जनसत्ता, १/९/२०१६:
"...रिलायंस इंडस्ट्रीज के मुखिया मुकेश अंबानी ने गुरुवार को जियो की 4जी सेवाएं लॉन्च की। सालाना आम बैठक में बोलते हुए अंबानी ने कहा कि अब 'दादागिरी नहीं, डाटागिरी चलेगी।'..."
"...I think a great many of us are haunted by the feeling that
our society, and by ours I don’t mean just the United States or Europe, but our
whole world-wide technological civilisation, whether officially labelled
capitalist, socialist or communist, is going to go smash, and probably deserves
to. Like the third century the twentieth is an age of stress and anxiety. In
our case, it is not that our techniques are too primitive to cope with new problems,
but the very fantastic success of our technology is creating a hideous, noisy,
over-crowded world in which it is becoming increasingly difficult to lead a
human life. In our reactions to this, one can see many parallels to the third
century. Instead of gnostics, we have existentialists and God-is-dead
theologians, instead of neo-platonists, devotees of Zen, instead of desert
hermits, heroin addicts and beats, (who also, oddly enough, seem averse to
washing), instead of mortification of the flesh, sado-masochistic pornography;
as for our public entertainments, the fare offered by television is still a
shade less brutal and vulgar than that provided by the amphitheatre, but only a
shade, and may not be for long. I have no idea what is actually going to happen
before I die except that I am not going to like it…”
Artist; K. J. Lamb, The Spectator, May 2014
"...रिलायंस इंडस्ट्रीज के मुखिया मुकेश अंबानी ने गुरुवार को जियो की 4जी सेवाएं लॉन्च की। सालाना आम बैठक में बोलते हुए अंबानी ने कहा कि अब 'दादागिरी नहीं, डाटागिरी चलेगी।'..."
Yuval Noah Harari's vision of our future, as elaborated by
him in 'Yuval Harari on big data, Google and the end of free will',FT dated
August 26 2016, reads creepy.
Read this:
"..Just
as divine authority was legitimised by religious mythologies, and human
authority was legitimised by humanist ideologies, so high-tech gurus and
Silicon Valley prophets are creating a new universal narrative that legitimises
the authority of algorithms and Big
Data.
This novel creed may be called “Dataism”..."
Or this,
"We are
already becoming tiny chips inside a giant system that nobody really
understands. Every day I absorb countless data bits through emails, phone calls
and articles; process the data; and transmit back new bits through more emails,
phone calls and articles. I don’t really know where I fit into the great scheme
of things, and how my bits of data connect with the bits produced by billions
of other humans and computers. I don’t have time to find out, because I am too
busy answering emails. This relentless dataflow sparks new inventions and
disruptions that nobody plans, controls or comprehends."
Or this,
"Devices
such as Amazon’s Kindle are able constantly to collect data on their users
while they are reading books. Your Kindle can monitor which parts of a book you
read quickly, and which slowly; on which page you took a break, and on which
sentence you abandoned the book, never to pick it up again. If Kindle was to be
upgraded with face recognition software and biometric sensors, it would know
how each sentence influenced your heart rate and blood pressure. It would know
what made you laugh, what made you sad, what made you angry. Soon, books will
read you while you are reading them. And whereas you quickly forget most of
what you read, computer programs need never forget. Such data should eventually
enable Amazon to choose books for you with uncanny precision. It will also
allow Amazon to know exactly who you are, and how to press your emotional
buttons."
While reading this, I remembered W H Auden's words written in 1966:
Artist; K. J. Lamb, The Spectator, May 2014