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[Fsfe-france] le point d'une anthropologiste sur le libre
From: |
Jean-Baptiste Soufron |
Subject: |
[Fsfe-france] le point d'une anthropologiste sur le libre |
Date: |
Sun, 26 Sep 2004 13:28:34 +0200 |
http://www.linuxinsider.com/story/Political-Agnosticism-Open-Source-
Politics-of-Contrast-36906.html
A mon avis voici un excellent article sur le mouvement libre, vu du
point de vue d'une anthropologiste qui s'est spécialement intéressée à
la nature politique du mouvement. Elle en conclut que celui-ci n'est
pas spécifiquement lié à un mouvement, mais qu'il s'intéresse
essentiellement à la libération des savoirs.
Je vous laisse lire, c'est excellent pour occuper un début de dimanche
après-midi :)
Jean-Baptiste Soufron
http://soufron.free.fr
-------------------------
Free and open source
software (FOSS), which is by now entrenched in the technology
sector, has recently traveled far beyond this sphere in the form of
artifacts, licenses, and as a broader icon for openness and
collaboration.
FOSS has attained a robust socio-political life as a touchstone for
like-minded projects in art, law, journalism, and science-some examples
being MIT's OpenCourseWare project, School Forge, and the BBC's
decision to release all their archives under a Creative Commons
license.
One might suspect FOSS of having a deliberate political agenda, but
when asked, FOSS developers invariably offer a firm and unambiguous
"no" -- usually followed by a precise lexicon for discussing the proper
relationship between FOSS and politics.
For example, while it is perfectly acceptable and encouraged to have a
panel on free software at an antiglobalization conference, FOSS
developers would suggest that it is unacceptable to claim that FOSS has
as one of its goals antiglobalization, or for that matter any political
program -- a subtle but vital difference, which captures the uncanny,
visceral, and minute semiotic acts by which developers divorce FOSS
from a guided political direction.
Complex Political Life
FOSS, of course, beholds a complex political life despite the lack of
political intention; nonetheless, I argue that the political
agnosticism of FOSS shapes the expressive life and force of its
informal politics.
FOSS gives palpable voice to the growing fault lines between expressive
and intellectual property rights, especially in the context of digital
technologies. While free speech and property rights are often imagined
as linked and essential parts of our American liberal heritage, the
social life of FOSS complicates this connection while providing a
window into how liberal values such as free speech take on specific
forms through cultural-based technical practice: that of computer
hacking.
Whereas, traditionally, censorship and state intervention were seen as
the primary threats against the realization of free speech, the social
practices of free and open software raise the idea that forms property
can be antithetical to the principles of free speech, "principles" that
are constantly under social revision though they might appear as
timeless and obvious.
Source code, the blueprint for programs that most nontechnical users
rarely see, is becoming an object to construct claims about vocational
rights and the appropriate scope of First Amendment law.
FOSS has not only transformed the dynamics of software development but
is also shifting understandings of the appropriate use of intellectual
property instruments and the scope of free speech protections.
I argue that the wedge placed by practitioners between FOSS and
politics is significant to an anthropological assessment of the liberal
underpinnings and reformulations of FOSS and the wider sociopolitical
effect of its vast circulations.
Artifacts, Metaphors
My thesis is that the denial of FOSS' formal politics enacted through
a particularized cultural exercise of free-speech facilitates the broad
mobility of FOSS as artifacts and metaphors and thus lays the
groundwork for its informal political scope: its key role as a catalyst
by which to rethink the assumptions of intellectual property rights
through its use and inversion.
It works because it recalibrates some of the distinctions and
associations between free speech and intellectual property -- it
revises intellectual property law and channels it toward the protection
of free speech, instead of its "conventional use" of securing property
rights.
Christopher Kelty aptly describes this as "openness through
privatization, which makes it the most powerful political movement on
the Internet, even though most of its proponents spend all their extra
energy denying that it is political."
Political intent and subjectivity are indeed noticeably absent in the
constitution of the free software and open source movement, which
differs from more formal political endeavors and new social movements
predicated on some political intentionality, direction, or reflexivity
or a desire to transform wider social conditions.
