{"id":228491,"date":"2017-07-17T16:31:58","date_gmt":"2017-07-17T20:31:58","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/uncategorized\/cory-doctorow-on-technological-immortality-the-transporter-problem-the-verge.php"},"modified":"2017-07-17T16:31:58","modified_gmt":"2017-07-17T20:31:58","slug":"cory-doctorow-on-technological-immortality-the-transporter-problem-the-verge","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/immortality\/cory-doctorow-on-technological-immortality-the-transporter-problem-the-verge.php","title":{"rendered":"Cory Doctorow on technological immortality, the transporter problem &#8230; &#8211; The Verge"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><p>    Cory Doctorow has made several careers out of thinking about    the future, as a journalist and co-editor of Boing Boing, an    activist with strong ties to the Creative Commons movement and    the right-to-privacy movement, and an author of novels that    largely revolve around the ways changing technology changes    society. From his debut novel, Down And Out In The Magic    Kingdom (about rival groups of Walt Disney World designers    in a post-scarcity society where social currency determines    personal value), to his most acclaimed, Little Brother    (about a teenage gamer fighting the Department of Homeland    Security), his books tend to be high-tech and high-concept, but    more about how people interface with technologies that feel    just a few years into the future.  <\/p>\n<p>    But they also tend to address current social issues head-on.    Doctorows latest novel, Walkaway, is largely about    people who respond to the financial disparity between the    ultra-rich and the 99 percent by walking away and building    their own networked micro-societies in abandoned areas.    Frightened of losing control over society, the 1 percent wages    full-on war against the walkaways, especially after they    develop a process that can digitize individual human brains,    essentially uploading them to machines and making them    immortal. When I talked to Doctorow about the book and the    technology behind it, we started with how feasible any of this    might be someday, but wound up getting deep into the questions    of how to change society, whether people are fundamentally    good, and the balance between fighting a surveillance state and    streaming everything to protect ourselves from government    overreach.  <\/p>\n<p>    Walkway feels timely in terms    of present politics and sociology, but the technology is more    theoretical. How much of this future do you consider    plausible?  <\/p>\n<p>    Oh, the technology is the most hand-wavey stuff in the book.    Its probably easier to identify the stuff thats least    plausible, like consciousness uploading. If our consciousness    isnt inextricably tied to our bodies, we have no good way to    know that, apart from wishful thinking. That sort of thing    should always be looked at suspiciously as a metaphor, and not    as a prediction. When we were making steam engines, we were all    sure we could make a steam-powered brain. We had a lot of other    different versions of this in fiction at different times  it    always turns out by this amazing coincidence, we think whatever    technology we use every day is the best way to understand our    own cognition. The most common technology of the day is    definitely the thing that is most like our brains, rather than    something coming up in the future. So Im deeply, deeply    skeptical of the idea that our brains are things that well put    in computers.  <\/p>\n<p>    But we do live a lot of our lives in the digital realm. We    project our minds into the digital world. So as a metaphor for    understanding who we are and how we relate to other people,    consciousness uploading is a useful metaphor.    Machine-learning-based vision systems are getting better at    recognizing objects. Like a lot of fast-growing things, we    dont know if its on an S-curve or a J-curve. Is it going    through a burst of productivity that will reach an actual limit    and then taper off, or are we in some crazy exponential curve    that will just go up and up, with machine learning getting    better and better, and delivering more and more dividends? We    cant answer, because a lot of what were getting out of    machine learning right now is incremental, but some of it is    breakthroughs. Its got that sexiness factor, where a bunch of    people who would have historically not given a shit about    machine learning are suddenly looking really closely at it,    discovering easy wins that were invisible to earlier    practitioners. Maybe there will be all new kinds of amazing    discoveries.  <\/p>\n<p>    Other things in Walkaway All of the biotech stuff,    like turning urine back into beer, that feels like something    within the realm of CRISPR hackers. Its something they might    attempt, though maybe not pull off to the extent that I would    drink what they made. CRISPR is one of those brands where    theres so much crazy, awesome, interesting stuff, and also so    much hot air and bloviating that its hard to tell whats    hand-waving and whats real. As a fiction writer, thats my    sweet spot. Exciting, expansive, fast-moving, and full of    bullshit? That is science-fiction-writing gold, right there.    Everything you write about it sounds eminently plausible.  <\/p>\n<p>    With the first    Homeland book, it felt like    you were suggesting real ways to resist surveillance overreach    and react to real politics.    