Dr. Cynthia K. West examines the intersection of information
technologies, power, people, and bodies. Informed by more than ten
years as a digerati in Silicon Valley and a political theorist, she
offers a unique perspective on the direction in which information
technologies are leading North American and global societies and
cultures. Not only are information technologies bringing positive
changes, technologies are embedded in what Michel Foucault calls
power networks. Information technologies inherit influences from
prior historical, cultural, and social events. West's research
examines how information technologies are on a path of creating
efficiency, productivity, profitability, surveillance, and
control.
Human-machine interface technologies are merging more and more
with physical bodies. Surveillance technologies are supervising
human activities in an increasingly panoptic fashion. Biometric
technologies record data from the body's parts--hands, retinas,
irises, and even body odor. But as West points out, we need to ask
ourselves just how digital do we want to become? West calls for an
ethics dialogue not only among digerati within the industry but
also a dialogue which allows for public participation. Where do we
want to lead the technology? Instead of continuing to embrace the
goals of the technocratic paradigm, how can we use the technologies
toward more humanistic goals? West concludes by offering six levels
of active participation for positive change. This book will be of
particular interest to scholars and students of contemporary
science and technology as well as participants in information
technology.
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