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引用次数: 2
摘要
先说几件轶事:几天前,当我在办公室准备一堂课时,一群“快闪族”出现在我窗前的四合院上,他们跟着ipod跳了一会儿舞,然后散开了。在明斯克(Shirky, 2008, p. 165)、费城(Urbina, 2010)和其他地方,快闪族(Flash暴徒)是警察和其他当局(短暂地)关注的问题,在这些地方,人们通过短信或博客松散地联系在一起,令人震惊地突然出现,引发了对无政府状态的恐惧。但是,看着他们跳舞,我想起了另一个类似的术语:闪电人群——互联网流量的突然激增,例如,与拒绝服务攻击有关。这种相似之处并非偶然——它们似乎都衍生出《新机器人革命》、《多机构》和《机械》:杰拉德·劳尼格《一千台机器》书评
New Robot Revolution, Multi-Agency and the Machinic: Review of Gerald Raunig's A Thousand Machines
First, a couple of anecdotes: While I was working on a class lecture a few days ago in my office, a “flash mob” showed up on the quadrangle in front of my window and danced to their iPods for a while before dispersing. Flash mobs were (briefly) a concern for police and other authorities in places like Minsk (Shirky, 2008, p. 165), Philadelphia (Urbina, 2010) and elsewhere, where the alarmingly sudden presence of people loosely coupled through their text messaging or blogging triggered fears of anarchy. But, watching them dance, I remembered another, similar term: flash crowds—the sudden surge of internet traffic associated with, for example, a denial-of-service attack. The similarity is not just incidental—they appear to both derive, New Robot Revolution, Multi-Agency and the Machinic: Review of Gerald Raunig’s A Thousand Machines