Maja Funke - Dead Glitch: Difference between revisions

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Algorithmic Video Surveillance (AVS) consists of the installation and use of software that executes the analysis of videos to detect, identify or classify certain behaviors, situations, objects and people. The various machine-learning-based applications<ref>Such as ''Cityvision'' by Wintics and Briefcam software. </ref> are mainly used by the police in conjunction with surveillance cameras: either for real-time detection of certain suspicious or risky ‘events’ or retrospectively as part of police investigations. Biometric identification allows a person to be recognized in a sample of people on the basis of physical, physiological or behavioral patterns.<ref>https://www.laquadrature.net/vsa/</ref>  
Algorithmic Video Surveillance (AVS) consists of the installation and use of software that executes the analysis of videos to detect, identify or classify certain behaviors, situations, objects and people. The various machine-learning-based applications<ref>Such as ''Cityvision'' by Wintics and Briefcam software. </ref> are mainly used by the police in conjunction with surveillance cameras: either for real-time detection of certain suspicious or risky ‘events’ or retrospectively as part of police investigations. Biometric identification allows a person to be recognized in a sample of people on the basis of physical, physiological or behavioral patterns.<ref>https://www.laquadrature.net/vsa/</ref>  


While walking Paris in dérive<ref>https://situationist.org/periodical/si/issue-2-1958-en/theory-of-the-derive-73</ref>, one might sense the onset of normalization of the New Military Urbanism<ref>Graham, Stephen: ''Cities Under Siege: The New Military Urbanism'', 2010.</ref>. Counter observation reveals the banalization of a watching city. Anonymity and privacy are vital for freedom like demonstration, movement and expression. Yet, as states adopt surveillance and control systems designed for warfare<ref>Graham, Stephen: ''Cities Under Siege: The New Military Urbanism'', 2010</ref> – driven by security concerns, economic interests, and political goals – privacy violations become the norm. These measures, initially temporary, often become permanent after the state of emergency, treating all citizens as suspects and placing AVS in fundamental conflict with democratic values.  [[File:Jxmaja deadglitch vsavideo.gif|thumb|300x300px|Surveillance video by SNCF, masking in original, cropped and sped up. (gif) |center]]The title »Dead Glitch« alludes not least to the deadly potential for error entailed by trust in these technologies. »Warfare, like everything else, is being urbanized«<ref>Graham, Stephen: ''Cities Under Siege: The New Military Urbanism'', 2010. (p. 4)</ref> and the boomerang of dataveillance is returning to state borders and war zones<ref>ibid and Foucault, Michel: ''Society Must be Defended: Lectures at the Collège de France,'' 1976.</ref>:
While walking Paris in dérive<ref>https://situationist.org/periodical/si/issue-2-1958-en/theory-of-the-derive-73</ref>, one might sense the onset of normalization of the New Military Urbanism<ref>Graham, Stephen: ''Cities Under Siege: The New Military Urbanism'', 2010.</ref>. Counter observation reveals the banalization of a watching city. Anonymity and privacy are vital for freedom like demonstration, movement and expression. Yet, as states adopt surveillance and control systems designed for warfare<ref>Graham, Stephen: ''Cities Under Siege: The New Military Urbanism'', 2010</ref> – driven by security concerns, economic interests, and political goals – privacy violations become the norm. These measures, initially temporary, often become permanent after the state of emergency, treating all citizens as suspects and placing AVS in fundamental conflict with democratic values.  [[File:Jxmaja deadglitch vsavideo.gif|thumb|300x300px|Surveillance video by SNCF, masking in original, cropped and sped up. (gif) |center]]The current legal situation in Paris allows exercising rights by claiming your video data when captured during AI experiments. You must identify when and where these experiments occur to actively participate. The engagement enables the creation of a performative figure in public spaces and becoming acutely conscious of the resulting ''Instruments of recognition.''
 
The multimedia body of work »Dead Glitch« includes investigatigative performance. The current legal situation in Paris allows exercising rights by claiming your video data when captured during AI experiments. The proclaimed zone of video surveillance is becoming a stage, highlighting the risk-taking in the everyday and becoming acutely conscious of the resulting ''Instruments of recognition''<ref>Die Instrumente des Erkennens after Gottfried Böhm </ref>''.''
 
The title »Dead Glitch« alludes not least to the deadly potential for error entailed by trust in these technologies. »Warfare, like everything else, is being urbanized«<ref>Graham, Stephen: ''Cities Under Siege: The New Military Urbanism'', 2010. (p. 4)</ref> and the boomerang of dataveillance is returning to state borders and war zones<ref>ibid and Foucault, Michel: ''Society Must be Defended: Lectures at the Collège de France,'' 1976.</ref>:


