You are here
Announcements
Recent blog posts
- Male Sex Trade Worker
- Communities resisting UK company's open pit coal mine
- THE ANARCHIC PLANET
- The Future Is Anarchy
- The Implosion Of Capitalism And The Nation-State
- Anarchy as the true reality
- Globalization of Anarchism (Anti-Capital)
- Making Music as Social Action: The Non-Profit Paradigm
- May the year 2007 be the beginning of the end of capitalism?
- The Future is Ours Anarchic
Umberto Eco, "Not Such Wicked Leaks"
December 7, 2010 - 9:34am -- jim
"Not Such Wicked Leaks"Umberto Eco
[For the celebrated novelist and intellectual Umberto Eco, the Wikileaks
affair or "Cablegate" not only shows up the hypocrisy that governs
relations between states, citizens and the press, but also presages a
return to more archaic forms of communication.]
The WikiLeaks affair has twofold value. On the one hand, it turns out to be
a bogus scandal, a scandal that only appears to be a scandal against the
backdrop of the hypocrisy governing relations between the state, the
citizenry and the press. On the other hand, it heralds a sea change in
international communication – and prefigures a regressive future of
“crabwise” progress.
But let’s take it one step at a time. First off, the WikiLeaks confirm the
fact that every file put together by a secret service (of any nation you
like) is exclusively made up of press clippings. The “extraordinary”
American revelations about Berlusconi’s sex habits merely relay what could
already be read for months in any newspaper (except those owned by
Berlusconi himself, needless to say), and the sinister caricature of
Gaddafi has long been the stuff of cabaret farce.
Embassies have morphed into espionage centres
The rule that says secret files must only contain news that is already
common knowledge is essential to the dynamic of secret services, and not
only in the present century. Go to an esoteric book shop and you’ll find
that every book on the shelf (on the Holy Grail, the “mystery” of Rennes-
le-Château [a hoax theory concocted to draw tourists to a French town], on
the Templars or the Rosicrucians) is a point-by-point rehash of what is
already written in older books. And it’s not just because occult authors
are averse to doing original research (or don’t know where to look for news
about the non-existent), but because those given to the occult only believe
what they already know and what corroborates what they’ve already heard.
That happens to be Dan Brown’s success formula.
The same goes for secret files. The informant is lazy. So is the head of
the secret service (or at least he’s limited – otherwise he could be, what
do I know, an editor at Libération): he only regards as true what he
recognises. The top-secret dope on Berlusconi that the US embassy in Rome
beamed to the Department of State was the same story that had come out in
Newsweek the week before.
So why so much ado about these leaks? For one thing, they say what any
savvy observer already knows: that the embassies, at least since the end of
World War II, and since heads of state can call each other up or fly over
to meet for dinner, have lost their diplomatic function and, but for the
occasional ceremonial function, have morphed into espionage centres. Anyone
who watches investigative documentaries knows that full well, and it is
only out of hypocrisy that we feign ignorance. Still, repeating that in
public constitutes a breach of the duty of hypocrisy, and puts American
diplomacy in a lousy light.
A real secret is an empty secret
Secondly, the very notion that any old hacker can delve into the most
secret secrets of the most powerful country in the world has dealt a hefty
blow to the State Department’s prestige. So the scandal actually hurts the
“perpetrators” more than the “victims”.
But let’s turn to the more profound significance of what has occurred.
Formerly, back in the days of Orwell, every power could be conceived of as
a Big Brother watching over its subjects’ every move. The Orwellian
prophecy came completely true once the powers that be could monitor every
phone call made by the citizen, every hotel he stayed in, every toll road
he took and so on and so forth. The citizen became the total victim of the
watchful eye of the state. But when it transpires, as it has now, that even
the crypts of state secrets are not beyond the hacker’s grasp, the
surveillance ceases to work only one-way and becomes circular. The state
has its eye on every citizen, but every citizen, or at least every hacker –
the citizens’ self-appointed avenger – can pry into the state’s every
secret.
How can a power hold up if it can’t even keep its own secrets anymore? It
is true, as Georg Simmel once remarked, that a real secret is an empty
secret (which can never be unearthed); it is also true that anything known
about Berlusconi or Merkel’s character is essentially an empty secret, a
secret without a secret, because it’s public domain. But to actually
reveal, as WikiLeaks has done, that Hillary Clinton’s secrets were empty
secrets amounts to taking away all her power. WikiLeaks didn’t do any harm
to Sarkozy or Merkel, but did irreparable damage to Clinton and Obama.
Technology now advances crabwise
What will be the consequences of this wound inflicted on a very mighty
power? It’s obvious that in future, states won’t be able to put any
restricted information on line anymore: that would be tantamount to posting
it on a street corner. But it is equally clear that, given today’s
technologies, it is pointless to hope to have confidential dealings over
the phone. Nothing is easier than finding out whether a head of state flew
in or out or contacted one of his counterparts. So how can privy matters be
conducted in future? Now I know that for the time being, my forecast is
still science fiction and therefore fantastic, but I can’t help imagining
state agents riding discreetly in stagecoaches along untrackable routes,
bearing only memorised messages or, at most, the occasional document
concealed in the heel of a shoe. Only a single copy thereof will be kept –
in locked drawers. Ultimately, the attempted Watergate break-in was less
successful than WikiLeaks.
I once had occasion to observe that technology now advances crabwise, i.e.
backwards. A century after the wireless telegraph revolutionised
communications, the Internet has re-established a telegraph that runs on
(telephone) wires. (Analog) video cassettes enabled film buffs to peruse a
movie frame by frame, by fast-forwarding and rewinding to lay bare all the
secrets of the editing process, but (digital) CDs now only allow us quantum
leaps from one chapter to another. High-speed trains take us from Rome to
Milan in three hours, but flying there, if you include transfers to and
from the airports, takes three and a half hours. So it wouldn’t be
extraordinary if politics and communications technologies were to revert to
the horse-drawn carriage.
