Goodbye Privacy Symposium

We publicize our view of the world and of ourselves in weblogs and at sites like Flickr, MySpace and YouTube. Many of the services that are being marketed under the banner of Web 2.0 are based on network linkup, exchange and the voluntary revelation of private information. With the emergence of this new “public life,” the value of that which is private has changed. Thus, there are indeed more and better forms of participation, but the staging of the private sphere before a mass public reduces the cultural status ascribed to it. At the same time, there's a bull market in detailed information about private individuals. The automatically analyzable data traces we leave behind give rise not only to new service industries but also to the architecture of surveillance and control. Figures, data and quantifiability have long since become conventional means of social selection and organization. Are we well on the way to a transparent society? Or is this hymn in praise of the new openness precisely what is paving the way for the abuse of power behind the scenes?This year’s Ars Electronica symposium will scrutinize this updated private sphere under the new conditions of terrorism and Web 2.0.
Ina Zwerger, Armin Medosch

Goodbye Privacy Symposium

06.09.09:30-13:00

Kunstuniversität Linz / K2

Goodbye Privacy Symposium I

No Privacy - No Autonomy!

What is the value of privacy? According to the classical interpretation of Modernity, the private sphere is a precondition for autonomy and the capacity of the individual to act. Being able to discuss issues in a context in which ones privacy is protected is a necessary requirement for the existence of a critical public in a democratic society. Can this view of the private sphere still be maintained before the backdrop of terror and Web 2.0?
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Goodbye Privacy Symposium

06.09.14:00-17:00

Kunstuniversität Linz / K2

Goodbye Privacy Symposium II

Identity 2.0 - Reclaiming Sovereignty

Public spaces are increasingly under permanent surveillance—via CCTV cameras in the streets and “dataveillance” in the registers of the information miners and processors. How can the private sphere be reconceptualized so that personal sovereignty doesn’t get lost completely? Could it be possible to construct an “Identity 2.0” that’s custom-tailored to the new technical and social facts of life?
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Goodbye Privacy Symposium

07.09.10:30-13:30

Kunstuniversität Linz / K2

Goodbye Privacy Symposium III

Goodbye Privacy - Welcome Publicity?

What role does the “new public life” play? Are the tools that allow people to publicize themselves also giving rise to a critical public? Or is it rather the case that in blogs full of personal shock and dismay, the political is simply being overwhelmed by the private and the I-stream is becoming mainstream? Web 2.0 entrepreneurs, media theorists and activists, sociologists, artists and hackers will discuss life in the aftermath of privacy’s demise.
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Goodbye Privacy Symposium

07.09.14:30-18:00

Kunstuniversität Linz / K2

Goodbye Privacy Symposium IV

Creative Resistance

While the ways and means at the disposal of a control-based society are becoming increasingly refined, artists and hackers are discovering gaps in the system. Creative resistance—beating the system with its own tools—can be put up by everyone. This will be a presentation of the basic principles of finding ways out of the digital Panopticon: active data protection and creative system hacks.
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