*12/01/2012: SEE UPDATE BELOW ORIGINAL POST*
Today (Thursday November 29, 2012), Syria’s internet shut down. This is a serious situation with literal life and death implications. We have been following the situation on the Cyborgology Facebook page since the story broke (largely, this consisted of seeing what was going on with Andy Carvin @acarvin). Much of this story has yet to play out, and we will certainly continue to follow/write about it as events progress and we learn more. Right now, I want to take a moment to explore one aspect of what this all means. Namely, I want to explore the question: why did the internet shut off now? To do so, I turn to Derrick Bell’s interest convergence theory.
Derrick Bell’s theory of interest convergence is a canonical statement on race relations. Bell famously argues that whites promote racial justice only when doing so converges with their own interests. The key example is the 1954 Brown V. Board of Education case, in which racial integration in schools served the larger U.S. message within the Cold War of human rights, freedom, and equality.
Although many scholars critique the strong version of Bell’s argument for its failure to incorporate agency among blacks, the root of the argument is quite useful in explaining power relations. In short, interest convergence theory tells us that the will of the powerful wades towards the direction of self-interest. When these interests converge with those of the less powerful, the less powerful are better able to achieve their will.
To a degree, I think this framework helps us understand the decision of the Syrian government to shut down communication channels. Syrian rebels utilized digital communication channels to both organize among themselves, and share their experiences—often in real time—with the outside world. This was instrumental in their cause both on the ground and internationally. The real question then, is why did the government maintain these channels for so long? This question is particularly blaring in light of extreme government atrocities, such as the mass killings of innocent citizens—including children. Moreover, why did the government decide to cut off these channels now?
Internet and communication blackouts are not unique among the Arab uprisings. Egypt and Libyan governments both shut down communication during their respective battles. The Syrian government, however, is unique in its deft use of digital technologies to quash protests, locate dissidents, and suppress the movement. In short, the interests of the powerful (i.e. the government) converged with the less powerful (i.e. the rebels). In addition to appearing somehow less oppressive to the international community, we see here a possible reason for maintaining Internet capabilities despite their strategic importance in the rebel movement.
However, we may speculate that the costs got too high for the government. We may speculate that in light a persistent rebel force, culminating in massive protests in Damascus—so large that the major airport had to be shut down—it no longer served governmental interests to maintain digital connectivity. The interests of the powerful and the less powerful no longer converged.
Certainly, there are other factors in play. This is a minuscule fraction of the story. With that said, this framework suggests that perhaps today’s act by the Syrian government was one of desperation. They were forced to give up a key oppressive resource (digital communication capabilities). This resource was no longer adequately effective for keeping the uprising at bay. Now, they must all battle in the dark.
Update 12/01/2012 2:19pm Central
Recent reports indicate that despite the government initiated Internet blackout, Syrian rebels have maintained spotty communication through the use of Skype. As a New York Times article reports
…[H]aving dealt with periodic outages for more than a year, the opposition had anticipated a full shutdown of Syria’s Internet service providers. To prepare, they have spent months smuggling communications equipment like mobile handsets and portable satellite phones into the country… If the uprisings in Tunisia and Egypt were Twitter Revolutions, then Syria is becoming the Skype Rebellion. To get around a near-nationwide Internet shutdown, rebels have armed themselves with mobile satellite phones and dial-up modems.
Problematic designations of “Skype and Twitter” uprisings aside, this speaks to the agency of the less powerful—the very agency that Bell is critiqued for not addressing. These alternative means of communication are indeed, weapons of the weak.
With that said, this new rebel weapon is used at a very high price. As the article further warns:
In recent months the Assad government, often with help from Iran, has developed tools to install malware on computers that allows officials to monitor a user’s activity… Using satellite phone service to connect makes Skype potentially more dangerous since it makes it easier to track a user’s location, said Eva Galperin of the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a civil liberties group in San Francisco.
Far from powerless, the rebels are indeed at a power deficit. They can subvert the will of the regime, but do so on terms that are not their own.
Comments 5
whitneyerinboesel — November 30, 2012
jenny, thank you for this.
i've been thinking about the blackout all day, though from a different perspective--namely, how it really illustrates the double-edged sword of augmented reality (for so many reasons, i'm resisting the mental auto-complete of "the dark side of augmented reality").
usually, when we cyborgologists make our Not Two Separate Worlds point, we do so in the process of pointing out that 'the internet isn't a separate reality; our social stuff is very much in there, and those bits affect our social and physical worlds in return.' what the blackout drives home is the equally true (but less discussed) side of augmented reality: it's not just that "this world" is in the internet, but that "the internet" is in this world. the seemingly magical ether of cyberspace actually depends on physical infrastructure that can be damaged or shut down, infrastructure that's not so unlike the roads outside the damascus airport (for example). i think The Average Person tends to forget this (especially if they have reliable wireless access).
and so today, i found myself wishing that the digital dualists were right: perhaps if "the internet" *was* a separate reality, oppressive regimes in this reality wouldn't be able to shut chunks of the internet down--whether as an end in its own right, or to deflect the international gaze while committing further atrocities.
i'm worried about this.
The Battle in the Dark: Syria’s Communication Blackout | Journalism: the citizen side | Scoop.it — November 30, 2012
[...] Today (Thursday November 29, 2012), Syria’s internet shut down. This is a serious situation with literal life and death implications. [...]
Friday Roundup: November 30, 2012 » The Editors' Desk — November 30, 2012
[...] class, Doug Hill looks at capitalism through Hollywood films, Jenny Davis writes that it might be game over in Syria (if interest convergence theory and an Internet blackout are any indication), and Jurgenson and [...]
Battle in the Dark: Syria’s Communication Blackout » Sociological Images — December 1, 2012
[...] The Battle in the Dark: Syria’s Communication Blackout on Cyborgology [...]