand story we want that data to tell us.   References [1] Source: www.narrativescience.com, accessed 15/10/14 [2] Steven Levy, “Can an Algorithm Write a Better News Story Than a Human Reporter?,” WIRED, April 24, 2012, http://www.wired.com/2012/04/can-an-algorithm-write-a-better-news-story-than-a-human-reporter/. [3] “Steven Poole – On Algorithms,” Aeon Magazine, accessed May 8, 2015, http://aeon.co/magazine/technology/steven-poole-can-algorithms-ever-take-over-from-humans/. [4] Ibid. [5] Jean-François Lyotard, The Postmodern Condition: A Report on Knowledge, Repr, Theory and History of Literature 10 (Manchester: Univ. Pr, 1992), 50. [6] Ibid., 51. [7] Brian Massumi, Parables for the Virtual: Movement, Affect, Sensation (Duke University Press, 2002), 128. [8] Edmund Berger, “The Anthropocene and the End of Postmodernism,” Synthetic Zero, n.d., http://syntheticzero.net/2015/04/01/the-anthropocene-and-the-end-of-postmodernism/. [9] Source: www.narrativescience.com, accessed 15/10/14 [10] Wendy Chun, “Crisis and the Temporality of Networks,” in The Nonhuman Turn, ed. Richard Grusin (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2015), 154. [11] Rajendra K. Pachauri et al., “Climate Change 2014: Synthesis Report. Contribution of Working Groups I, II and III to the Fifth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change,” 2014, http://epic.awi.de/37530/. [12] Berger, “The Anthropocene and the End of Postmodernism.”

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Fri, 08 May 2015 04:02:51 -0700 http://machinemachine.net/portfolio/paper-at-theorizing-the-web-synthetic-subjects/
<![CDATA[[KareemEstefan] Artists @morehshin & @therourke visualize a post-anthropocene world w/ brash manifesto on 3D printing + #additivism: <a href="https://t.co/lWuUCHBuOx" rel="external">https://t.co/lWuUCHBuOx</a>]]> https://twitter.com/KareemEstefan/statuses/578964743257399296 ]]> Fri, 20 Mar 2015 10:02:06 -0700 https://twitter.com/KareemEstefan/statuses/578964743257399296 <![CDATA[[negatendo] @therourke @sinkdeep @prosthetic Hehe yep. It sometimes seems sophisticated, but it's just serendipity. Check out <a href="https://t.co/RP0EFx27Jr" rel="external">https://t.co/RP0EFx27Jr</a>]]> https://twitter.com/negatendo/statuses/496272383985344512 ]]> Mon, 04 Aug 2014 05:32:11 -0700 https://twitter.com/negatendo/statuses/496272383985344512 <![CDATA[[proctor] DYING @therourke "Lars von Trier only wishes he could make a movie as bleak & existentially discomfiting as this one" <a href="http://t.co/gzR3jTmhYj" rel="external">http://t.co/gzR3jTmhYj</a>]]> https://twitter.com/proctor/statuses/482887103198822400 ]]> Sat, 28 Jun 2014 07:03:51 -0700 https://twitter.com/proctor/statuses/482887103198822400 <![CDATA[Forever by Daniel Rourke / @therourke Part of the #GIFbites...]]> http://gifbites.com/post/87202655133

Forever by Daniel Rourke / @therourke Part of the #GIFbites Project for Bitrates Exhibition L↺↻p it!

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Thu, 29 May 2014 07:26:00 -0700 http://gifbites.com/post/87202655133
<![CDATA[[morehshin] @therourke 3D printing skin-like material that equal that of real shark skin! #additivism <a href="http://t.co/cugotHcW2t" rel="external">http://t.co/cugotHcW2t</a> <a href="http://t.co/2lseWj4MWj" rel="external">http://t.co/2lseWj4MWj</a>]]> https://twitter.com/morehshin/statuses/469985694085959680 ]]> Fri, 23 May 2014 16:38:16 -0700 https://twitter.com/morehshin/statuses/469985694085959680 <![CDATA[[s_o_f_t_w_a_r_e] @GIFbytes' Bitrates launch <a href="http://t.co/X3p7SlWjvt" rel="external">http://t.co/X3p7SlWjvt</a> feat @hellocatfood @therourke @Erica_Scourti @norette @prosthetic <a href="http://t.co/bXwv3W2pQ6" rel="external">http://t.co/bXwv3W2pQ6</a>]]> https://twitter.com/s_o_f_t_w_a_r_e/statuses/469894283181686784 ]]> Fri, 23 May 2014 10:35:01 -0700 https://twitter.com/s_o_f_t_w_a_r_e/statuses/469894283181686784 <![CDATA[[videosmithery] .@therourke @hoodedu Tolkien vs Orwell <a href="http://t.co/oO0TaLkYcc" rel="external">http://t.co/oO0TaLkYcc</a>]]> https://twitter.com/videosmithery/statuses/453917799866728448

Sam Meech @videosmithery .@therourke @hoodedu Tolkien vs Orwell slate.com/articles/news_…

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Wed, 09 Apr 2014 08:30:11 -0700 https://twitter.com/videosmithery/statuses/453917799866728448
<![CDATA[Twitter / sidbranca: This @therourke talk on Superman ...]]> https://twitter.com/sidbranca/status/434405984836919298/photo/1

This @therourke talk on Superman & the Phantom Zone is everything 2 me right now #caa2014 #kneelbeforethedigitalimage http://t.co/oeHUbfthP7 – Sid Branca (sidbranca) http://twitter.com/sidbranca/status/434405984836919298

