Archive | March, 2009

Rebuilding the moral code

Posted on 08 March 2009 by admin

A reaction to Clive Hamilton’s latest article ‘Rethinking Sexual Freedom’.

I’m the obsessive type. The kind of person that latches their grip onto a subject and the people involved. The Internet filter debate is a contemporary battlefield in the war of individual freedom versus universal stability and as such I clung to it.

A part of my foray into the field has been the emergent enmity between myself and Clive Hamilton. This site’s readers will remember that, not long ago, my own cold war with the good professor briefly ignited as a war of words.

Today I sat down and started reading more of his works, looking for something to love. Indeed I agree with some of his assertions, especially on the pressures facing children and teens today, but I still find myself unable to stomach his stance on sexuality.

One of his latest essays, Rethinking Sexual Freedom, represents, for me, the enemy. He claims that -

It’s now evident that the removal of most taboos and social prohibitions on sexual activity has led to a highly sexualised society in which erotic imagery and sex talk are to be found everywhere in private and public life.

- and through a series of arguments about the awry hydroplaning of the movement towards sexual liberation, concludes that -

In affluent, liberal societies, the task is to understand that freedom cannot be found in a moral free-for-all, but only in the careful exercise of restraint.

At one point in the article he attacks one of the more extreme expressions of permissive sexual self determination, the sale of a consenting adults virginity -

In a perfect convergence of the narcissistic interpretation of 1960s liberation and pure market thinking, she declared: “I don’t have a moral dilemma with it. We live in a capitalist society. Why shouldn’t I be allowed to capitalise on my virginity?” Why not indeed? If he requests it, the purchaser of Natalie’s virginity will be able to authenticate the quality of the product by way of a gynaecological examination and then consummate the transaction in brothel. Nice. As if to underscore the perversion of the ideals of feminism, it turns out that Natalie holds a bachelor’s degree in women’s studies.

I suppose Clive can be forgiven for making a value judgment on the situation, it’s his job. It does, however, align his arguments with a conservative outlook on sexuality.

It appears Clive has missed the irony in calling this a perversion of feminism. Feminism being the movement that fought desperately to allow women to determine how they used their bodies without being controlled, restrained or chastised by male ‘intelligencia’ in ivory towers.

He also goes too far straw-manning ‘post-moderns’.

The debate over the sexualisation of girls has outed these post-moderns. They have always argued that children are sexual creatures and should be allowed to explore and express their sexuality without the guilt imposed on them by neurotic adults and conservative clerics. Luckily, they believe, children are much smarter than neurotic adults and slip easily into a savvy, ironic, critical mode whenever there is any danger of falling under the sway of advertisers or media.

He then goes on to describe an unholy alliance between those that think children shouldn’t be punished merely for touching themselves in ‘a naughty place’ and corporate vampires trying to push ‘corporate peadophilia’ as a means of selling their wares.

While I have no problem with attacking commercial interests having anything to do with children’s sexuality, it’s wrong to say that there is a causal relationship between the two without undermining a movement to remove shame and denigration from the lives of children.

I agree with Clive that sexual liberty has been used immaturely over the last few decades. I see these as teething problems, painful, undesirable and yet passing. We do need to rebuild the moral code, but to rebuild it again as a societal construct as opposed to an individual choice is unsustainable in the long term. 

Unfortunately it may be the marketers and advertisers that ruin it for everyone by giving social conservatives more clout than ever before. Could we effect desirable change by tightening ethical regulation on corporations only? Why? Is it because they have greater influence over more people? If so then could the argument spread to celebrities having a different level of ethical restriction in law? I certainly hope not. 

In the end Clive does make a call that I agree with once taken out of the context of his essay.

Today the historic mission is no longer to attack and tear down, but to rebuild a moral code.

I agree, though a moral code worth building must be robust enough to sustainably allow for and tolerate the whims and impulses of the majority of people, not just stabilise people’s lives in a low entropy state.

I think we’ve come to the point where we can no longer separate morality and ethics from the technology of the day and that, as Clive so vehemently desires, we can use technology to help us shape or buffer people’s actions.

Where Clive and I differ is that he would prefer to use technology in a restrictive manner to achieve that ‘low entropy state’ favoured by conservatives, whereas I would prefer to use technology to sandbox behaviours that would otherwise be too unstable to allow in physical situations.

Encapsulating society within a set of values will not reduce society’s entropy. No matter where we draw the line of ‘this much freedom’, parts of it will swell and explode. Crime, riots, revolution, all expressions of the compressed combustibles of the human condition are historically the only thing to expect from a restraining moral code. We do need to rebuild the moral code, but we need to make something more robust than current conservative notions.

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How to describe twitter.

Posted on 04 March 2009 by admin

Explaining the concept of twitter to those not already on twitter is difficult and leaves many people lost for words.  Here I will attempt to give voice to the concept of twitter for the benefit of those faced with describing it.

