in/compatible systems
 
Panel with Tsila Hassine (il), Ziv Neeman (il) and Frank Rieger (de)
 
Moderated by Christopher Salter (ca/de)
 
The liberatory possibilities of our networked systems of digital  culture get continually emphasised with the rhetorics of improvisation,  openness and new possibilities for social life. Yet, in many cases,  these very technologies find their genesis in the most repressive  systems of command and control – birthed in the closed world of military  institutions and strategies. This panel focuses on the supposedly  incompatible links between global neo-liberalism and war machines. Using  the strange confluence of military technological development and  private tech start ups in Israel as a case study, experts excavate the  ways in which the improvisational nature of combat and the split second  creative decision making taking place in the “fog of war” get embedded  into the very tools we claim liberate us from the societies of control.