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Posts Tagged ‘Privacy’

Exegesis of PKD.

In Books on December 19, 2011 at 10:18 am

Sitting under my laptop right now lies a brand new copy of the daunting Philip K. Dick manuscript “Exegesis”.  Comprised of piles upon piles of both handwritten and typed notes, journals, philosophical wanderings, and the plain weird… the collection was an attempt by Dick to pull some sort of context or meaning out of a bizarre series of events he refers to as “2-3-74″ (or: February and March of the year 1974).  The introduction alone is fascinating.

Now, the precursor to these events — arguably — was the break in he encountered a few years prior.  Dick came home one day to a front door that had been bashed in, and an exploded safe with valuable — and personal — papers stolen.  He apparently ran through a whole slew of suspects in his head, never finding out who broke in… or why.  Like many of the significant events that came to shape Dick’s life (the infant death of his twin sister one of the best and most glaring examples), the break in somehow led to the next series of events, the next chapter, of Dick’s life with remarkable and strange significance.

That next chapter — the “2-3-74″ chapter — was very strange indeed.  It started with a delivery woman, of all things.  She had knocked on his front door to give him his prescribed medication after getting his wisdom teeth removed.  During the interaction a pendent she was wearing around her neck jumped out at him: the Ichthus symbol, the “Jesus fish”.  In that instant Dick had some sort of revelation that I still cannot wrap my head around.  No matter how much I read about it or imagine it I still can’t wrap my head around it.  I’m assuming my moments of clairvoyance — the few I’ve had… Ha — cannot match such a brain as Dick’s moments, but that’s as close as I’ll get to understanding it.

In the ballpark of a week later Dick saw what he describes as a pink beam of light, which he would apparently see again.  And again.  The light communicated with him. This would influence his later works like VALIS, The Divine Invasion, and The Transmigration of Timothy Archer.  There were other episodes of revelation for Dick in these months, a whole slew of coincidence or divine intervention or a bit of both.  At one point a panic attack stuck him about his son, he begged and pleaded with his wife that they take him to the hospital, his wife thought he was hysterical.  As it turned out, his son was diagnosed after they brought him in with some form of rare (blood, I believe?) disease.

There were many more happenings I’m failing to mention here, there may have even been some he didn’t write down for all we know.  Reading through the first few pages last night, it’s really hard not to get a few things out of it: Dick was — pure and simple — an unadulterated genius, and… several, if not many, of these pages and experiences point towards a whole slew of mental disorders.  The editors of the Exegesis mention this also, that Dick shows signs of bipolar disorder, among other conditions.  But good God, the man’s letters to friends alone are the stuff of brilliance.  They’re these beautifully elegant, patient, yet humble letters where he’s writing to close friends about the things he’s going through in his life, essentially.  Except he’s applying a philosophical context to everything, everything, that happens to him.

It really makes one think that everyone should be doing this with their lives.  Writing down their experiences and analyzing them… both for their own sakes and the sake of the rest of the world.  If such notes and journals can be so illuminating — on the nature of reality, God, culture, and more — from one person (albeit a brilliant person), then I’ve got to imagine a billion would only be that much more illuminating.

I think I’ll start soon.

-Sonny

Psy-vertising; Human Blooded Cyborgs?

In Links on April 1, 2011 at 12:01 pm

Couple science fiction-esque links for you here.

A website called Physorg.com is running an article discussing the key to “cyborg interfaces”: biological components, in this case human blood.  A group if Indian researchers have published the concept in the International Journal of Medical Engineering and Informatics.  You need to speak some amount of science to read this (ha):

There are countless patents linking the development of memristors to applications in programmable logic circuits, as components of future transistors, in signal processing and in neural networks. S.P. Kosta of the Education Campus Changa in Gujarat and colleagues have now explored the possibility of creating a liquid memristor from human blood. In parallel work they are investigating diodes and capacitors composed of liquid human tissues.

The BBC Tech department is always good for a news story straight out of a Philip K. Dick novel.  In this story they talk about how the advertising of Minority Report may be closer than 2054 (when the movie takes place), it may come as soon as… wait, next year??

Written by the Centre for Future Studies, it predicts an advertising revolution taking place over the next 12 months.  Their report – commissioned by 3MGTG, which specialises in digital advertising – foresees the first step to be advertisements that adapt to our moods.  The tech has been dubbed ‘Gladverts’ by the report’s authors.  They envision a world where emotion recognition software (ERS) can tell if you are happy or sad and then serve up an advert based on how you feel.  In Japan, technology company NEC has already developed a system which can work out a person’s gender, estimate their age, and serve up adverts suited to that demographic.  In the further future, this targeted advertising may go a step further by not only knowing your mood, but also information such as age, sex and interests, possibly powered by social networking profiles.

This, of course, has privacy aficionados calling foul.  Delving into personal information all for the chance to get us to maybe buy something… can you blame them?

-Sonny

 

ACTA: Another Childish Terror-law Authorized.

In Sonny's Journal, Sonny's So Sick Of on May 30, 2008 at 2:47 pm

Are airports, and the industry in general, seriously contemplating this? Wow. This whole revolution of airport security is spawning out of Canada, apparently. But at this year’s G8 summit, the ACTA (The Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement) will be discussed at length. News of the Act being discussed at G8 indicates possible wide-spread usage throughout the world of the ACTA. So what exactly is the ACTA? It’s a law/act that proposes airport security checkpoints should have the right to check electronic devices (MP3 players, laptops, advanced cell-phones, portable gaming devices, etc) for illegal possession of copyrighted material, or pirated media. A Reply to this article (Digital Journal: Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement May Make Content On Your iPod Illegal) responded perfectly:

“Every time I come across this story, I look for some clue that it isn’t as hopelessly stupid as it seems to be. Can anyone seriously think that customs officials are going to add iPod and computer searches to their workload? How would they select the ones to be examined, or would everybody automatically be subject to a search? How are the officials to determine what’s legal or illegal? It seems that copyright holders will never give up the fight to control every possible source of potential illegality, even to the point of constantly violating the rights and privacy of those who buy their products. If they lose one battle, they just attack from another front.”

But seriously, how the hell would they separate who to search and who NOT to search? What we’re going to see is a type of profiling not unlike profiling those of Middle-Eastern descent as terrorists. Now males, ages 18-24, who may or may not be wearing one of those “clever” T-shirts, will start to be screened for illegal content on electronic devices. And how the hell do they know what’s illegal and legal? I have CDs on my computer that aren’t registered with the “auto-find” (whatever you wanna call it) program because they were copyrighted by smaller record companies. What of this? This is just an example of the airline industry taking 9/11, and global terrorism, and using for an entirely different means. Bullshit. Like this reply-er says: security screeners already have a large enough checklist to follow without trying to bust Tommy from Kappa-Delta-Pi of torrenting the Star Wars episode of Family Guy illegally. This law is completely unenforceable, which last time I checked, makes it Unconstitutional (at least in this country). I love Canada, but this is terrible. They can do whatever the fuck they want, but if other countries start adopting this, I’ll be so pissed. The fact that the ACTA is even on the damn bill at G8 this year is enough to make me vomit. As if the world doesn’t have larger problems than Coldplay’s new album being downloaded 1,604,378 times.

-Sonny

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