Twitter is a service

Explaining twitter as a website leaves out the staggering array of third party tools, sites and applications built around the service. As opposed to saying that twitter is a website on which you can post 140 character messages about what you are doing isn’t going to endear it to people used to facebook or especially those that aren’t heavily active on the Internet.

More accurately Twitter is a service that allows people to communicate in short bursts. 

This allows for both the Internet and mobile faces of twitter and can be followed by a description of how the Twitter service helps enable communities.

Something along the lines of Through Twitter you can find and keep up to date with the people that are relevant to your interests and activities.

If people come out with the “Why would anyone want to know when I’m going to the toilet?” question, remind them that Twitter is more about building relationships and less about dry facts, though posting your activities can often generate great discussion.

So once you’ve gotten their heads around the service concept, you can explain that there are generally two ways to use Twitter.

Twitter is useful for both personal and professional communication

While there are very few Twitter users that could be labelled distinctly as one or the other without some grey areas, they do tend to fall on a spectrum that ranges from purely personal use to purely professional use; the choice is entirely theirs. 

As far as personal use of Twitter goes, people find that the simplicity of communicating in short bursts makes it easier to stay in touch. Ask the person how often they use their mobile phone for SMS, chances are high that they use it frequently. Twitter is a really flexible type of SMS that is more useful for interacting with friends.

In terms of professional use, Twitter is a great way to put a human face on a brand, whether it be your own personal brand or that of a large organisation. 

Having an engaging and responsive Twitter presence can drastically influence the online good will of an organisation in a positive way. While it can’t be used in isolation, it is practically free to be involved with and scales well from sole traders to multi-nationals.

It’s also a cheap and speedy way of gauging your consumer base’s reaction to your brand or organisation. Quite often news headlines about companies generates heavy online discussion, most of which is linked on Twitter. Twitter is currently a fantastic snapshot of consumer opinion.

Twitter on a deeper level

This applies more for those that do use Twitter for personal reasons. Between the ability to express yourself succinctly and the ability to call on the opinions of many others almost instantly, Twitter is like outsourcing your inner monologue.

While most people are smart enough to only post the things they are willing for others to read, one of the reasons attributed to Twitter’s success is that the 140 character posts and the constant stream of information into which users can dip their feet is reminiscent of the way in which our mind works.

The voice of our conscience, once entirely localised within our mind, can now be bolstered with succinct input from others in a way that mimics our own interior monologue.

Parting words

Twitter is a service that allows people to communicate in short bursts. Through Twitter you can find and keep up to date with the people that are relevant to your interests and activities. Twitter is more about building relationships and less about dry facts, though posting your activities can often generate great discussion.

Twitter is a really flexible type of SMS that is more useful for interacting with friends, as people find that the simplicity of communicating in short bursts makes it easier to stay in touch. 

Twitter is a great way to put a human face on a brand, whether it be your own personal brand or that of a large organisation and is currently a fantastic snapshot of consumer opinion.

More deeply, Twitter is somewhat like outsourcing your inner monologue, and well worth diving into.

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A demonstration of the interweb censor.

Posted on 02 March 2009 by admin

The EFA has been hard at work recently putting together an awareness building demonstration of the web filter currently being proposed by Senator Steven Conroy.

The EFA hopes to create awareness of the upcoming civil rights violations proposed by political head kicker Senator Conroy and his fearmongering sidekicks Clive “YOU WILL RESPECT MY AUTHORITAH!” Hamilton and Bernadette “Peds under the bed” McMenamin.

I highly recommend you use this tastefully, spamming a million inboxes with this demo is likely to make you incredibly unpopular but, sent to the right people, this could be a succinct way of getting the point across to less well informed friends and family.

I’m personally a huge fan of the animation of our national animals variously blindfolding themselves or putting their head in the sand. It’s a tongue in cheek yet upsettingly apt representation of this entire policy.

The anti-filter lobby has progressed in recent months to not only denounce the government’s filter plans but to call for and develop a more effective solution to protecting children.

Throw in your support and pass the link around, it’s quite entertaining. Hat tip to Geordie Guy, Colin Jacobs and Nic Suzor for pulling this together.

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I hate the sniffles

Posted on 01 March 2009 by admin

I’m sick. I barely got any sleep last night. I think my nose might need the attention of a plumber with a medical degree. 

Lying in bed all night with weird cold induced visions of photorealistic computer games and temples filled with water was not conducive to sleep. This is ironic because it was a lack of sleep that so diminished my immune system in the firt place.

The human body is a wonderful mess.

My situation was not helped by phone calls starting at 5:30 am from my brother, Anthony. He had found a door in the bottom of a rum bottle that led him to the front steps of my building. I love catching up with my brothers so the irritable little fairy in my nose was ignored for 10 minutes. 

Brothers are a wonderful mess.

I give up, I’m going to get my uni work done.

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