Walkaway deals with similar    issues, but in a far more speculative way. Can readers learn    anything useful from    Walkaway about dealing with    current economic and power inequities?  <\/p>\n<p>    Consciousness uploading in Walkaway is not a solution     more like a McGuffin. Nobody really solves any problems with    that. They solve problems with ethics and social movement and    organizational tools, with communal living and unselfishness    and commitment to abundance. Having Airs that act like house    elves is just fashion. But other things they do, like using    networks to build flexible political groups that allow them to    pool their labor, I think if were going to have a resistance,    thats the resistance. Thats what we get out of technology.  <\/p>\n<p>    Ive had years of debating with friends in political movements    about whether technology is a distraction. Malcolm Gladwell    wrote a column about how real activists lay down shoe leather    ringing doorbells. They dont post online petitions. But the    reality is that if shoe-leather is needed, the way you mobilize    it is with networks where you can find people who want to go    and ring doorbells. And anyone who says, Well, I dont know    why I would use a communications tool that will allow me to    find people who feel the same way I do anywhere in the world,    and recruit them to my cause, I just want to ring doorbells,    that person is talking out of their ass.  <\/p>\n<p>    In the book, you dont address the usual problem of    human brain duplication, which is basically the transporter    problem  if you make a copy of yourself and destroy the    original, is the new one really you, or are you dead? How do    you feel about that question personally?  <\/p>\n<p>    I have this super-glib answer, which is, Everyone who cares    about that will die. If immortality is only available to    people who dont care about that stuff, just wait a hundred    years, and all the people with moral quandaries about it will    be dead.  <\/p>\n<p>    My thoughts on it are that if your hypothetical transporter had    hypothetical characteristics that made it like murder, it would    be like murder, and if your hypothetical transporter had    hypothetical characteristics that didnt, it wouldnt be. Its    your Gedankenexperiment, you give it the contours that you want    it to have.     I wrote an essay about this once, specifically about a    classic science-fiction story called The Cold    Equations, and how it omits the writers hand outside the    frame, manipulating things so theres only one answer to their    problem. The inevitability of The Cold Equations is    not the inevitability of the universe. Its a contrivance. If    you have a thought experiment and its clear that it can really    only be answered one way, our next question should be, Why did    you structure your thought experiment that way?  <\/p>\n<p>    One of the three books youve often cited as    inspiring Walkaway    was Rebecca Solnits A Paradise    Built in Hell, about the positive,    generous ways people respond to crisis, and how people in power    usually make crisis worse by attempting to stabilize situations    with heavy-handed measures. How early in the process of writing    this did those parallels occur to you?  <\/p>\n<p>    The elements of Walkaway were self-assembling in my    subconscious out of things I wrote for Boing Boing and things I    have seen in the world, whether they were at Maker Faire or    Burning Man or on the 9 oclock news. Solnits book helped    crystallize a lot of those ideas. I started actually writing    this book by re-reading Down and Out in the Magic    Kingdom and thinking about what story I could tell about    how that society came into being. That primed me to start    noticing things in the world that hinted at the kind of story.  <\/p>\n<p>    Im filling in the blanks between our present day and Down    and Out in The Magic Kingdom. I got as far as    Walkaway, and I want to stick a pin in the board    there, or hammer a piton into the side of the cliff, to help me    find the next step there. My theory of change in my activist    work is that theres no point charting a course from A to Z,    because the world is dynamic. If your course from A to Z works    now, by the time you get to M, everything from M to Z will have    rearranged itself. Youre going to need a new plan. And so my    view is, you do hill-climbing. You find that step you can take    that makes the world a little better, that gives you a slightly    more advantageous position, and then you see from there what    your next step might be. In my activist work, Im going from A    to B. In my imaginative fiction work, Im going from Z to M.    Maybe theyll meet in the middle? Its just very abstract.  <\/p>\n<p>    One outgrowth of that expansion is that in your writing    in general, you often dig deep into what one technological    change does to the world, then zip past the next few, because    that first change makes things alter so fast that theres no    time for consideration. Does that approach in fiction come out    of your attitude about radical technological change?  <\/p>\n<p>    Yeah. I do think things are intertwingled. I think it was    Arthur C. Clarke who said if an old, well-established scientist    says something is possible, theyre probably right, and if they    say something is impossible, theyre probably wrong. The world    is weirder than we tend to extrapolate. We make thought    experiments that are stripped-down models, where a small thing    changes another thing and then stops there, as opposed to    rippling outward and making interference patterns with other    changes. Like Gardner Dozois said, a science-fiction writer    should see cars and cinemas and not only predict the drive-in,    but also the sexual revolution. And it occurred to me one day    that in the 21st century, the major effect all of those things    that lingers isnt the sexual revolution, the car, the    drive-in, or the cinema. Its the fact that because the sexual    revolution necessitated a driving license, for the first time    in American history, civilians started covering government    issued ID, and that created the entire modern bureaucratic    surveillance state. So if you really want to be a real badass    science-fiction writer, you should predict that hitching    government-issued credentials to the procreative act would    profoundly change our current world more than anything else.  <\/p>\n<p>    Youve said you consider science fiction to be a sort    of social-engineering fly-through of possible technology. Once    youve considered what technology or social issue you want to    write about, at what point do the characters come in for    you?  <\/p>\n<p>    Well, here, Im trying to get people on an emotional    fly-through here. Walkaway isnt about the impact of    technology, so much as a shift in our social mores toward the    belief that your neighbors are part of the solution, and not    the problem. Competitive market economies create amazing    productivity gains. We talk about how wasteful capitalism is,    and how much pollution it produces, and so on, but if you look    at any material object that you use thats been made in the    last five years  a car, a refrigerator, whatever  the labor,    energy, and material inputs to that object are an infinitesimal    fraction of what they were when we were born. And that is an    astounding accomplishment.  <\/p>\n<p>    So market capitalism works really well. But it has a failure    mode, and that failure mode is to pit us against one another so    we have adversarial exclusive destinies, where my success is    your loss. And that produces this world where when things go    wrong, instead of turning to your neighbors, you run away from    them. And we cant solve our problems without our neighbors.    All those preppers who have bugout bags so they can run for the    hills when the lights go out, those people are crazy, because    if they get a burst appendix or bad stuff in their water, they    cant solve their problems. Society is built up by having a    variety of perspectives and expertises all convened under one    roof, as opposed to each person for themselves. So the    emotional fly-through here, where the characters come in, is in    figuring out what would it be like if in a crisis, you turned    to your neighbor and asked them how you could help them, and    the two of you got together to help the next person you could    find. Which I think going back to Rebecca Solnit, thats what    we do in a crisis, but its not what we think well    do. Its statistically illiterate to imagine that most people    are bad, when most of the people you know are good. What are    the odds that you would happen to know the very, very rare good    people out of a pool of extremely bad people, as opposed to you    knowing a fairly representative slice of people?  <\/p>\n<p>    Is there a technological solution for what you call the    virtue deficit, the fear that other people are probably bad    and cant be trusted?  <\/p>\n<p>    The leaderboard system in Walkaway [where people are    competitively rated by what they contribute to a collective] is    a really good example of how technology can pit us against us.    One of the things Im really interested in is how the different    frameworks of our social media produce different outcomes. So    Twitter shows you the number of followers people have, and    thats seems to be inextricably tied to social media. Its very    rare now to find a social technology that doesnt show you how    many followers people have. Tumblr doesnt, which is    super-interesting. If youre on Tumblr, you dont know how    popular another Tumblr person is. Flickr was one of the first    social technologies, but it marked itself out from things like    MySpace by refusing to allow you to see how many followers    other people had. If youre making a technology about being    sociable and finding your authentic self and expressing it to    other people, then creating a system where people can easily    compete to see whos the most popular runs antithetical to it.    I think social media has optimized a mechanism for being    compelling without being enjoyable.  <\/p>\n<p>    We become inured to a lot of these technological techniques    for manipulating our emotional states.  <\/p>\n<p>    I can spend endless hours on Twitter, even though Im not    enjoying it. The maximization of engagement rather than    pleasure has been a hugely transformative and    not-for-the-better shift in the way we do application and    technology design. If we want to make technology that    encourages pleasure instead of engagement, or cooperation    instead of competition, there are conscious choices we can    make. Well reach some natural limits. People become adapted to    whatever kinds of social rewards they get from our technology.    