FOSS uniqueness as a "new social movement" stands precisely in the
"extra energy" noted by Kelty to deny political associations of various
kinds.
While technical or economic rationalities are often the native
explanation for FOSS, a taken-for-granted form of cultural liberalism
and the pragmatics of programming mutually inform and reinforce the
hacker
aesthetic distaste for politics.
Political Neutrality
In other words, political denial is culturally orchestrated through a
rearticulation of free-speech principles, a cultural positioning that
simultaneously is informed by the computing
techniques and outwardly expresses and thus constitutes hacker values.
It is this practice that I refer to here as "political agnosticism."
The purported political neutrality of FOSS, inscribed into its
technological artifacts through licenses, has facilitated an unfettered
circulation of its technologies.
FOSS is made visible to wider publics through its extensive use and
resignification. The witnessable set of practices, such as
collaborative production and the creative deployment of licenses, has
become a social point of contrast by which the assumptions of the
American legal intellectual property system are partially destabilized.
It thus conveys an implicit critique of the opaque logics enveloped in
the neoliberal drive to make property out of everything and, at this
historical conjunction, seemingly out of very little.
As noted by Herman and Coombe in this journal, the persuasive force of
neoliberal rhetorics of property rights lie in their corporeality as an
habituated ethos that defines the proper, veritable, and, thus,
supposedly singular relationship between consumers, objects, and
corporations.
Though they astutely assert that intellectual property regimes are bent
toward the "incorrigible" and are "resistant to revision," FOSS has
inadvertently performed with some degree of success against this
habituated stance.
FOSS provides another existing and transposable model for new legal
possibilities composed of an aggregate of practices, licenses, social
relationships, artifacts and moral economies and, thus, enters a wider
public debate on the limits of intellectual property primarily though
visible cultural praxis. Its "success" is that it transformed what is
purported to be a "singular" field of intellectual property law into
one that is now multiple, offering new instruments and justifications
for their use.
Political Agnosticism
To understand the logic of political denial, it is instructive to
define the rationale for freedom formulated in the philosophical
underpinnings of FOSS licenses. The moral and semiotic load of free
software is a commitment to prevent limiting the freedom of others.
This is done to realize a sphere for the unfettered circulation of
thought, expression, and action for software development.
This vision is clear in three key documents that guide the choice and
creation of every free and open source license: the Free Software
Definition, the Debian Free Software Guidelines, and the Open Source
Definition.
In these charters, freedom underscores an individual's right to create,
use, and distribute software in a manner that will allow exactly the
same for others, so long as license rules are followed-the goal of
which is to enact a universal sphere for the flourishing of free forms
of action and thought.
All provisions in these documents work through a logic of
nondiscrimination as to achieve universality. Within this purview,
source code, the line-by-line directions that programmers write to make
software applications, is treated implicitly and explicitly as a form
of speech. Writing source code is thus akin to "speaking" while
licenses establish the conditions that allow for the free and
unrestricted expression of speech.
A utilitarian ethic of openness is increasingly seen as obvious and
indispensable in order to develop the "state of the art." FOSS
developers also place an extremely high premium on open technical
production as an avenue for expressive activity.
Personal Significance
While hackers see the spread of free software as socially beneficial
because it allows a diverse range of "others" to deploy their software
(like you, me, the Mexican school system, the government, and even "Big
Brother"), the primary significance of FOSS is personal: it is
something which protects the "food" for them to "hack on" so that they
can exercise their right to learn from and create more speech (source
code) for others to share and extend.
According to hackers, the fact that anyone can use FOSS and that it can
be directed towards economic, political, and personal ends is a
positive side-effect of openness; they consider it a testament to the
power of a neutral political commitment.
The "free" of free software rests on yet reposes a wider Anglo-European
socio-cultural sensibility for expressive rights, which underscores
ideas of individual autonomy, self-development, and a value-free
marketplace for the expression of ideas.
