[iDC] Introducing: Real Costs & Oil Standard

Michel Bauwens michelsub2004 at gmail.com
Sat May 12 02:04:13 EDT 2007


Hi Julian,

Of course global-warming is a direct effect of having a system of infinite
growth (the result of the interest-baring monetary system mostly, as it
cannot exist in a static environment, hence it can only provoke growth or
collapse) in a finite material system.

But we are all part of that system, so that any approach that blames
capital, and does not want to change its own behaviour, is going to be
unproductive.

But at the other end of the spectrum, a strategy that is based only on
micro-change, while leaving the overall logic of the system unchagned, is
equally doomed to failure.

We have to change, we have to change the system. It's not either/or, its
both.

Now the key question is how you change the meta-system, giving the record of
failure in this regard, and the obsoleteness of industrial era leftism? My
suggestion would be to tone down the useless anti-capitalist rhetoric, and
to tune up the post-capitalist practices.

Michel

On 5/11/07, Julian Kücklich <julian at kuecklich.de> wrote:
>
> In this context, I'd like to alert the list to an article by Will
> Barnes, which argues that climate change is not man-made but
> "capital-made". I am not sure I agree with him entirely, but I take his
> point that measures against climate change are also used as weapons
> against the "developing world" and as tools for behavioural
> reprogramming all over the world (save water, quit smoking, recycle your
> paper, avoid taking aeroplanes), without any proof whatsoever that these
> "micro-actions" are in any way effective. Barnes argues quite
> convincingly that climate change is going to continue as long as the
> principle of capital accumulation remains in effect, so I wonder whether
> plugins like "Real Costs" aren't actually counter-productive, insofar as
> they suggest to people that climate change is their fault, and that they
> can contribute to "saving the planet" by canceling their trip to Hawaii.
>
> http://www.metamute.org/en/Capital-Climes
>
> Michael Mandiberg schrieb:
> > Hello All,
> >
> > Trebor Scholz has asked me to write a post introducing two recent
> > projects,"Oil Standard" (2006), "Real Costs" which I releasd a beta
> version
> > of last week.
> >
> > "Real Costs" is a Firefox plug-in that inserts emissions data into
> travel
> > related e-commerce websites.  The first version adds CO2 emissions
> > information to airfare websites such as Orbitz.com <http://orbitz.com/>
> ,
> > United.com <http://united.com/>, Delta.com <http://delta.com/>, etc.
> > Following versions will work with car directions, car rental, and
> shipping
> > websites. Think of it like the nutritional information labeling on the
> back
> > of food... except for emissions.
> >
> > The objective of the "Real Costs" is to increase awareness of the
> > environmental impact of certain day to day choices in the life of the
> > Internet user. By presenting this environmental impact information in
> the
> > place where decisions are being made, it will hopefully create an impact
> on
> > the viewer, encourage a sense of individual agency, start ongoing
> > discussions, and provide a set of alternatives and immediate actions. In
> > the
> > process the user/viewer might even be transformed from passive consumer
> to
> > engaged citizen.
> >
> > Experience the project by installing the "Real Costs" plug-in into your
> > Firefox application; the plug-in is available at
> > http://TheRealCosts.com<http://therealcosts.com/>.
> > Currently, this plug-in pulls the origination and destination
> information
> > for each flight from the page, and then calculates and reinserts the CO2
> > produced. It compares the CO2 produced for that flight to making that
> trip
> > by bus or train, and to the average CO2 produced per capita for the
> average
> > US and world citizen. It is configured to work on the websites of the
> > largest North American air carriers (major global air carriers are
> > currently
> > being added.) A list of these carriers and documentation of all
> scientific
> > calculations is available on the project Wiki (
> > http://therealcosts.com/wiki
> > ).
> >
> > "Real Costs" builds on many of my prior investigations into
> intersections
> > between conceptualism, Internet art, and activism. I make art that
> explores
> > the way the Internet shapes subjectivity and consumerism. I take common
> > genres including e-commerce, blogs and opinion poll sites and create
> > site-specific interventions into this digital vernacular to provoke a
> > moment
> > of contemplation on the part of the viewer.  The key example here is the
> > "Oil Standard" ( http://transition.turbulence.org/Works/oilstandard/)
> > Firefox plug-in that converts all prices on a web page from U.S. Dollars
> > into the equivalent value in barrels of crude oil. When you load a web
> > page,
> > the script seamlessly inserts converted prices into the page. As the
> > cost of
> > oil fluctuates on the commodities exchange, prices rise and fall in
> > real-time causing the user to reflect on their relationship to the
> abstract
> > fluctuation of the price of oil reported on the news everyday.  "Oil
> > Standard" synthesized my interest in hactivism and net.art, sustainable
> > economics, and information design to create an art piece that opened up
> a
> > dialogue about oil, economics, and the environment.  It was used and
> > discussed by eco-techies, high school classes, progressive politicians,
> and
> > Internet artists. This project achieved the goal of making abstract
> > information legible so as to create dialogue about the important issues
> > surrounding how we use the earth's natural resources.
> >
> > "Real Costs"  and "Oil Standard" very intentionally sit in the liminal
> > spaces between art and design, between hactivism and software
> development,
> > and between situationist intervention and green-tech tool making.  I
> have
> > situated this project in this position at the edge of art because it
> allows
> > me to present completely unexpected content in familiar forms.  The goal
> is
> > to seduce the viewer through what appears to be a comfortable and usual
> > situation and to create an experience of surprise and wonder.  I have
> done
> > this before, in "Shop Mandiberg", (
> > http://Mandiberg.com/shop<http://mandiberg.com/shop>)
> > where I buit an e-commerce site as a container for self-portraiture, and
> in
> > "Bush Poll," ( http://BushPoll.com <http://bushpoll.com/>) where I made
> an
> > opinion poll of the other 153 George Bushes of the country. By making
> art
> > appear in everyday contexts the potential capacity for art to instigate
> > change is integrated into daily life.
> >
> > I would contextualize this approach within a growing body of similar
> work.
> > I see this taking place in work like Angie Waller's
> > http://myfrienemies.com/,
> > Ben Engebreth's http://personal-kyoto.org/, and xtine hansen's
> > http://delocator.net/ + http://yourneighborsbiz.com/.   One of the core
> > motivations in these works is to make something that has a function, and
> > which changes or articulates how we interact with (one small part of)
> the
> > world.
> >
> > Yours,
> >
> > Michael Mandiberg
> >
> > ++
> >
> > Michael Mandiberg
> > Artist in Residence // Eyebeam
> > Asst Professor // CSI/CUNY
> > Michael -at- Mandiberg -dot- com
> > http://Mandiberg.com <http://mandiberg.com/>
> >
> > ++links++
> >
> > http://TheRealCosts.com <http://therealcosts.com/>
> > http://transition.turbulence.org/Works/oilstandard/
> > http://Mandiberg.com/shop <http://mandiberg.com/shop>
> > http://BushPoll.com <http://bushpoll.com/>
> >
> > http://myfrienemies.com
> > http://personal-kyoto.org/
> > http://delocator.net
> > http://yourneighborsbiz.com
> >
> >
> > ------------------------------------------------------------------------
> >
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>
> --
> julian raul kücklich, ma
>
> http://www.playability.de
>
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