In the EU, migration is treated as a security issue, with the EU Commission intensively researching automated technologies to 'defend' the Mediterranean, one of the world's deadliest border regions, using dehumanized AI-supported methods.<ref>https://fuckoffai.eu/</ref> In the Gaza Strip, systems like ''Lavender'' target individuals for killing by disclosing their identities and locations.<ref>https://blog.fiff.de/content/files/2024/04/2024_04_29_Stellungnahme-lavender.pdf  and https://www.972mag.com/lavender-ai-israeli-army-gaza/</ref> Concurrently, Russia and China are advancing automated weapon systems, prompting the US and EU to develop similar technologies through NATO. This digitalization of warfare is transforming the role of citizens under the Geneva Conventions.<ref>[https://netzpolitik.org/2024/artificial-intelligence-automated-warfare-and-the-geneva-convention/?via=nl Mulligan, Cathy: ''Automated Warfare and the Geneva Convention'', 2024.] </ref>
In the EU, migration is treated as a security issue, with the EU Commission intensively researching automated technologies to 'defend' the Mediterranean, one of the world's deadliest border regions, using dehumanized AI-supported methods.<ref>https://fuckoffai.eu/</ref> In the Gaza Strip, systems like ''Lavender'' target individuals for killing by disclosing their identities and locations.<ref>https://blog.fiff.de/content/files/2024/04/2024_04_29_Stellungnahme-lavender.pdf  and https://www.972mag.com/lavender-ai-israeli-army-gaza/</ref> Concurrently, Russia and China are advancing automated weapon systems, prompting the US and EU to develop similar technologies through NATO. This digitalization of warfare is transforming the role of citizens under the Geneva Conventions.<ref>[https://netzpolitik.org/2024/artificial-intelligence-automated-warfare-and-the-geneva-convention/?via=nl Mulligan, Cathy: ''Automated Warfare and the Geneva Convention'', 2024.] </ref>


Even with a human in the loop<ref>[https://static1.squarespace.com/static/64d25344dbe1c3217d71979a/t/675856793fcee029070f8988/1733842554618/Lisa+Ling+-+Accountability+in+Data-Centric+Warfare.pdf Ling, Lisa: ''Accountability in Data-Centric Warfare: Insights from a former insider'', 2024.]</ref>, responsibility and jurisdiction are increasingly shifting from humans to machines. The mediated image<ref>Luhmann, Niklas: ''Die Kunst der Gesellschaft,'' 1997.</ref> in the security apparatus, among other tools, is meant to control bodies. With acknowledging surveillance images as ''actants''<ref>''Latour, Bruno: Eine neue Soziologie für eine neue Gesellschaft. Einführung in die Akteur-Netzwerk-Theorie''. 2007</ref> we must emphasize that their imaginary sphere of phantasms, superstructures, and ulterior worlds exerts a tangible, worldmaking effect on the real and human lifes.
 


When video surveillance is not a material apparatus, but a practice<ref>Kammerer, Dietmar: ''Bilder der Überwachung'', 2008. (p. 33)</ref>, there is place to argue for a proximity to social justice<ref>https://disclose.ngo/fr/article/intelligence-artificielle-la-france-ouvre-la-voie-a-la-surveillance-de-masse-en-europe</ref> and bringing back in mind that historically, antifascist countermovements emerge in response to a tightening of state security. <blockquote>»By adding cameras, the idea of the romantic city, the city of the flâneur, has shifted. Contemporary city management seems to have different expectations of what public space is and does. Your artistic strategy to claim CCTV data by using GDPR regulations is a wonderful strategy of resistance. This is a laborious endeavour, both for you and the city, that slows down the cogs of the surveillance machine. It functions as a strong example of what "surveillance as a practice" entails, and how CCTV is so much more than mere technology, but a site of contestation.« – commented by Ruben van de Ven </blockquote>
When video surveillance is not a material apparatus, but a practice<ref>Kammerer, Dietmar: ''Bilder der Überwachung'', 2008. (p. 33)</ref>, there is place to argue for a proximity to social justice<ref>https://disclose.ngo/fr/article/intelligence-artificielle-la-france-ouvre-la-voie-a-la-surveillance-de-masse-en-europe</ref> and bringing back in mind that historically, antifascist countermovements emerge in response to a tightening of state security. <blockquote>»By adding cameras, the idea of the romantic city, the city of the flâneur, has shifted. Contemporary city management seems to have different expectations of what public space is and does. Your artistic strategy to claim CCTV data by using GDPR regulations is a wonderful strategy of resistance. This is a laborious endeavour, both for you and the city, that slows down the cogs of the surveillance machine. It functions as a strong example of what "surveillance as a practice" entails, and how CCTV is so much more than mere technology, but a site of contestation.« – commented by Ruben van de Ven </blockquote>

Revision as of 12:43, 30 January 2025

»Dead Glitch« is a research project and a multimedia body of work that was initiated in view of the global event of the 2024 Olympic and Paralympic Games in Paris. The project places the issue of comprehensive algorithmic video surveillance at the center of attention.

Urban design is updated in the Parisian gaze. What seems to be a streetlamp is no longer a distributor for romantic light, but a surveillance instance in empire green or anthracite. Some five-eyed sentries are special in their materialization of control and freedom and – other than white-bodies cuboids – may not seem dissuasive but rather belonging. This is a security enforcement with symbolic aesthetic, in the heritage of the penetrability of the urban space in Louis’ XIV »Ville Lumière«[1]. This light is more often than not interested in non-white bodies and oher visible minorities.