As a number of critical scholars argue, forms of political neutrality
are immanent to free speech doctrine (Brown 1995, Fish 1999, Marcuse
1965, MacKinnon 1993, Passavat 2002). These critiques treat
decontextualized neutrality primarily as ideological scaffolding that
justifies a politics of individual liberties over those of structural
equality.
While relevant in other ways, it is analytically deficient to analyze
the free-speech elements of free software as an example of these
otherwise cogent analyses -- that is, as an augmentation or
verification of an already existing and mystified American liberal
tradition.
The hacker aesthetic distaste for politics and their free-speech codes
can only be meaningfully ascertained as "cultural practice" if placed
within the scope of their lived practical and material actions, not
just in relation to how their values express or map perfectly onto some
existing regime of value such as liberalism.
Key Questions
If not, we construe their moral orders as vacuous and thus, decouple
their values from a particular way of life and the historical
conditions that enable and constrain what they do.
Also to simply assert that the free-speech character of FOSS is an
expression of liberal values occludes key questions of investigation,
for example: why is a language of expressive rights compelling to
programmers, and how does the local rearticulation of expressive rights
shift the wider juridical and cultural face and expressions of liberal
values?
Continuity of liberal traditions does not mean sameness. In other
words, it reminds us that free speech, privacy
, and property right have complex histories born from material and
discursive struggles over meaning, even if such principles are socially
construed as beyond the turmoil of history.
The freedom of free software, while influenced by wider liberal
sensibilities, is fundamentally shaped by the pragmatics of programming
and the social context of Internet use.
My contention is that values for expressive rights as formulated in
free software philosophy were and are compelling to programmers because
they hold affinities with their technical habitus borne from
"practical" (as in meaningful, embodied, and collective action)
experiences formed around the pragmatics of programming and the
aesthetics of technical architectures.
In addition, in recent times, it has afforded a wider cultural and
political language by which to objectify to themselves and larger
publics the nature of their technical life world, an objectification
buttressed within a hacker public sphere and as a political vector to
make claims against the aggressive application of intellectual property
restrictions.
Forms of Creativity
Programmers describe their craft as an activity that allows for
personal unrestricted forms of creativity, expression, learning, and
action, enacted through a medium, the digital computer, and preferably
interfaced through a transparent and flexible, technical environment
(like UNIX).
Passion that is understood to be the basis of the hacker ethic (Himanen
2001, Levy 1984) is fueled by a practice that allows programmers great
flexibility and control in creation (Turkic 1984), creations which are
put to use and hence seen as highly valuable.
Programmers over decades of intense interaction come to viscerally
experience the computer as a general purpose machine that can be
infinitely programmed to achieve any task through the medium of
software written by humans with a computer language.
The technological potential for unlimited programmable capabilities
melds with what is seen as the expansive ability for programmers to
create. For programmers, computing in a dual sense, as a technology and
as an activity, becomes a total realm for the freedom of creation and
expression.
In essence, computing is understood and experienced (sometimes
reflectively, other times implicitly) by FOSS hackers as the very
micro-sphere for the unfettered circulation of thought, expression, and
action that freedom within the macro-sphere FOSS seeks to achieve
through licenses.
Downloading music and watching movies, socializing in chat rooms,
playing highly addictive mutliplayer games, creating software libre,
meeting future girlfriends and wives on chat channels, reading your
news daily online-all these activities contribute to a strong practical
orientation and embodied disposition that the activity of communicating
on and creating through a computer is a space of freedom for
entertainment, production, pedagogy, and sociality.
Application of Patents
More than ever, hackers actively and self-reflexively constitute these
values within a type of public sphere where hackers discuss the
corporate and legal practices that are seen to impinge on their ability
to engage in such forms of "free" expressive making (Coleman and Hill
2004).
The indiscriminate application of patents to software algorithms and
other encryption
and copyright laws, such as the Digital Millennium Copyright Act
(DMCA), are construed as threats to the free ability of programmers to
write source code, which hackers and programmers have only recently
come to conceptualize as a form of communication worthy of the broadest
protections afforded by First Amendment law.