We tend to forget, when a new technology sweeps through our    world like a bonfire, that well become inured to it, and itll    cease to be impressive or compelling. Old ads for soap    basically said, Buy soap and you will be clean. Talking about    the value of the product used to be a fantastically persuasive    technique. But through exposure, we became inured. Today, if    you want to advertise soap, you do it like Axe body spray:    spray this on your body and women will throw    themselves at you! Its like a junkie chasing a high  a dose    that used to make us feel great now just makes us feel normal.    We become inured to a lot of these technological techniques for    manipulating our emotional states.  <\/p>\n<p>    There are always people at the margin who dont become inured.    A lot of people will try a casino game and find that mechanic    really compelling, until they realize they wont win in the    long term, and walk away. But other people are unable to    disengage, and become problem gamblers. So are we going to use    technology to make ourselves better or worse? Well find some    techniques that people are broadly vulnerable to, or receptive    to, and minorities of people will be susceptible to them in    very profound ways, or will be totally immune to them. And then    well develop new techniques, and theyll go in both directions    to make us better and make us worse. But that doesnt mean that    they wont make us better or worse. It just means that they    create this boom-and-bust cycle of making big changes that    become smallish changes that then beget a new big change.  <\/p>\n<p>    Speaking of walking away from something that doesnt    give you long-term gains, the hardest thing for me to buy    in Walkaway wasnt    brain uploads, it was the idea that you could put your heart    and soul into building something, and then just quietly walk    away if someone else tried to take it. Its a radical    philosophy throughout the book, but ownership is so baked into    American culture  the twin ideas that having things makes you    important and happy, and that if you make something, you    deserve it. How would you convince someone to walk away from    something they made and care for?  <\/p>\n<p>    Well, theyre walking away from the physical reality of the    home theyve built, but not the digital afterlife. So theyre    like programmers who fork open a project because they cant    agree with one another. Yeah, they walk away from the server    where their code is running, but they dont walk away from all    the knowledge they gained making it, or the individual talents    theyve honed. They walk away to do something better.  <\/p>\n<p>    Its a bit like the rationalist community, who are trying to    find a way around our cognitive blind spots, to apply    behavioral economics to get people to do what will be best in    the long term, instead of what your emotions tell you is best    in the short term. The reality is, when you look back on people    who have done amazing things, they usually walked away from    several failures in order to get there. If you want to triple    your success rate, you triple your failure rate. Walt Disney    had to walk away from Oswald the Lucky Rabbit, which was owned    by the studio he worked with, so he created Mickey Mouse. And    if it wasnt for that failure, he would have been a middling    cartoonist drawing Oswald the Lucky Rabbit for the rest of his    life. There are a lot of those failures in the lives of people    who have very successful careers. Elon Musk was forced out of    PayPal. That stings a lot when it happens. But everyone whos    found true love, with very few exceptions, walked away from    times when they thought they found true love, and it turned out    that they hadnt.  <\/p>\n<p>    You do have to write off a lot of failures on your way to    success.  <\/p>\n<p>    Today, theres a lot of big movement for successful people to    admit their failures, rather than paper over them, and to talk    about their other challenges, like depression and mental    illness, as opposed to pretending to be super-people who have    no problems. Thats part of it, helping people understand that    you do have to write off a lot of failures on your way to    success. In Walkaway, you also cushion the blow by    having technology that makes it easier to salvage the best    parts of the things you walk away from.  <\/p>\n<p>    Streaming technology becomes vitally important    in Walkaway, and    theres a tension between the surveillance state, where the    rich can track everyone elses movements, and the ability to    broadcast your reality to get past news filtering and    censorship, and show people whats really going on. Its    notable that our government is simultaneously trying to keep us    from recording things it doesnt want seen, and trying to    record and examine everything we do.  <\/p>\n<p>    I think that just tells you that their arguments are    self-serving bullshit. When they say, Well, we dont want you    to record the police because it puts them at risk, or it    interferes with their job, or they have the right to privacy,    and then they say, By the way, your privacy is totally    worthless, theyre having their cake and eating it too. And    theres another framing for this, which is that when you do the    peoples business with a gun on your hip, the people have a    right to know what youre doing. And when you are the people,    the government doesnt have the automatic right to know what    youre doing. Thats actually not a novel prospect. Thats a    thing baked into the US Constitution. Transparency for the    strong and privacy for the weak. Thats the Fourth Amendment.  <\/p>\n<p>    On a lighter note, like one of the things that I really    enjoy about the book is the emphasis that you put on people    creating art even in the most crisis-ridden circumstances.    There are a lot of details in that vein. What made that aspect    of creativity interesting to you?  <\/p>\n<p>    In every kind of adversity, you get people making art.  <\/p>\n<p>    Well, thats certainly the world I inhabit. Everyone I know has    laptops covered in stickers. When laser cutters first came    along, everyone was engraving everything they could engrave. We    do ornament our things, especially in times of adversity. Some    of my very favorite art in the world, like vintage folk art, is    trench art. Stuff that comes out of World War I, where people    made things out of bullet casings. Prison art is amazing, and    so are the paintings flyers put on the nose cones of their    fighter planes. One of the things that was really formative to    me was a book of poetry by children in Auschwitz that was    circulated when I was a kid. I went to a socialist Yiddish    school, and we read these poems that had been written in    Yiddish by these kids who all died. They had teachers who    convened classes to keep the kids occupied, and they wrote    poetry. In every kind of adversity, you get people making art.    It is really a universal trait, and it particularly manifests    in times of extrema and adversity.  <\/p>\n<p>    Activism is important right now, but so is optimism.    What about the tech world right now gives you hope for the    future?  <\/p>\n<p>    Its really easy to focus on the terrible things people do with    social media, for the same reason that its really easy to    focus on the turd floating in the punchbowl. But when I reflect    on my experiences of networks, communication, and media, over    and over again, its people coming together to help one    another. And its true that a few people acting very    flamboyantly badly can make it easy to forget, or even cancel    out some of the benefits there. But over and over again, when    theres a disaster, when someone has a personal crisis, even    the people who  like, I look around on Tumblr and every now    and again therell be someone who will write a post about their    depression and then other people will come in and kind of    comfort them and help them out. Its just such a motif thats    easy to miss. When you see it its so obvious, and once you    start looking at it, you see it everywhere. And so that I think    thats a thing that gives me hope, that the evidence of our    fundamental goodness is there on the network for us to see. You    have to look past all of the shouting and the anger, which    obviously loom large and it looms large for really illegitimate    reasons. And Im not saying that it excuses, but the nobility    should give you hope that the people who are kind and good are    in the majority and its a matter of figuring out how to use    the technologies but it doesnt create a false multiplier for    the minority of bad actors, so that the rest of us can get on    with the business of our ancient dream of our species, which is    collaborating to make the world better.  <\/p>\n<p><!-- Auto Generated --><\/p>\n<p>See the original post:<\/p>\n<p><a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow\" href=\"https:\/\/www.theverge.com\/2017\/7\/16\/15978554\/cory-doctorow-interview-walkaway-consciousness-uploads-fast-moving-futures\" title=\"Cory Doctorow on technological immortality, the transporter problem ... - The Verge\">Cory Doctorow on technological immortality, the transporter problem ... - The Verge<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p> Cory Doctorow has made several careers out of thinking about the future, as a journalist and co-editor of Boing Boing, an activist with strong ties to the Creative Commons movement and the right-to-privacy movement, and an author of novels that largely revolve around the ways changing technology changes society. From his debut novel, Down And Out In The Magic Kingdom (about rival groups of Walt Disney World designers in a post-scarcity society where social currency determines personal value), to his most acclaimed, Little Brother (about a teenage gamer fighting the Department of Homeland Security), his books tend to be high-tech and high-concept, but more about how people interface with technologies that feel just a few years into the future.  <a href=\"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/immortality\/cory-doctorow-on-technological-immortality-the-transporter-problem-the-verge.php\">Continue reading <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"limit_modified_date":"","last_modified_date":"","_lmt_disableupdate":"","_lmt_disable":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[431589],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-228491","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-immortality"],"modified_by":null,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/228491"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=228491"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/228491\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=228491"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=228491"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=228491"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}