For the 2002
exhibition «Open_Source_Art_Hack» at the New Museum curated by myself
and Jenny Marketou, Knowbotic Research proposed the work «Minds of Concern:
Breaking News». For it, they created a jukebox interface that would select
at random the URL of an NGO or cultural organization. It then performed
a port scan [42] , which their legal counsel had determined was, in fact,
legal, even under the restrictions of the recently passed Patriot Act,
as long as there was no attempt to «enter» the server through any identified
security weakness. «Minds of Concern» did not publicly identify the sites
it scanned, and viewed it as a kind of public service, warning under-resourced
organizations about potential vulnerabilities. It turned out, however,
that the New Museum’s internet service provider had a clause in their
commercial contract with the museum, which prohibited port scanning for
any reason. The museum and curators were unable to provide the necessary
support to fight the ISP or find an alternative, and the project was shut
down. Knowbotic then added in large vinyl letters on the walls of the
installation: «_Legal Bug_Artistic_Self_Censorship_» making explicit,
the ultimate—and immediate— consequences of such «benign» legal bugs,
about which the «New York Times» wrote: «The dispute calls attention to
one of the very points the piece is intended to make. Because the lines
between public and private control of the Internet are not yet clearly
defined, what artists want to do may be perfectly legal, but that does
not mean they will be allowed do it.» [43] The legal bug is an insidious
restriction of the public sphere. |
knowbotic research knowboticresearch in collaboration with Peter Sandbichler (installation) |
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