My New Left Review piece on Surveillance Capitalism has just been published in Spanish translation by Latin American magazine Nueva Sociedad.

My New Left Review piece on Surveillance Capitalism has just been published in Spanish translation by Latin American magazine Nueva Sociedad.

On 10 November I took part in a debate with Dennis Graemer of the Association for the Design of History as part of the “Sheltering Places” public series at the New Center for Research & Practice.
It seems these guys were hoping to set up a confrontation between their chosen brand name of “left accelerationism” and a certain “communisation theory” that is reputed to be a reincarnation of anarcho-primitivism.
I’ve never had much interest in either of those identities—both of which it should be noted were largely constructed by Ben Noys—let alone in rhetorical pittings of the two against each other. I made it clear before participating that I could thus not represent one against the other, and would only be interested in a more substantive discussion. The organisers dutifully made some minor concessions in presentation, but it seems this rhetorical structure could not be avoided.
Needless to say, as someone who has spent the bulk of their adult life immersed in the concrete problems of technology, I am not a primitivist; nor do I have any need for blanket affirmations of modernity and technical change. My position on such things is most clearly articulated in the Endnotes text “Error“. (More on this later.)
Still, we managed to have a reasonable debate, and Meier and Graemer are good interlocutors when the radical brandings are set aside.
I am on the latest Social Discipline podcast, talking with Mattin & Miguel Prado about surveillance capitalism, mode of production and the compulsion to totalise. My kids had me up much of the night, so I was exhausted, which is probably why I sound exasperated all the way through. With more than a couple of hours of sleep, I could hopefully have been more lucid, but there you go.
These guys are into noise, and add a different soundtrack to each episode. I suggested they use something that “sounds like the acoustic monitoring on the Forth Bridge”, and the result was great. Particularly pleased with Miguel’s bonkers graphical attempt to capture the content.


My critical review of Shoshana Zuboff’s 2019 book The Age of Surveillance Capitalism: The Fight for a Human Future at the New Frontier of Power is now out in the latest NLR.
Most fundamentally, this is a book torn between a Polanyian critique of the marketisation of the new realm of surveillance data and a business school celebration of the market as the basis of democracy and freedom.
Zuboff in some ways comes close to a full-blooded leftist—even Marxisant—attack on Facebook, Google et al. Yet her attempts to reconcile this with her prior pontifications on business history have led to awkward, unresolved tensions in the project.
There are also reasons to doubt her central concept of the “behavioural surplus”.
More in the review...