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Trapped in the grid

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Of course, those changes were under way long before software applications began to migrate to the Web -- and they would arguably still be happening, albeit a bit more slowly, even if we never did plug a gazillion new devices into a "World Wide Computer," and just kept plugging away on our clunky old Web-enabled PCs instead. And so, while the first part of "The Big Switch" could only have been written today, the second part could, with the swapping out of a few company names, easily be mistaken for one of the many books of techno-cult crit that greeted the Web's first coming in the mid-'90s (like those by Sherry Turkle, Clifford Stoll, or David Shenk). In the ranks of such critics, Carr is deft but not, fundamentally, original.

"The Big Switch" provides an intelligent overview of the rise of Web 2.0-style services and reviews a canonical list of examples, from YouTube and Second Life to Craigslist and Amazon's Mechanical Turk. Then Carr runs down the list of usual-suspect dangers of the New Web Order: erosion of privacy, economic dislocation, exploitation of unpaid labor, alienation from real-world communities and disintegration of civic life. (Newspapers are in bad trouble, too.) The charges are comprehensive -- sometimes so comprehensive that they cancel each other out: On one page, for instance, Carr tells us that the Net has been "a godsend for terrorists," who can use it to hide their plots; a few pages later, he declares that the "World Wide Computer" will allow governments to perfect surveillance.

Carr is way too smart a critic not to acknowledge the multitude of on-the-other-hands to his critiques. He knows that many of us love the opportunities the Web provides for self-expression, for connection, and for access to a wider set of cultural choices than the broadcast world could ever deliver. Repeatedly, he acknowledges tensions between the Net's uses as "an instrument of bureaucratic control and of personal liberation, a conduit of communal ideals and of corporate profits." "The resolution of the tensions, for good or ill," he writes, "will determine how the grid's consequences play out over the coming years and decades."

Carr is right: These tensions lie at the Internet's heart. It is a dynamic system in which every move toward centralization, and each step toward individual empowerment, evokes an equal and opposite reaction. But after all his unresolved tensions, his balanced clauses and hedged rhetoric, Carr finally comes clean that he doesn't think the conflict between control and liberation is an even fight at all. "Computer systems," he writes, "are not at their core technologies of emancipation. They are technologies of control. They were designed as tools for monitoring and influencing human behavior, for controlling what people do and how they do it." As a result, he says, every apparently liberating moment that digital technology has provided -- from the excitement of the early PC era to the heady thrill of the nascent Web -- has proved "short-lived." What the chip giveth, the Man soon taketh away.

"The Big Switch," then, is offering a different, and in some ways more sophisticated, analysis than the alarm sounded by writers like Andrew Keen and Lee Siegel, who offer variations on "The barbarians are at the gates!" Carr's power-structural analysis warns us instead that every time the provinces get restless, the emperor will send out his legions -- and resistance is futile.

For Carr, the genesis of information technology as a tool for bureaucratic management, all the way back to the days of Hollerith punch cards, limits its potential for good. Initial conditions determine the story's outcome. But by this reasoning, counting and writing ought to have been similarly hobbled; after all, they were invented so the ancients could manage their grain stores. Yet somehow humanity managed to turn such tools to more diverse ends -- to work out particle physics and write "Hamlet" and "Paradise Lost."

I am not so quick as Carr to assume that the end-state of digital technology can be so easily predicted from its origins. In the face of the accelerating changes the Net promises, ambivalence is a natural and appropriate response -- one neatly encapsulated in the punning title of Michael Wesch's popular video encapsulation of the Web 2.0 world, "The Machine is Us/ing Us." Whether one chooses to view the digital glass as half-full or -empty is, finally, a matter of temperament.

Carr's brain entertains both sides of the issues, but at heart he's plainly a glass-half-empty type. That predilection, I think, limits "The Big Switch's" power: Carr writes with a grim assurance of a hell-in-a-handbasket outcome that his own logic does not support. Yet the book's final pages -- a rumination on how quickly we forget "how things were" once a new technological regime arrives -- sing such a lovely elegy that I almost forgot all the arguments I'd had with the preceding chapters.

Perhaps the initial conditions of Carr's own career, as an author of business-school studies, are what hem in his judgments. His gimlet eye lingers in the Web's corporate precincts, and has little time to spare for the teeming, unpredictable, often frivolous, occasionally beautiful Web that's being built, in tiny increments, by millions of individuals. Carr is an adept blogger -- his Rough Type posts display a sense of fun that only infrequently leavens "The Big Switch" -- and he seems to understand why people like to contribute to Web-based projects: "...because they enjoy it. It gives them satisfaction." But then he goes on to describe the bottom-up world of creativity on the Net as merely "new forms of the pastimes and charitable work that people have always engaged in outside their paid jobs."

To Carr, each choice we make, every day, to write on our blogs or post photos and videos or share reviews of products or contribute to Wikipedia is ultimately the act of a dupe. However good our self-expression makes us feel, we're really just creating value to be skimmed by Silicon Valley's new plutocrats.

That's indeed part of the story -- but if it were all of it, then surely the whole "user-generated" Web would disintegrate the moment we saw through the scam. Carr doesn't predict that, and neither does anyone else. In fact, economic analysis alone can't explain what's happening on the Web; neither can technological determinism.

I can't fully explain it myself. But I think the piece of the picture that Carr leaves out may be the one that longtime Internet observer Clay Shirky was talking about last year, in a speech about the fruits of open collaboration online. "In the past," Shirky said, "we could do little things for love. But big things required money. Now, we can do big things for love."

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About the writer

Salon co-founder Scott Rosenberg is the author of "Dreaming in Code" and blogs at Wordyard. He is working on a new book about the story of blogging.

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