One last observation: In days of yore, the press would try to figure out
what was hatching sub rosa inside the embassies. Nowadays, it’s the
embassies that are asking the press for the inside story.
"Not Such Wicked Leaks"Umberto Eco
[For the celebrated novelist and intellectual Umberto Eco, the Wikileaks affair or "Cablegate" not only shows up the hypocrisy that governs relations between states, citizens and the press, but also presages a return to more archaic forms of communication.]
The WikiLeaks affair has twofold value. On the one hand, it turns out to be a bogus scandal, a scandal that only appears to be a scandal against the backdrop of the hypocrisy governing relations between the state, the citizenry and the press. On the other hand, it heralds a sea change in international communication – and prefigures a regressive future of “crabwise” progress.
But let’s take it one step at a time. First off, the WikiLeaks confirm the fact that every file put together by a secret service (of any nation you like) is exclusively made up of press clippings. The “extraordinary” American revelations about Berlusconi’s sex habits merely relay what could already be read for months in any newspaper (except those owned by Berlusconi himself, needless to say), and the sinister caricature of Gaddafi has long been the stuff of cabaret farce. Embassies have morphed into espionage centres
The rule that says secret files must only contain news that is already common knowledge is essential to the dynamic of secret services, and not only in the present century. Go to an esoteric book shop and you’ll find that every book on the shelf (on the Holy Grail, the “mystery” of Rennes- le-Château [a hoax theory concocted to draw tourists to a French town], on the Templars or the Rosicrucians) is a point-by-point rehash of what is already written in older books. And it’s not just because occult authors are averse to doing original research (or don’t know where to look for news about the non-existent), but because those given to the occult only believe what they already know and what corroborates what they’ve already heard. That happens to be Dan Brown’s success formula.
The same goes for secret files. The informant is lazy. So is the head of the secret service (or at least he’s limited – otherwise he could be, what do I know, an editor at Libération): he only regards as true what he recognises. The top-secret dope on Berlusconi that the US embassy in Rome beamed to the Department of State was the same story that had come out in Newsweek the week before.
So why so much ado about these leaks? For one thing, they say what any savvy observer already knows: that the embassies, at least since the end of World War II, and since heads of state can call each other up or fly over to meet for dinner, have lost their diplomatic function and, but for the occasional ceremonial function, have morphed into espionage centres. Anyone who watches investigative documentaries knows that full well, and it is only out of hypocrisy that we feign ignorance. Still, repeating that in public constitutes a breach of the duty of hypocrisy, and puts American diplomacy in a lousy light. A real secret is an empty secret
Secondly, the very notion that any old hacker can delve into the most secret secrets of the most powerful country in the world has dealt a hefty blow to the State Department’s prestige. So the scandal actually hurts the “perpetrators” more than the “victims”.
But let’s turn to the more profound significance of what has occurred. Formerly, back in the days of Orwell, every power could be conceived of as a Big Brother watching over its subjects’ every move. The Orwellian prophecy came completely true once the powers that be could monitor every phone call made by the citizen, every hotel he stayed in, every toll road he took and so on and so forth. The citizen became the total victim of the watchful eye of the state. But when it transpires, as it has now, that even the crypts of state secrets are not beyond the hacker’s grasp, the surveillance ceases to work only one-way and becomes circular. The state has its eye on every citizen, but every citizen, or at least every hacker – the citizens’ self-appointed avenger – can pry into the state’s every secret.
How can a power hold up if it can’t even keep its own secrets anymore? It is true, as Georg Simmel once remarked, that a real secret is an empty secret (which can never be unearthed); it is also true that anything known about Berlusconi or Merkel’s character is essentially an empty secret, a secret without a secret, because it’s public domain. But to actually reveal, as WikiLeaks has done, that Hillary Clinton’s secrets were empty secrets amounts to taking away all her power. WikiLeaks didn’t do any harm to Sarkozy or Merkel, but did irreparable damage to Clinton and Obama. Technology now advances crabwise
What will be the consequences of this wound inflicted on a very mighty power? It’s obvious that in future, states won’t be able to put any restricted information on line anymore: that would be tantamount to posting it on a street corner. But it is equally clear that, given today’s technologies, it is pointless to hope to have confidential dealings over the phone. Nothing is easier than finding out whether a head of state flew in or out or contacted one of his counterparts. So how can privy matters be conducted in future? Now I know that for the time being, my forecast is still science fiction and therefore fantastic, but I can’t help imagining state agents riding discreetly in stagecoaches along untrackable routes, bearing only memorised messages or, at most, the occasional document concealed in the heel of a shoe. Only a single copy thereof will be kept – in locked drawers. Ultimately, the attempted Watergate break-in was less successful than WikiLeaks.
I once had occasion to observe that technology now advances crabwise, i.e. backwards. A century after the wireless telegraph revolutionised communications, the Internet has re-established a telegraph that runs on (telephone) wires. (Analog) video cassettes enabled film buffs to peruse a movie frame by frame, by fast-forwarding and rewinding to lay bare all the secrets of the editing process, but (digital) CDs now only allow us quantum leaps from one chapter to another. High-speed trains take us from Rome to Milan in three hours, but flying there, if you include transfers to and from the airports, takes three and a half hours. So it wouldn’t be extraordinary if politics and communications technologies were to revert to the horse-drawn carriage.
One last observation: In days of yore, the press would try to figure out what was hatching sub rosa inside the embassies. Nowadays, it’s the embassies that are asking the press for the inside story.