Digital interactive space is not only a technical condition: it mobilizes larger ecologies of meaning that cannot be captured by an exclusive focus on those technical features. Roberto Simanowski gives us a brilliant exploration of one such ecology, an ironic and critical take on contemporary society's ambivalent relationship with data.
- Saskia Sassen, author of <i>Expulsions</i>,
With the advent of the Web, digital technologies seem to contain alternatives to the consumerist models implemented by the culture industry as described by Adorno and Hockheimer. Simanowski shows how data economy turns this dream into a nightmare of hyperconsumption founded on hypercontrol.
- Bernard Stiegler, author of <i>States of Shock: Stupidity and Knowledge in the 21st Century</i>,
With this book, Simanowski joins Evgeny Morozov as an indispensable critic of our obsession with big data. What sets Data Love apart from other accounts is its determined shift of attention away from the sinister machinations of government agencies to the impact of seemingly harmless commercial data-service providers, as well as its informed historical focus, which ties modern data mining to the venerable project of enlightenment. Seek and you will find, a famous text promised two millennia ago. Search engines such as Google have renewed the pledge, but Simanowski leaves no doubt that the digital platform supporting this promise is turning it into a threat: Seek and you will be found.
- Geoffrey Winthrop-Young, author of <i>Kittler and the Media</i>,
Simanowski proffers a much more profound history and theoretical basis to the debate, a contribution unparalleled in its findings and with conclusions that are neither too radical nor too conservative. Without question, <i>Data Love</i> is the most comprehensive and philosophically rich contribution on this subject that I have read.
- Creston Davis, Global Center for Advanced Studies,
Compelling. . . . Simanowski makes an excellent case that the most essential struggle is not with the NSA or Facebook but with ourselves.
- Jennifer Howard, Times Literary Supplement
Recommended.
Choice
<i>Data Love</i> dares us to reflect on the progression of our relationship with data, to think where zealous data mining might be leading, and then to solemnly answer the question: does data love us back?
- David R. Gruber, Information, Communication & Society
A splendid and beautiful book about our society, our relationship with technologies, but most important, governments' relationship with them. . . . Highly recommended to everyone.
Articles and more
Roberto Simanowski elaborates on the changes data love has brought to the human condition while exploring the entanglements of those who—out of stinginess, convenience, ignorance, narcissism, or passion—contribute to the amassing of ever more data about their lives, leading to the statistical evaluation and individual profiling of their selves. Writing from a philosophical standpoint, Simanowski illustrates the social implications of technological development and retrieves the concepts, events, and cultural artifacts of past centuries to help decode the programming of our present.
Part I. Beyond the NSA Debate
1. Intelligence Agency Logic
2. Double Indifference
3. Self-Tracking and Smart Things
4. Ecological Data Disaster
5. Cold Civil War
Part II. Paradigm Change
6. Data-Mining Business
7. Social Engineers Without a Cause
8. Silent Revolution
9. Algorithms
10. Absence of Theory
Part III. The Joy of Numbers
11. Compulsive Measuring
12. The Phenomenology of the Numerable
13. Digital Humanities
14. Lessing's Rejoinder
Part IV. Resistances
15. God's Eye
16. Data Hacks
17. On the Right Life in the Wrong One
Epilogue
Postface
Notes
Index