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Fri, 14 Feb 2014 12:20:43 -0800 https://twitter.com/sidbranca/status/434405984836919298/photo/1
<![CDATA[Eterni.me - Become Virtually Immortal]]> http://eterni.me/

Submitted w/out comment: "Simply Become Immortal" http://t.co/vT48jQ1KZT (via @therourke) http://t.co/sTbOFQHGfg – Chris Lindgren (lndgrn) http://twitter.com/lndgrn/status/431445405440569347

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Thu, 06 Feb 2014 07:34:48 -0800 http://eterni.me/
<![CDATA["politics is basically the relation between things" @therourke on glitches in things. Cool stuff: <a href="http://t.co/gJyHZlrccP" rel="external">http://t.co/gJyHZlrccP</a>]]> http://vimeo.com/84208956

"politics is basically the relation between things" @therourke on glitches in things. Cool stuff: http://t.co/gJyHZlrccP – Submarine (sinkdeep) http://twitter.com/sinkdeep/status/423544734464761857

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Wed, 15 Jan 2014 14:35:03 -0800 http://vimeo.com/84208956
<![CDATA[@JackLScanlan @therourke Thought this might interest - does evolution have a purpose? The Q of teleology in biology: <a href="http://t.co/BwSFQwwYYf" rel="external">http://t.co/BwSFQwwYYf</a>]]> http://www.aeonmagazine.com/world-views/does-life-have-a-purpose/

@JackLScanlan @therourke Thought this might interest - does evolution have a purpose? The Q of teleology in biology: http://t.co/BwSFQwwYYf – Aeon Magazine (aeonmag) http://twitter.com/aeonmag/status/349153929633865729

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Mon, 24 Jun 2013 07:00:17 -0700 http://www.aeonmagazine.com/world-views/does-life-have-a-purpose/
<![CDATA[Twitter / norette: @therourke <a href="http://t.co/xFSan6OJHh" rel="external">http://t.co/xFSan6OJHh</a>]]> https://twitter.com/norette/status/345319182386216960/photo/1

@therourke http://t.co/xFSan6OJHh – nora o murchú (norette) http://twitter.com/norette/status/345319182386216960

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Thu, 13 Jun 2013 16:30:00 -0700 https://twitter.com/norette/status/345319182386216960/photo/1
<![CDATA[How Dogs Evolved Into 'Our Best Friends' : NPR]]> http://www.npr.org/2011/11/08/142100653/how-dogs-evolved-into-our-best-friends

@therourke a "qualitative" take: http://t.co/bBYH79jrrb – erdogan_h (erdoganhs) http://twitter.com/erdoganhs/status/337244091547000832

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Wed, 22 May 2013 10:17:16 -0700 http://www.npr.org/2011/11/08/142100653/how-dogs-evolved-into-our-best-friends
<![CDATA[Critics Who May Not Yet Exist » 3:AM Magazine]]> http://www.3ammagazine.com/3am/critics-who-may-not-yet-exist/

Seen this @therourke? Critics Who May Not Yet Exist- seeking submissions http://t.co/6a3rVO7Rt8 – Erica Scourti (Erica_Scourti) http://twitter.com/Erica_Scourti/status/335673714328879104

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Sat, 18 May 2013 02:32:05 -0700 http://www.3ammagazine.com/3am/critics-who-may-not-yet-exist/
<![CDATA[Abstract Encounters: a Modern Media Simulation | Alien Fiction]]> http://alienfiction.com/2013/05/01/abstract-encounters-a-modern-media-simulation/

@zara_dinnen @therourke exapted theory of game design: http://t.co/0Ac4ZwgFQd – Alex Myers (aandnota) http://twitter.com/aandnota/status/335062810973315073

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Thu, 16 May 2013 09:42:22 -0700 http://alienfiction.com/2013/05/01/abstract-encounters-a-modern-media-simulation/
<![CDATA[RAWerTUNES10dotEXE [3Dude Remix]]]> http://runcomputerrun.com/?portfolio=daniel-rourke-alex-myers

My homage to iTunes 10 has been transcoded and extruded into another iteration! A collaboration with Alex Myers. You can hear, see and 3D print it at your own great expense in the forthcoming Run Computer, Run exhibition, Rua Red, Dublin.

DANIEL ROURKE + ALEX MYERS Daniel Rourke is a writer and artist. His work explores error, noise and kippleisation through words, sounds, performance and whatever ideas are to hand. He is one half of GLTI.CH Karaoke, an experimental performance platform exposing the course of accidents, temporary lyrical disjoints & technical out-of-syncs. Daniel writes regularly forRhizome.org and Furtherfield.org. He is currently undertaking a practice-based PhD in Art and Writing at Goldsmiths, University of London. machinemachine.net / twitter @therourke Alex Myers makes artgames to explore how accidental meaning/anomalous discourse emerges by breaking rule-based game spaces to disrupt player expectations and concepts. He is an Assistant Professor and Director of Game Studies at Bellevue University. Alex has exhibited at NP3 in Groningen,Nikolaj Kunsthallen in Copenhagen, Lab for Electronic Art and Performance, Berlin, Interaccess in Toronto, FACT in Liverpool, and LACDA in Los Angeles. www.alexmyers.info / twitter @aandnota

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Mon, 13 May 2013 08:08:51 -0700 http://runcomputerrun.com/?portfolio=daniel-rourke-alex-myers