Picture this rosy scenario for your high-tech future: You awaken because
your curtains open automatically, your coffee maker starts brewing and your bed
administers a subtle hint in the form of a back massage. Your closet, having
scanned your calendar, coughs up a freshly cleaned suit for the big meeting
today. You head for the kitchen while reading the day’s news as a translucent
holographic display. Thanks to motion detection, it stays right in front of you
as you walk.
And when you stub your toe — because you will, pal, if you wander around
scanning eye-level holograms — you can use a diagnostics app on your mobile
device to see whether it’s broken. Speaking of your feet, you will have a
smartshoe that pinches you to keep you from lingering over breakfast and being
late for your meeting. Neither human error nor human nature will interfere with
your gratingly perfect morning.
If this is the happiest news delivered by Eric Schmidt and Jared Cohen in
“The New Digital Age: Reshaping the Future of People, Nations and Business,”
imagine what the bad news is like. Actually, you don’t have to: the authors have
come up with memorably batty examples. They say that the future will be a tough
time to be a Malawian witch doctor because when everyone in the world has access
to digital information, the witch doctors’ authority will be contradicted. It
will also be hard to be a warlord in eastern Congo if warlords are touchy about
negative publicity.
Maybe they are. “The New Digital Age” is much more prescient and
provocative than it is silly. Its thinking got a little less futuristic when
last week’s Boston Marathon bombings turned crowdsourcing and cameras into
high-speed methods of needle-in-a-haystack detection.
The collaboration between Mr. Schmidt, the executive chairman (and former
chief executive) of Google, and Mr. Cohen, a foreign-relations expert and
director of Google Ideas, is meant to explore the ways in which technology and
diplomacy will intersect. “There is a canyon dividing people who understand
technology and people charged with addressing the world’s toughest geopolitical
issues, and no one has built a bridge,” they write.
The most frightening and important sections deal with the futures of war
and terrorism, and it is here that the authors sound most assured. Until now,
they point out, it has been relatively easy to use scare tactics and Web
charisma to mobilize acolytes. But a new accountability is coming, and a wired,
well-informed public will be able to tell the difference between stardom and
wisdom. “The consequence of having more citizens informed and connected is that
they’ll be as critical and discerning about rebels as they are about the
government,” the authors write.
This book articulates why any leaders, whether legitimate, revolutionary,
self-styled or tyrannical, will need much more elaborate planning skills than
they ever had before. “States will long for the days when they only had to think
about foreign and domestic policies in the physical world,” it grimly says.
Future political visionaries will have to devise policies for both the real and
virtual worlds, and those policies will not necessarily be consistent with each
other. There is already much evidence for the authors’ claim that cyberwarfare
and drone strikes are apt to overshadow traditional combat — although technology
may yield military uniforms that can generate sounds, camouflage themselves and
even self-destruct rather than wind up in enemy hands.
Despite dry, dense prose and occasional weird misfires (will it be joyous
or heartbreaking to watch holographic home movies, to have the dead visit your
living room?), “The New Digital Age” throws off many worthwhile
provocations.
Some are pop-cultural: It’s no longer true, the authors argue, that
everyone will be famous for 15 minutes (per Andy Warhol). Thanks to the
unforgiving nature of the Internet, everyone will be famous forever. “It’s only
a question,” they say, “of how many people are paying attention, and why.”
Some are global: Making frequent swipes at China (the authors agree with
certain experts “that China’s future will not be bright”), this book handicaps
the prospects of both rebellion and suppression as if the fate of the world
might depend on these things — because it might.
Any reader of “The New Digital Age” is sure to have a favorite point of
contention. Like the book’s view of politics: The authors predict that we can
expect many more Herman “Ubeki-beki-beki-beki-stan-stan” Cains in the future,
candidates with big personalities who become momentarily popular but cannot
withstand tough scrutiny.
Then they advise political consultants to map the brain functions of
candidates for a scientific assessment of how well they handle stress and
temptation. When a politician makes it past that kind of screening, we will have
truly reached the robotic age.
www.windows7mart.com
No comments:
Post a Comment