Despite this incipient cognizance of the legal threats to free speech,
what grows out of this particular life world of intense, lifelong
programming and networked sociality is an overt aesthetic dislike for
politics and a culturally embodied experience of freedom that
conceptually shuns politics.
Put simply, political claims outside of software subtract from,
tarnish, and censor the sphere for the free circulation of thought,
action, and expression. It is felt that if FOSS was directed towards a
political end, it would sully the "purity" of the technical
decision-making process. Political affiliation also might deter people
from participating on development, thus creating an artificial barrier
to entry into this sphere whose ideal and idealized form is a
transparent meritocracy.
A political tag is also perceived to curtail one's personal freedom for
deciding how to best interpret this domain of activity-a form of
censorship and thus a highly polluted association to conjure.
In addition, the pragmatics of computing is a means by which to typify
political activity as distasteful, unappealing, and ineffective.
While programming is considered a transparent, neutral, highly
controllable realm for thought and expression where production results
in immediate gratification and something useful, politics tend to be
seen by programmers as buggy, mediated, and tainted action clouded by
ideology that is not productive of much of anything while it
insidiously works against true forms of free thought. You can't tweak
politics in an elegant and creative way to achieve something
immediately gratifying, and thus it goes against everything programmers
think and love about computing.
Inadvertent Politics of Contrast
I now shift my discussion to assess the political implications of
FOSS. The multiple uses of FOSS and its transposability and visibility
are simultaneously conditions for what I call a cultural critique
through contrast.
To explain what I mean, let's visit our own field for a moment.
Anthropology has historically unsettled our essentialist and universal
assumptions about human behavior by contrasting them with those of
people from other places (cf. Benedict 1959, Mead 1928, Marcus and
Fisher 1986, Mauss 1967, Sahlins 1976).
The disciplinary vehicle for this, it has been noted eloquently, is
ethnography which "serves at once to make the familiar strange and the
strange familiar" (Comaroff and Comaroff 1992:6). FOSS, among many
other things, functions as a form of critical ethnography writ large.
While a critical anthropology is based on a consciousness of its
politics, FOSS inadvertently has become a vehicle by which to rethink
the naturalness of intellectual property law. It exemplifies what
Marcus and Fisher call "defamiliarization by cross cultural
juxtaposition" (1986), the difference being that juxtaposition arises
out of an accidental cultural and not intentional anthropological
practice.
Its ability to conjure contrast, I argue, results from its marked
visibility and transportability partially borne from its purported
political neutrality.
Free and open-source hackers have been effective in coding FOSS as
politically removed -- a "neutrality" made material and socially
effective through licenses. The effect is that the freedom within FOSS
exudes a similar productive ambiguity that Prakash (1999) locates in
the sign of science in his study of Indian nationalists who directed
the icon of sciences as "the sign of rationality and progress" towards
justifying their anti-colonial liberation aspirations.
Due to this productive ambiguity that resists political affiliation of
left, right and liberal, FOSS has circulated extensively, though the
relevance of freedom and openness mutates along the way of its
excursions, fueling economic, governmental, popular, and leftist
articulations as justifications and alternatives.
'Market Agility'
For example, I.B.M and other business that use FOSS emphasize it for
its "market agility" and its ability to empower the consumer. I.B.M.
adopts a neoliberal language to interpret the significance of FOSS to
its consumer publics.
On the opposite side of the spectrum, leftist media websites such as
lndymedia.net run almost entirely on FOSS while its activists adore it
for its subversive, anticapitalist potentialities. The commons
movement, centered on the idea of creating public goods to reinvigorate
democratic principles, pragmatically built their licenses and
justifications around the already existing practice of FOSS (Bollier
2002, Lessig 2001).
Each group situates it in ways that empowers and legitimates their own
aspirations, but through their particular efforts they extend FOSS to
wider publics. And though there are distinct imaginaries grafted onto
FOSS, certain implicit political messages within the labor and law of
free and open source software also gain visible prominence.
