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Networked Control: Search Engines and the Symmetry of Confidence
Author(s) -
Bernhard Rieder
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
international review of information ethics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2563-5638
DOI - 10.29173/irie346
Subject(s) - search engine , context (archaeology) , decoupling (probability) , computer science , the internet , control (management) , computer security , artificial intelligence , engineering , information retrieval , world wide web , geography , archaeology , control engineering
Search engines have become an integral part of our Internet use. They shape the way we look at the world, they provide orientation where there is none; but the maps they draw are too often hijacked by commercial interest. Search engines are less black box than black foam; functional decoupling, parasite technologies, and the embedding in the greater context of culture and society render the search act subject to overdetermination. Control is thus diluted into a dense network of human and non-human “actants” and the power of the search engine is located in a control zone rather than a control center. In order to shift power back to the public, this paper proposes the concept of “symmetry of confidence”, a new relationship between search engine companies and their users.

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