[syndicate] <nettime> NYT on Thing.net (fwd)

Ricardo MadGello madgello at hotmail.com
Mon Dec 23 17:26:31 CET 2002


Not to mention DOW has set-up forwarding from the URL mentioned in this
article to their own site.

Let DOW try to down GreenPeace Next?
http://www.mad-dow-disease.com

How many more DOW waste pipes need to be plugged before DOW gets a clue?

DOW murdered a best friend's several children in cold blood for their
speaking out against DOW's contributions to global stenching!

DOW, you listening?

Down this!

Take your toxic waste drain pipes and shove them up your bloody red asses
through your ferkin' eyeballs!

  PLUGH!

----- Original Message -----
From: "Alan Sondheim" <sondheim at panix.com>
To: <syndicate at anart.no>
Sent: Monday, December 23, 2002 7:51 AM
Subject: [syndicate] <nettime> NYT on Thing.net (fwd)




---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Mon, 23 Dec 2002 15:25:20 -0100
From: nettime's_roving_reporter <nettime at bbs.thing.net>
To: nettime-l at bbs.thing.net
Subject: <nettime> NYT on Thing.net

     [ via <tbyfield at panix.com>]

<http://www.nytimes.com/2002/12/23/arts/design/23ARTS.html?pagewanted=print&
position=top>

Cyberspace Artists Paint Themselves Into a Corner

By MATTHEW MIRAPAUL

In a 1950's horror movie the Thing was a creature that killed before it was
killed. Now in a real-life drama playing on a computer screen near you, the
Thing is an Internet service provider that is having trouble staying alive.
Some might find this tale equally terrifying.

The Thing provides Internet connections for dozens of New York artists and
arts
organizations, and its liberal attitude allows its clients to exhibit online
works that other providers might immediately unplug. As a result the Thing
is
struggling to survive online. Its own Internet-connection provider is
planning
to disconnect the Thing over problems created by the Thing's clients. While
it
may live on, its crisis illustrates how difficult it can be for Internet
artists to find a platform from which they can push the medium's boundaries.

Wolfgang Staehle, the Thing's founder and executive director, said the
high-bandwidth pipeline connecting the Thing to the Internet would be
severed
on Feb. 28 because its customers had repeatedly violated the pipeline
provider's policies. While the exact abuses are not known, they probably
involve the improper use of corporate trademarks and generating needless
traffic on other sites.

If Mr. Staehle is unable to establish a new pipeline, the 100 Web sites and
200
individual customers, mostly artists, that rely on the Thing for Internet
service could lose their cyberspace homes. In a telephone interview from the
Thing's office in Chelsea, Mr. Staehle (pronounced SHTAW-luh) said, "It's
not
fair that 300 of our clients will suffer from this and I might be out of
business."

The Thing's pipeline is currently supplied by Verio Inc. of Englewood,
Colo.,
which declines to comment on its troubles with the Thing. Mr. Staehle said
that
he had not received official word from Verio, but that the company's lawyers
told the Thing the service would be cut off because of the violations.

For some digital artists, these are perilous times. With the Internet's rise
have come increased concerns about everything from online privacy to digital
piracy. Naturally artists are addressing these matters in Internet-based
works.
So an online project about copyright violations inevitably violates some
copyrights, and a work that warns how a computer could be spying on you
could
very well be spying on you.

Most Internet service providers yank such works offline whenever legal
challenges are raised, so open-minded providers like the Thing become an
important alternative. But as Alex Galloway, a New York artist, said, "There
really are no true alternative Internet service providers because
connectivity
is still controlled by the telecommunication companies."

Mr. Staehle has learned this the hard way. The project that overheated
Verio's
circuits was probably a Web site created by an online group of political
activists called the Yes Men. The site, at dow-chemical.com, resembled Dow
Chemical's real site, at dow.com. But the contents were phony news releases
and
speeches that ridiculed Dow officials for being more interested in profits
than
in making reparations for a lethal gas leak at a Union Carbide plant (now
owned
by Dow) in Bhopal, India, in 1984.

The hoax's supporters said it was a parody. But Dow's lawyers contacted
Verio
to complain that the site infringed on its trademarks, among other sins.
Initially it seemed to be just another fracas over corporate logos and other
forms of intellectual property on the Internet.

What happened next stunned Mr. Staehle. The Yes Men project had been put
online
by RTMark.com, a politically active arts group that uses the Web as its base
and gets its Internet service from the Thing. After Dow complained about the
fake Web site, Mr. Staehle said, Verio alerted the Thing, where a technician
said he was not authorized to act. Within hours Verio cut off access to
RTMark.com, as well as to all the Thing's Internet customers. These included
innocent victims like Artforum magazine and the P. S. 1 Contemporary Art
Center
in Long Island City, Queens. Starting mid-evening on Dec. 4, the Thing was
offline for 16 hours.

Ted Byfield, a Thing board member who teaches a course at the Parsons School
of
Design on the social effects of technology, would not call Verio's action
censorship. Instead he said, "They hit the panic button." He compared the
temporary shutdown to a meat packer who recalls all his beef products after
discovering a small batch of tainted hamburger.

Mr. Staehle soon discovered that his virtual supermarket might be
permanently
closed, too. When he called Verio to ask why his entire network had been
unplugged instead of the sole offending site, he said, a Verio lawyer told
him
that the Thing had violated its policies repeatedly and that its contract
would
be terminated.

Verio had shut down part of the Thing once before. In 1999 the online toy
retailer eToys.com asked a California court to stop an online arts group
from
using its longtime Web address etoy.com. The Electronic Disturbance Theater,
a
Thing client, staged a virtual protest by overloading the retailer's site
with
traffic during the holiday season. Verio blocked access to one of the
Thing's
computers until the protest site's owners agreed to take it offline.

These two episodes may give Verio enough cause to bump the Thing from the
Internet. If so Verio would appear to be a surprising censor. In January the
company earned praise from Internet-rights supporters when it refused to
grant
a request by the Motion Picture Association of America to shut down a Web
site
containing DVD-copying software.

Mr. Staehle said he had no knowledge of the Yes Men site. "I am not in the
business of policing my clients," he said. "I am just a carrier."

Although some Thing customers pursue a radical political agenda, most do
not.
Even RTMark.com was included in the Internet-art section of the 2000 Whitney
Biennial exhibition.

One might assume that museums and other cultural organizations could provide
a
safe haven for challenging works. But they are just as susceptible to legal
threats and technical restrictions. For instance, in May the New Museum of
Contemporary Art in New York was forced to remove a surveillance-theme
artwork
from the Internet after its service provider said it violated its policies.

Mr. Staehle said he was considering several plans that would keep the Thing
alive. While he is confident that he will find another pipeline provider, he
said, he is worried that customers will abandon the Thing during the
transition, financially ruining it.

The Thing is one of the oldest advocates of online culture. Mr. Staehle, who
moved to New York from his native Germany in 1976, started the Thing in 1991
as
an electronic bulletin board where artists could exchange ideas about how
the
new medium would affect the arts. The electronic forum continues at
bbs.thing
.net, where artists post projects and review works.

Charles Guarino, Artforum's associate publisher, said that should the Thing
vanish, "it would be a terrible loss." But he noted that the Thing's
customers
would simply find new, if less sympathetic, Internet service providers. Mr.
Guarino said, "Everyone will still continue to exist, probably even the
people
who got them into all this trouble in the first place." He added, "Poor
thing."

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