Through its visibility and use by multiple publics, FOSS makes
apparent, and to some extent "strange," the assumptions that dominate
the social landscape of intellectual property. It opens to critical
scrutiny the liberal moral "habituations" that stringent intellectual
property instruments are indispensable to foster innovation and
creation.
Thousands upon thousands of developers laboring to make software libre
provides potent critiques and viable alternatives since it is realized
by the social performance of collective labor and licenses that others
can and now do use. Perhaps most significant is that FOSS enjoins
others to become part of its performance in various ways: use of FOSS
artifacts and licenses, participation in projects, reflection of the
larger meaning of collaboration, and the reuse (and reconfigurations)
of its licenses for other non-technological objects, such as college
courseware, music, books, and movies.
Actualized labor in practice undermines current theories of labor in
the law whose nature is to pose singular models for the proper
relationship between legal means and ends.
Licenses like the copyleft rupture the naturalized "form" of
intellectual property by inverting its ossified and singular
logic-through the very use of intellectual property-a move not unlike
Marx's inversion of Hegelian idealism, which retained Hegel's
dialectical method to repose history not as an expression of the
"Absolute Idea" but as humanity's collective creation through labor.
Using copyright as its vehicle, the copyleft places copyright literally
on its head and in the process demystifies copyright's "absolute"
theory of economic incentive. The copyleft says, we are not the passive
"subjects" of an almighty, unchangeable law, but actually can create
the law to serve us for other ends: in the case of FOSS, that of free
speech.
While many hackers might think you can't tweak politics in an elegant
and creative way to achieve something immediate and useful, Richard
Stallman, the mastermind behind the copyleft, showed through a clever
legal hack that politics can be gratifying and indeed very productive.
Conclusion
Over the course of the last thirty years, anthropologists have
increasingly left for the field by staying home. Research in medical
clinics, scientific laboratories, online communities, city
neighborhoods, and high schools, to name a few such locations, has
shifted the meaning of anthropological practice, the implications of
theoretical critique, and the identity of the ethnographer (Marcus
1999).
The nature of this research makes more clear that normative and
ubiquitous regimes of values, such as those posed by liberalism,
science, and capitalism, have a much more variegated expression when
located in particular institutions, social groups, or an assemblage
between them.
In other words, the local is as much here as it is "there" in foreign
or small scale societies, and part of the task of a critical
anthropology is to conjoin the exercise of anthropological critique
with the cultural processes of "defamiliarization" and critique located
in historical practice, not in theory.
The source and the effect of political agnosticism has been the focus
of this piece. FOSS, I have argued, is one local instantiation of
liberal values, a rearticulation centered on reposing the relationship
between intellectual property and free speech law by redirecting the
use of licenses to protect expressive activity.
Source Code as Speech
FOSS sensibilities of freedom and the growing hacker assertion that
source code is speech, largely regimented as politically neutral
through liberal values, are also rooted in methodologies, values, and
techniques constituted around the act of writing code and expressed
visibly in a wider public social sphere of hacking.
Through FOSS' visibility, circulation, and use, the juridical
understanding of free speech is shifting while some of the ingrained
assumptions of intellectual property law have already been partially
destabilized, the wider effect of which has been to open up a social
space for new legal possibilities.
The feature of critique that arises through the cultural struggle to
recreate and redefine meanings and associations, I have come to learn,
is much more ephemeral than the supposed ephemera of virtual social
spaces.
It is a moment in time whose nature is to shock other "socially
situated actors" into a process of cultural rethinking that shifts
practices in other areas of social life. The nature of the shock is to
lose its "shock value" so to speak and sink back into the natural state
of affairs as soon as a set of practices are more or less stabilized.
The journalistic, popular, and native narrative retelling of the rise
and importance of new practices or political sensibilities often don't
integrate this moment of cultural defamiliarization, focusing instead
on the rubric of great men and their ideas or explanation through
unintended consequences that may not have been part of its genesis.
Thus, the task of a critical anthropology within complex multi-cultural
societies is to keep a mindful orientation toward these powerful yet
elusive processes of cultural contrast and defamiliarization so that
its politics can be more effectively known, acknowledged, and directed.
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