Four different kind of surveillance camera applied on streetlamps.
Variations de lampadaires, Paris 2024 (L’infrastructure s’appuie sur l’infrastructure).

In preparation for the 2024 Olympic and Paralympic Games, the French government passed a law on March 19, 2023 that includes provisions to improve security, situational (crime) prevention and counterterrorist measures (Article 9 to 19).[2] Among them is the »experimental [sic!]« use of algorithmic video surveillance to control crowds at sporting, leisure and cultural events. The trial will run until the end of March 2025.

Algorithmic Video Surveillance (AVS) consists of the installation and use of software that executes the analysis of videos to detect, identify or classify certain behaviors, situations, objects and people. The various machine-learning-based applications[3] are mainly used by the police in conjunction with surveillance cameras: either for real-time detection of certain suspicious or risky ‘events’ or retrospectively as part of police investigations. Biometric identification allows a person to be recognized in a sample of people on the basis of physical, physiological or behavioral patterns.[4]

While walking Paris in dérive[5], one might sense the onset of normalization of the New Military Urbanism[6]. Counter observation reveals the banalization of a watching city. Anonymity and privacy are vital for freedom like demonstration, movement and expression. Yet, as states adopt surveillance and control systems designed for warfare[7] – driven by security concerns, economic interests, and political goals – privacy violations become the norm. These measures, initially temporary, often become permanent after the state of emergency, treating all citizens as suspects and placing AVS in fundamental conflict with democratic values.

Surveillance video by SNCF, masking in original, cropped and sped up. (gif)

The current legal situation in Paris allows exercising rights by claiming your video data when captured during AI experiments. You must identify when and where these experiments occur to actively participate. The engagement enables the creation of a performative figure in public spaces and becoming acutely conscious of the resulting Instruments of recognition.

The multimedia body of work »Dead Glitch« includes investigatigative performance. The current legal situation in Paris allows exercising rights by claiming your video data when captured during AI experiments. The proclaimed zone of video surveillance is becoming a stage, highlighting the risk-taking in the everyday and becoming acutely conscious of the resulting Instruments of recognition[8].

The title »Dead Glitch« alludes not least to the deadly potential for error entailed by trust in these technologies. »Warfare, like everything else, is being urbanized«[9] and the boomerang of dataveillance is returning to state borders and war zones[10]:

In the EU, migration is treated as a security issue, with the EU Commission intensively researching automated technologies to 'defend' the Mediterranean, one of the world's deadliest border regions, using dehumanized AI-supported methods.[11] In the Gaza Strip, systems like Lavender target individuals for killing by disclosing their identities and locations.[12] Concurrently, Russia and China are advancing automated weapon systems, prompting the US and EU to develop similar technologies through NATO. This digitalization of warfare is transforming the role of citizens under the Geneva Conventions.[13]


When video surveillance is not a material apparatus, but a practice[14], there is place to argue for a proximity to social justice[15] and bringing back in mind that historically, antifascist countermovements emerge in response to a tightening of state security.

»By adding cameras, the idea of the romantic city, the city of the flâneur, has shifted. Contemporary city management seems to have different expectations of what public space is and does. Your artistic strategy to claim CCTV data by using GDPR regulations is a wonderful strategy of resistance. This is a laborious endeavour, both for you and the city, that slows down the cogs of the surveillance machine. It functions as a strong example of what "surveillance as a practice" entails, and how CCTV is so much more than mere technology, but a site of contestation.« – commented by Ruben van de Ven

References

  1. Kammerer, Dietmar: Bilder der Überwachung, 2008. (p. 20)
  2. République Française: LOI n° 2023-380 du 19 mai 2023 relative aux jeux Olympiques et Paralympiques de 2024 et portant diverses autres dispositions.
  3. Such as Cityvision by Wintics and Briefcam software.
  4. https://www.laquadrature.net/vsa/
  5. https://situationist.org/periodical/si/issue-2-1958-en/theory-of-the-derive-73
  6. Graham, Stephen: Cities Under Siege: The New Military Urbanism, 2010.
  7. Graham, Stephen: Cities Under Siege: The New Military Urbanism, 2010
  8. Die Instrumente des Erkennens after Gottfried Böhm
  9. Graham, Stephen: Cities Under Siege: The New Military Urbanism, 2010. (p. 4)
  10. ibid and Foucault, Michel: Society Must be Defended: Lectures at the Collège de France, 1976.
  11. https://fuckoffai.eu/
  12. https://blog.fiff.de/content/files/2024/04/2024_04_29_Stellungnahme-lavender.pdf and https://www.972mag.com/lavender-ai-israeli-army-gaza/
  13. Mulligan, Cathy: Automated Warfare and the Geneva Convention, 2024.
  14. Kammerer, Dietmar: Bilder der Überwachung, 2008. (p. 33)
  15. https://disclose.ngo/fr/article/intelligence-artificielle-la-france-ouvre-la-voie-a-la-surveillance-de-masse-en-europe

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