Will Google Eat Itself?
On the activist project ÈGoogle Will Eat ItselfÇ, which looks at
the monopoly held by the highly remunerative search engine
Slavo Krekovic
The friendly-looking search engine and advertising company is
again under attack by activist artists. The ÈGoogle Will Eat ItselfÇ project,
which critically explores the relations between the new click-based economy,
technology and society, has recently succeeded in gaining the attention of a
larger audience and was also nominated for the Transmediale festival award at
the start of the year. Hans Bernhard, Lizvlx (both UBERMORGEN.COM), Alessandro
Ludovico (Neural.it) and Paolo Cirio (epidemic) do not like the label
ÈhacktivistsÇ Ð they tend rather to call themselves Èdigital actionistsÇ. The
idea of the GWEI project is sophisticated, but at the same time simple: for
every click on ads on registered partner pages of Google, both the company and
its partner get a micro-payment from the advertisers. By hosting Google ads on
many of their own hidden websites, the creators of GWEI are earning money with
which they automatically buy Google shares. It will take a long time but, in
the end, artists will own Google Ð a growing information and advertising
monopoly that, due to its power and attitude, is becoming a dangerous element
in our information society.
When the Google company found out about this endeavour, it
cancelled some of the partner accounts and erased the GWEI website from its
database. However, the other accounts remained untouched and the project
continues: from now on, it will take 3,443,287,037 million years until GWEI
fully owns Google.
From its early days, net.art has functioned as a kind of parallel
counter-movement to the traditional art scene. Now, the situation is different:
besides the online version of GWEI, the team has also put on several
exhibitions in galleries (Johannesburg, Berlin, S‹o Paolo, Sydney). It seems as
if we are entering a period of Ècomplex artÇ, where the manifestation of an
idea can take on many forms, using various media.
Slavo Krekovic: How did you have the idea of a self-referential
Google parody, and how did the team get together?
Lizvlx: I donÕt know if it really is a parody. Probably not, as
GWEI is not actually funny, is it? I donÕt regard it as funny that one can make
money with a company that lives on a system of fake/non-fake click rates,
posing as a kind of pseudo-governmental information provider. I think thatÕs
sick. What does money really mean anymore if a company that lives from
commercial pixel-arrow-relations is worth a thousand times more than, letÕs
say, a food chain, or if you like, even a bank? I think that GWEI is in fact
very serious and that Google seems to be a parody of the capitalist definition
of ÈmoneyÇ.
Hans Bernhard: In 2004 the net.art world was flooded with Google
art projects. They all dealt with search-engine results, the image-database or
other Google services. Our artistic strategy is to search for the weak points
within strong and large-scaled systems and exploit them aggressively. We first
met at the 2004 ÈRead_meÇ Festival in Aarhus (Denmark). It took us more than
six months to adjust our focus to the core principles of Google, to reduce and
to remove all interfering material. GWEI is a conceptual work with a high
degree of reality. It involves the simple step of understanding that we can
build a simple model in which the giant becomes a cannibal of itself. It is a
self-referential game and conceptual hack of the second New-Economy bubble.
Alessandro Ludovico: IÕve talked with lots of artists in the past,
but Hans Bernhard was (surprisingly for me) the first to come back after weÕd
exchanged some ideas. And from then on, I really felt in sync with him in a
fruitful, intellectual kind of way. All this happened after I had spent more
than a decade analysing and critiquing the artistic work of others. This is the
first time I am getting my hands dirty with art as an ÈartistÇ. We all live
quite far apart (Bari, Turin, Vienna, St. Moritz), but at the moment this does
not seem to be a very important aspect.
Slavo Krekovic: The more people use the Google search engine, the
more powerful it is. If you are not listed, you do not exist. However,
open-source and non-commercial search engines (such as Mozdex) are too weak to
provide a real solution. Can the detection of Èevil processesÇ hidden behind
the nice Google face change the situation? What are the biggest dangers of
Google-style info-monopolies?
Alessandro Ludovico: What Google makes possible is a two-faced
brand awareness. On one hand, you have this ÈporcelainÇ interface Ð funny and
totally clean Ð that everybody likes and that is immediately recognized,
accompanied by a number of ÈpositiveÇ rumours. On the other hand, you have all
these services established by the same corporation, which is becoming a
standard, a monopoly. This mechanism, which also seems to trigger the rise in
Google shares, may make Google an unstoppable machine forming an almost
complete interface to the net services. With everything you do, you would be
better off conveying your information via the Google servers, leaving your
unavoidable traces. They are establishing themselves as a thin, global and
almost invisible layer for accessing the whole net.
Hans Bernhard: We are not changing the situation and we do not
want to. Google is part of a oligopolistic market (along with Yahoo and msn).
We are simply developing strategies to symbolically attack such market giants.
These are practical (technical) and formal (aesthetic) games. We try to publish
all the information we gather during such an experiment. We like Google, we use
Google, we fuck with the minds of the Google users and Google employees.
Google's position is dominant right from the moment when they enter a new
business field with a new service. It's the ÈGoogle effectÇ: creating consensus
in a new business field, even if they instantly take the dominant position. The
greatest enemy of such a giant is not another giant: it's a parasite. Our
working thesis: if enough parasites suck small amounts of money from this
embodiment of self-referentiality, they will empty this artificial mountain of
data and its inner risk of digital totalitarianism. By establishing the GWEI
model, we deconstruct the new global advertising mechanisms by rendering them
into a surreal, click-based economic model. The reality is that Google is
currently valued at more than all the Swiss banks together! Google earned 500
million dollars with advertisements in 2005, and is projected to earn 1.5
billion dollars in 2006. Google has used the knowledge of the economic
internet-avant-garde. Those who come on the scene later always have a serious
advantage over the pioneers. They have efficiently put together a technical
high-performance invention and a super-clean business model. They had the best
product at the right time. But mainly they just profited from the crisis of
search engines, the blown dotcom energies and visions, and the fucked-up
business plans.
Lizvlx: I would just like to add that we do our job as artists in
order to ask questions, and not to provide answers. I donÕt want anybody
believing in my ideas, I would like people to believe in their own thinking
abilities.
Slavo Krekovic: There are not only artists, but also journalists
and theorists among you, actively dealing with electronic culture. So how would
you describe the development of relations between art and technology in recent
times and how would you position your project within them?
Hans Bernhard: After the nearly futurist approach to drugs and
technology in the early net.art days (for example, the works of etoy,
1994-1997), a group of actionists grew out of the general net.art scene. A
large array of digital actions was launched during the second net.art period
(1998-2001). For me, GWEI is a new manifestation of digital art. We do not
primarily use mass media (media hacking); the project is basically a conceptual
piece (with practical, technical applications) produced for the fine-arts
market. The objects we create from this experience are large-scaled paper
sculptures, diagrams and the GWEI-seal (pseudo-governmental icon, digital print
on canvas).
AL: Personally, I think that GWEI is really a child of its time.
It makes manifest some of the biggest contradictions of the immaterial era: the
extreme volatility of the economy, the globally abstract and, at the same time,
personal involvement in the net-content economy, and the risk of monopoly that
is always around the corner.
http://www.gwei.org
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