Andrew Wilson | Blink
Andrew designs and implements large scale projects [10,000 users
and 50,000 interactions so far] using GSM mobile phones, including
The Guardian's two SMS events [2001, 2002] and Citypoems [live since
2003], a citywide low-fi locative media project in Leeds, expanded
to Antwerp. In 2004 he was AHRB/ACE Visiting Fellow in the School
of Biology, University of Newcastle, studying self-organising group
behaviour and ubiquitous computing.
http://fisharepeopletoo.blogs.com
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Tea Gardens: RFID and Common Pool
Resources
Andrew Wilson
Big Brother is Watching
Stop RFID
If RFID has entered the public consciousness at all, it is as a
sinister surveillance technology. The Stop RFID campaign, run by
Consumers Against Supermarket Privacy Invasion and Numbering, calls
on its supporters to 'fight this battle before big corporations
track our every move.' [3] RFID, along with tracking the location
of mobile phones, CCTV cameras, and biometric ID on passports, is
seen as a technology that will be used by 'them' against 'us' without
our understanding or permission. Michel Foucault called this pervasive
surveillance 'discipline', in which subjects become so certain that
they are being watched at all times that it is impossible for them
to think in a critical, anti-authoritarian or subversive way [2].
Tragedy of the Commons
Common Pool Resources (CPRs) are natural or man made resources such
as fish stocks, grazing land or road bridges that provide benefits
to groups of individual appropriators, but that are always in danger
of running out if overused. CPRs are often described as subject
to the 'tragedy of the commons', for example farmers cutting down
trees to burn without allowing time for new trees to grow. In such
cases individuals take as much of a limited resource as they can
because they feel that everyone else is already doing the same,
causing the destruction of the CPR. By acting rationally as individuals,
the appropriators create the worst result for themselves and the
group as a whole.
The usual solutions offered for the tragedy of the commons are
'top down', either state management of the CPR or private ownership
by a single corporation or landlord. However Elinor Ostrom has found
numerous CPRs, including grazing land in Switzerland and Japan,
irrigation water in Spain and the Philippines and fish stocks in
Turkey, that are all successfully managed from the “bottom
up” by the farmers and fishermen who use them [1]. These resources
have been sustained and improved over many generations without succumbing
to the tragedy of the commons. The appropriators all show restraint
in the way they use the CPR and Ostrom found a number of common
rules which govern the use of such resources. These rules include
clearly defined boundaries and limits to who has a right to use
the resources; shared norms of behaviour and a shared history and
future among the appropriators; mutual monitoring by the appropriators
to make sure no one is taking more than their fair share.
Peer to Peer Surveillance
Self-organised 'bottom up' management of Common Pool Resources succeeds
because the appropriators all engage in mutual monitoring. Each
farmer checks that the other farmers do not cut down too much wood.
Each fisherman checks that others do not catch too many fish. When
an appropriator is caught breaking the rules, shame and ostracism
are often the most effective punishment, because everyone shares
the same norms of right and wrong behaviour. However, maintaining
a CPR in this way involves an investment of time, effort and resources
by the people involved. Spanish farmers who share water to irrigate
their crops have to pay ditch-riders to patrol the irrigation canals
and make sure that other farmers do not steal extra water. If these
transaction costs become too high, it no longer worth accepting
the rules governing the CPR, and a tragedy of the commons follows.
Lowering transaction costs provides greater overall returns from
the CPR for each appropriator, meaning that they are more likely
to stick to its rules. In the future, wireless sensor networks might
help to lower transaction costs. In the Spanish situation, for example,
meters could be installed to measure the flow of water to each farmer,
and neighbouring farmers alerted automatically by mobile phone if
someone was stealing water, so reducing the need to pay for ditch-riders.
Tea Gardens
The Media Centre
The Media Centre houses around 100 start-up small businesses all
sharing the same building in the town of Huddersfield, England [4].
It provides tenants with low cost office space, including shared
reception facilities, meeting rooms, secure access and technical
support. Most of the companies housed in the Media Centre building
operate in the creative and media industries, and so rely on knowledge
and innovation for profitability.
As well as a physical infrastructure The Media Centre operates
under a distinct philosophy for supporting the growth of small businesses.
It considers the various companies under its roof as a network with
shared interests, and that they will benefit from closely knit informal
contacts between them to allow the introduction of new ideas, the
quick transfer of ideas and the formation of beneficial creative
business partnerships.
The Media Centre has two strategies for nurturing this closely
knit network. The first is a café-bar within the Media Centre,
open to tenants and the public. This café-bar has free wifi
access, and is useful for holding short business meetings for those
companies that only have small offices. It is intended as a venue
for regular unofficial contacts during lunch times and coffee breaks.
The second strategy is an artistic programme of new media art, funded
and curated by The Media Centre, which introduces new creative thinking
about digital media and fosters a climate of innovation.
