Item
New Media and the Power Politics of Sousveillance in a Surveillance-Dominated World
- Author
- Steve Mann and Joseph Ferenbok
- Year
- 2013
- Publisher
- Surveillance & Society 11(1/2)
- DOI/Link
- View Source
- Abstract
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In this paper, we address the increasingly complex constructs between power and the practices of seeing, looking, and watching/sensing in a networked culture mediated by mobile/portable/wearable computing devices and technologies. We develop and explore a nuanced understanding and ontology that examines ‘veillance’ (‘watching’) in both directions: surveillance (oversight), as well as sousveillance (‘undersight’). In this context, we look at some new possibilities for computationally mediated veillances. In particular, we unpack the new relationships of power and democracy facilitated by mobile and pervasive computing. We differentiate between the power relationships in the generalized practices of looking or gazing, which we place under the broad term ‘veillance’. Then we address the more subtle distinctions between different forms of veillance that we classify as surveillance and sousveillance, as well as McVeillance (the ratio of actual or permitted surveillance to sousveillance). We start by unpacking this understanding to develop a more specialized vocabulary to talk not just about oversight but also to
about the implications of mobile technologies on ‘undersight’ (e.g. who watches the watchers, who watches the watchers of the watchers…ultimately the people at the bottom of the hierarchy). We argue that the time for sousveillance as a social tool for political action is reaching a critical mass, facilitated by a convergence of transmission, mobility and media channels for content distribution and engagement. Mobile ubiquitous computing, image capture, processing, distribution, and seamless connectivity of devices such as iPad, iPhone, Android devices, wearable computers, Digital Eye Glass, etc., allow for unprecedented ‘on the ground’ watching of everyday life. The critical mass of these ‘sousveillant’ capable devices in everyday life may make the practice of sousveillance a potentially effective political force that can now challenge and balance the hypocrisy and corruption that is otherwise inherent in a surveillance-only society (i.e. a society that has only oversight without undersight).