The two strategies have had mixed results. The artistic programme
has attracted widespread interest within the UK and beyond, though
less so among tenants of The Media Centre itself. The café-bar
by contrast has not been particularly popular with tenants or the
public. It has gone through several changes of management, and been
closed for long periods. When it is open it is often empty, and
so makes a rather cold, unwelcoming environment for business meetings
and informal contacts. The problems with the café-bar as
a venue have had a knock-on effect on the artistic programme. Presentations
by innovative digital artists in the café-bar tend to attract
only a small audience from outside The Media Centre, and tenants
usually do not attend, even though it is in their interests to be
aware of new thinking in digital media.
Common Pool Resources
The Media Centre network, as expressed through the café-bar
and artistic programme, can be defined as a manmade Common Pool
Resource, albeit one that works in the opposite way to a normal
CPR: the less people use the café-bar, the less value it
has a resource and so the less closely knit the network becomes.
In this case the tragedy of the commons can be expressed as “No
one else is there, so why should I go?”
The problem can be analysed using Ostrom’s rules for successful
management of CPRs. The Media Centre’s tenants lack norms
of shared behaviour: the tenants do not believe in the philosophy
of The Media Centre as a network, and so do not see how the café
bar and artistic programme relate to their particular business activity.
The lack of shared norms means that ignoring the artistic programme
and not visiting the café bar bring no punishment through
shame or ostracism.
The boundaries of the CPR are unclear. The café bar and
artistic programme are provided by The Media Centre for the good
of the network as a whole, so it is unclear who is responsible for
the upkeep of the resource. A tenant visiting the café bar
and artistic events regularly is performing a provisioning task,
ensuring that the resource is available when needed in the future,
in the same way that farmers reconstruct irrigation channels each
year. The Media Centre cannot undertake this provisioning task,
since the network depends on the participation of the tenants for
is existence. The boundary of the resource needs to be redrawn so
as to include the tenants.
At present the transaction costs for provisioning and mutual monitoring
are too high. A tenant would need to spend a great deal of time
in the café bar waiting to bump into others, and to monitor
who did or did not regularly attend events.
Tea Gardens
The Tea Gardens project aims to use RFID technology to improve the
self-organised, bottom-up management of The Media Centre’s
CPR. Each tenant will be given a key ring with an RFID chip inside.
A reader will be placed at the door of the main building and at
the door of the café bar, and will record the tenants each
time they enter. The readings will be displayed on a website that
represents a large communal garden. Each tenant will be responsible
for his or her own section of the garden. Every time a tenant visits
the café bar, their section of the garden will be nourished,
and grow new flowers. When a tenant grows enough flowers they will
be entitled to free coffee in the café bar. If tenants do
not visit the café bar, their garden remains fallow.
The technological hurdles that Tea Gardens needs to overcome will
be the range and reliability of the RFID readers. The main entrance
to the building is three meters wide, a much greater distance than
for many RFID tasks, and the readers will have to detect chips carried
in pockets and handbags next to metal keys, which can interfere
with the readers.
Using a swipe card or key fob system with a short-range reader
will not work in this situation because of the additional transaction
cost involved. Tenants do not value the CPR highly at present, so
they will not make the extra effort to swipe into the building in
order to strengthen the network.
Tea Gardens will define the boundaries of the CPR to include all
the companies in The Media Centre. Responsibility for managing and
sustaining the network is shared among the tenants. The success
of the Tea Garden is a metaphor for the success of the network.
It presents an intangible result in an easily understood form, with
an element of playfulness. Ostrom suggests that appropriators tend
to value short terms gains from a CPR, so giving tenants free coffee
will also encourage participation.
The website considerably reduces the transaction costs of mutual
monitoring between tenants, by making it clear who does and does
not use the café bar regularly. It also exposes those tenants
with fallow gardens to the potential of mild shame and ostracism.
Norms of shared behaviour that include regular visits to the café
bar and support for the artistic programme will take root at the
same time.
Conclusion
Michel Foucault’s notion of discipline has similarities to
the mutual monitoring that Elinor Ostrom finds is one of the rules
of successful self-organised CPR management. Both attempt to enforce
norms of behaviour. In the case of CPR management however it is
clear that these norms help to safeguard valuable resources and
the communities and cultures that have developed to make use of
them, often over hundreds of years. While objections to corporate
deployment of RFID may or may not be valid, imaginative applications
of RFID and other sensor technologies, rather than allowing sinister
top-down surveillance, will help to sustain existing CPRs and also
to define and develop new ones.
REFERENCES
Ostrom, E. Governing the Commons, CUP, Cambridge 1990.
Rheingold, H. Smart Mobs, Perseus, Cambridge MA, 2003
Stop RFID. Retrieved October 13,2004 from http://www.spychips.com
The Media Centre Huddersfield. Retrieved October 13, 2004 from
http://www.the-media-centre.co.uk
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